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Effects of forest residue harvesting on short-term changes in soil solution chemistry
Authors:Nicholas Clarke  Silje Skår  O Janne Kjønaas  Kjersti Holt Hanssen  Tonje Økland  Jørn-Frode Nordbakken
Institution:1. Norwegian institute of Bioeconomy Research, ?s, Norwaynicholas.clarke@nibio.no;3. Norwegian institute of Bioeconomy Research, ?s, Norway
Abstract:Short-term (three to four years) effects of forest harvesting on soil solution chemistry were investigated at two Norway spruce sites in southern Norway, differing in precipitation amount and topography. Experimental plots were either harvested conventionally (stem-only harvesting, SOH) or whole trees, including crowns, twigs and branches were removed (whole-tree harvesting, WTH), leaving residue piles on the ground for some months before removal. The WTH treatment had two sub-treatments: WTH-pile where there had been piles and WTH-removal, from where residues had been removed to make piles. Increased soil solution concentrations of NO3–N, total N, Ca, Mg and K at 30?cm depth, shown by peaks in concentrations in the years after harvesting, were found at the drier, less steep site in eastern Norway after SOH and WTH-pile, but less so after WTH-removal. At the wetter, steeper site in western Norway, peaks were often observed also at WTH-removal plots, which might reflect within-site differences in water pathways due largely to site topography.
Keywords:Whole-tree harvesting  stem-only harvesting  soil solution  short-term effects  Mann–Kendall trend analysis
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