Aspen Bibliography
Contrasting Release Approaches for a Mixed Paper Birch (Betula papyrifera-Quaking Aspen (Populus tremuloides) Stand
Document Type
Article
Journal/Book Title/Conference
Northern Journal of Applied Forestry
Volume
25
Issue
3
Publisher
Society of American Foresters
First Page
124
Last Page
132
Publication Date
9-1-2008
Abstract
Early release from competitors can be used to influence the species composition, quality, and rate of development of young stands. Release strategies can vary in intensity, ranging from complete removal of competitors and infrequent future entries (early, heavy, infrequent [EHI]) to lighter entries that are repeated more frequently (early, light, often [ELO]). It is unclear, however, which strategy is more successful for producing high-quality birch sawtimber (Betula papyrifera Marsh.) in mixed stands with aspen (Populus tremuloides Michx.). We evaluated the effects of various release intensities on the growth and mortality of a 16-18-ft-tall natural aspen-paper birch stand in Minnesota following density reductions from 1,500-3,000 trees ac-1 (trees per acre [TPA]) to 750 (ELO750), 500 (EHI500), and 250 (EHI250) TPA. After 6 years, paper birch was overtopped by aspen and contributed 77-87% of basal area in release plots. The basal area and volume of all paper birch and of only paper birch crop trees (100 largest TPA) were highest in lightly released ELO750 and lowest in control plots. Growth of mean quadratic diameter, basal area, and volume of paper birch was 2-3 times higher in release plots but independent of release intensity. Early release is necessary to maintain paper birch dominance, but there is no short-term advantage among treatment intensities. Long-term growth simulations using the Forest Vegetation Simulator suggest that merchantable timber production was unaffected by release strategy but that the EHI250 strategy produced the most birch sawtimber (40 times as much as in ELO750).
Recommended Citation
Zenner, Eric K. and Puettmann, Klaus J., "Contrasting Release Approaches for a Mixed Paper Birch (Betula papyrifera-Quaking Aspen (Populus tremuloides) Stand" (2008). Aspen Bibliography. Paper 140.
https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/aspen_bib/140