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Above-ground biomass recovery following logging and thinning over 46 years in an Australian tropical forest
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Above-ground biomass recovery following logging and thinning over 46 years in an Australian tropical forest

Jing Hu, John L Herbohn, Robin L Chazdon, Jack Baynes and Jerry Vanclay
Science of the Total Environment, Vol.734, pp.1-9
2020
url
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.139098View
Published Version

Abstract

biomass growth long-term forest plots recovery logging thinning recruitment
Managed tropical forests are a globally important carbon pool, but the effects of logging and thinning intensities on long-term biomass dynamics are poorly known. We investigated the demographic mechanisms of above-ground biomass recovery over 48 years in an Australian tropical forest following four silvicultural treatments: selective logging only as a control and selective logging followed by low-, medium- and high-intensity thinning. Initial biomass recovery rates following thinning were poor predictors of the long-term changes. Initial biomass recovery from 1969 to 1973 was slow and was largely concentrated on an increase in the biomass of residual stems. From 1973 to 1997, above ground biomass (AGB) increased almost linearly, with a similar slope for all sites. From 1997 to 2015, the rate of biomass accumulation slowed, especially for the L treatment. All thinning treatments stimulated more recruitment and regrowth of non-harvested remaining trees compared to the untreated control. Biomass at both the low and medium intensity treatments has almost fully recovered to within 98% and 97% of pre-logging biomass levels respectively. The predicted times of complete above-ground biomass recovery for the logging only and high intensity treatments are 55 and 77 years respectively. The slower biomass recovery at the logging only site was largely due to increased mortality in the last measurement period. The slower recovery of the high intensity site was due to a combination of a higher initial reduction in biomass from thinning and the increased mortality in the last measurement period. The high mortality rates in the most recent measurement period are likely due to the impacts of two cyclones that impacted the study site. Our results suggest that sustainable cutting cycles in this site need to be at least 50 years, which is much longer that many of the cutting cycles currently used in tropical forest management.

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