Is selective thinning an adequate practice for adapting Quercus ilex coppices to climate change?

TitleIs selective thinning an adequate practice for adapting Quercus ilex coppices to climate change?
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2011
AuthorsRodriguez-Calcerrada, J., Pérez-Ramos I. M., OURCIVAL JEAN-MARC., Limousin J-M., Joffre R., & Rambal S.
JournalAnnals of Forest Science
Volume68
Issue3
Pagination575 - 585
Date Published2011///
KeywordsDrought, forest adaptation strategy, seed production, sprouting, stem growth
Abstract

& Introduction Future climatic scenarios demand an increasing involvement of management for forest preservation, but little is known on how forestry practices will benefit stands in facing variation of climatic components. & Objectives We investigated how selective thinning affected the response of an old Quercus ilex coppice to 6 years of throughfall reduction. Plots thinned from below (≈30% basal area removal) and unthinned plots were subject to either throughfall exclusion (TE; ≈33% throughfall reduction) or normal rainfall. Stem diameter growth, stem survival, and seed and sprout production were measured. & Results TE did not have a significant effect on stem growth but it reduced the production of viable acorns. Also, in the absence of thinning, TE accelerated the mortality of small stems and stimulated the emergence of new sprouts. Thinning reduced stem mortality, enhanced growth of residual stems, and caused a profuse emission of resprouts. Thinning also increased total seed production, but the crop had a large proportion of aborted seeds, especially in those areas subject to TE. & Conclusion The mere elimination of suppressed and diseased stems in abandoned Q. ilex coppice stands helps remaining trees to cope with current and future (probably longer and more intense) droughts. Potentially drier conditions might attenuate the success of thinning in producing a viable seed crop.

URLhttp://www.springerlink.com/index/10.1007/s13595-011-0050-x