TY - JOUR
T1 - The more, the better? Water relations of Norway spruce stands after progressive thinning
AU - Gebhardt, Timo
AU - Häberle, Karl Heinz
AU - Matyssek, Rainer
AU - Schulz, Christoph
AU - Ammer, Christian
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank Georg Reitmaier for the opportunity to use his property for many years as an experimental site, and Thomas Feuerbach, Peter Kuba, Josef Heckmair, Winfried Grimmeisen, Karl-Heinz Heine, Andreas Parth, Michael Unger, Ulrike Westphal, and Alfred Wörle for supporting the laborious field work. Many thanks go to Wolfgang Schmidt for repeatedly assessing species composition and coverage of the ground vegetation. The work has amply been funded by the Bavarian Forest Service (Grant No. W 37 ).
PY - 2014/10/15
Y1 - 2014/10/15
N2 - Predicted intense and prolonged drought events challenge forest management. Thinning is debated as a silvicultural measure for reducing drought risk in densely established forest stands. We report on a thinning experiment in a 26-year-old Norway spruce stand (Picea abies), comprising of two thinning intensities and one unthinnned control. The removal of 43% (moderate thinning, MT) and 67% (heavy thinning, HT) of the initial basal area led to increased water availability during the entire three year observation period. Stand-level transpiration (Es) was decreased by about 25% upon moderate, and by about 50% upon heavy thinning during the first year after the interventions had been carried out. However, differences in Es across the treatments decreased within three years after thinning mainly due to increased single-tree transpiration and additional understory evapotranspiration at HT. Nevertheless, due to lower interception and transpiration on the thinned plots three years after treatment MT and HT still showed a substantial surplus in extractable soil water. The results showed that the main determinants concerning the extent of the mitigation effect with increasing thinning intensity were the available soil water storage capacity and the emerging understory vegetation. We conclude that repeated moderate thinning, through enhancing the water availability to the remaining trees, can mitigate drought risk in young spruce stands and thus, represent a viable silvicultural measure in anticipating possible water limitations due to climate change.
AB - Predicted intense and prolonged drought events challenge forest management. Thinning is debated as a silvicultural measure for reducing drought risk in densely established forest stands. We report on a thinning experiment in a 26-year-old Norway spruce stand (Picea abies), comprising of two thinning intensities and one unthinnned control. The removal of 43% (moderate thinning, MT) and 67% (heavy thinning, HT) of the initial basal area led to increased water availability during the entire three year observation period. Stand-level transpiration (Es) was decreased by about 25% upon moderate, and by about 50% upon heavy thinning during the first year after the interventions had been carried out. However, differences in Es across the treatments decreased within three years after thinning mainly due to increased single-tree transpiration and additional understory evapotranspiration at HT. Nevertheless, due to lower interception and transpiration on the thinned plots three years after treatment MT and HT still showed a substantial surplus in extractable soil water. The results showed that the main determinants concerning the extent of the mitigation effect with increasing thinning intensity were the available soil water storage capacity and the emerging understory vegetation. We conclude that repeated moderate thinning, through enhancing the water availability to the remaining trees, can mitigate drought risk in young spruce stands and thus, represent a viable silvicultural measure in anticipating possible water limitations due to climate change.
KW - Available soil water content
KW - Transpiration
KW - Understory vegetation
KW - Water balance
KW - Water use efficiency
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84907595215&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.agrformet.2014.05.013
DO - 10.1016/j.agrformet.2014.05.013
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84907595215
SN - 0168-1923
VL - 197
SP - 235
EP - 243
JO - Agricultural and Forest Meteorology
JF - Agricultural and Forest Meteorology
ER -