Tamm review: Does salvage logging mitigate subsequent forest disturbances?
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteAuteur
Leverkus, Alexandro B.; Buma, Brian; Wagenbrenner, Joseph; Burton, Philip J.; Lingua, Emanuele; Marzano, Raffaella; Thorn, SimonMateria
Beetle outbreak Compound disturbance Disturbance interaction Fire prevention Linked disturbance Pest control Post-disturbance management Salvage harvest Sanitation logging
Date
2020-11-12Referencia bibliográfica
Leverkus AB, Buma B, Wagenbrenner J, Lingua E, Marzano R, Burton P, Thorn S, 2021. Tamm review: Does salvage logging mitigate subsequent forest disturbances? Forest Ecology and Management 481:118721
Patrocinador
ABL acknowledges postdoctoral funding from the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation and grant RTI2018-096187-J-100 from FEDER/ Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities. Anika Goßmann assisted with the literature searches.Résumé
After natural forest disturbances such as wildfires, windstorms and insect outbreaks, salvage logging is
commonly applied to reduce economic losses and mitigate subsequent disturbance risk. However, this practice is
controversial due to its potential ecological impacts, and its capacity to mitigate or increase the risk of subsequent
disturbances remains unclear. Salvage logging removes and alters the legacies remaining after natural
disturbances, and it produces additional management legacies. Consequently, salvage logging has the potential
to alter the functional connection between natural disturbances and also produce new functional connections to
additional disturbances. We reviewed the efficacy of salvage logging in mitigating the risk of subsequent wildfire,
insect outbreaks, hydrologic disturbances, mass movements, windthrow, browsing, and microclimatic stress. We
asked: (1) Does salvage logging modify resistance to subsequent disturbances? (2) Through what mechanisms do such
effects operate? Based on 96 publications, salvage logging can reduce total ecosystem fuels but increase small
ground fuels and produce drier fuels in the short term, reduce bark beetle host trees and beetle-tree connectivity
(though with little evidence for outbreak mitigation), magnify erosion and flood impacts of disturbance but with
uncertain watershed-scale implications, increase susceptibility to windthrow at artificially created stand edges,
remove the protective function of deadwood in preventing rockfall and avalanches, alter browsing pressure by
modifying forage availability and hiding cover for herbivores and predators, and increase microclimatic stress
due to greater radiation and temperature fluctuations. We propose a decision-making framework to evaluate the
suitability of salvage logging to manage subsequent disturbances. It contemplates the likelihood and impacts of
both salvage logging and the subsequent disturbances. In summary, salvage logging does not necessarily prevent
subsequent disturbances, and sometimes it may increase disturbance likelihood and magnitude. Forecasting the
suitability of salvage logging for management goals requires assessing the mechanisms through which salvage
logging effects operate under local conditions, balanced with its impacts as a disturbance itself. Managing to
foster the highest-priority functions and services –such as biodiversity conservation, pest mitigation or economic
return– across different parts of disturbed forest landscapes based on decision-making procedures such as the one
proposed may constitute the best response to uncertain subsequent disturbances.
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