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Early successional forest habitats and water resources

Formally Refereed
Authors: James M..Vose, Chelcy R..Ford
Year: 2011
Type: Scientific Journal
Station: Southern Research Station
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-1620-9_14
Source: In: Greenberg, C.; Collins, B.; Thompson, F., III. editors. Sustaining Young Forest Communities. Springer Series: Managing Forest Ecosystems, Volume 21, Chapter 14, pp. 253-269. Springer, New York.

Abstract

Tree harvests that create early successional habitats have direct and indirect impacts on water resources in forests of the Central Hardwood Region. Streamflow increases substantially immediately after timber harvest, but increases decline as leaf area recovers and biomass aggrades. Post-harvest increases in stormflow of 10–20%, generally do not contribute to downstream flooding. Sediment from roads and skid trails can compromise water quality after cutting. With implementation of Best Management Practices (BMPs), timber harvests are unlikely to have detrimental impacts on water resources, but forest conversion from hardwood to pines, or poorly designed road networks may have long lasting impacts. Changing climate suggests the need for close monitoring of BMP effectiveness and the development of new BMPs applicable to more extreme climatic conditions.

Citation

Vose, James M.; Ford, Chelcy R. 2011. Early successional forest habitats and water resources. In: Greenberg, C.; Collins, B.; Thompson, F., III. editors. Sustaining Young Forest Communities. Springer Series: Managing Forest Ecosystems, Volume 21, Chapter 14, pp. 253-269. Springer, New York.
Citations
https://www.fs.usda.gov/research/treesearch/38729