Authors
Christel C Kern, Julia I Burton, Patricia Raymond, Anthony W D'Amato, William S Keeton, Alejandro A Royo, Michael B Walters, Christopher R Webster, John L Willis
Publication date
2017/1/1
Source
Forestry: An International Journal of Forest Research
Volume
90
Issue
1
Pages
4-17
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Description
Gap-based silvicultural systems were developed under the assumption that richness, and diversity of tree species and other biota positively respond to variation in size of harvest-created canopy gaps. However, varying gap size alone often does not meet diversity objectives and broader goals to address contemporary forest conditions. Recent research highlights the need to consider site factors and history, natural disturbance models, within-gap structure and recruitment requirements in addition to light resources for desired tree diversity. This synthesis brings together silvicultural developments and ecological literature on gap-based management, highlighting interactions with other factors such as microsite conditions, non-tree vegetation and more. We pose a revised concept for managers and researchers to use in prescriptions and studies focused on integrated overstory and understory manipulations that …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
CC Kern, JI Burton, P Raymond, AW D'Amato… - Forestry: An International Journal of Forest Research, 2017