• Title of article

    Soil erosion after Eucalyptus globulus clearcutting: differences between logging slash disposal treatments

  • Author/Authors

    Fernandez، Cristina نويسنده , , Vega، Jose A. نويسنده , , Gras، Jose M. نويسنده , , Fonturbel، Teresa نويسنده , , Cuinas، Pedro نويسنده , , Dambrine، Etienne نويسنده , , Alonso، Margarita نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
  • Pages
    -84
  • From page
    85
  • To page
    0
  • Abstract
    The effect of different logging slash disposal techniques on soil erosion for 3 years after harvesting was evaluated in a clear-felled Eucalyptus globulus Labill. stand on a representative coastal site in Galicia (NW Spain). The treatments compared were: slash scattering; slash scattering+fertilization; windrowing; scattering+burning (broadcast burning) and windrowing+strip burning (windrow burning). Accumulated soil losses were relatively small and particularly in slash scattering treatments. Both burning treatments resulted in significantly higher losses (between 7 and 110 times) than the other disposal methods. Broadcast burning generated less erosion than windrow burning in the first year after treatment but not in the second. The severe burning conditions in windrow burns reduced drastically the protective soil organic layer. Slash scattered (alone or combined with fertilization) on the ground was the most efficient treatment and gave negligible soil losses. Cover by slash or litter and duff significantly controlled soil losses. In burn treatments, remaining slash and litter+duff reduced soil losses. The duration of soil heating significantly affected the remaining soil organic cover on burned soils and this, in turn, was significantly influenced by surface soil moisture content immediately before burning. Soil moisture content just before burns was the key to constrain soil losses after slash burning.
  • Keywords
    Clearcutting , Logging slash disposal , Soil erosion , Burning , harvesting , E. globulus
  • Journal title
    FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT
  • Serial Year
    2004
  • Journal title
    FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT
  • Record number

    119815