We investigated yellow birch (Betula alleghaniensis Britt.) growth patterns and disturbance frequency before and after the advent of selection harvesting at the Ford Forestry Center in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, USA, through the use of tree-ring analysis. Based on the boundary-line release detection procedure, 88% of the trees in our sample (n = 67) displayed evidence of at least one moderate or major release. Prior to active forest management, releases were infrequent, and trees that originated during that period had growth histories consistent with establishment after large-scale disturbances (i.e., large canopy gaps, \u3e 200 m2). Conversely, tree cohorts that recruited to the canopy more recently displayed a growth pattern suggest...
In forest ecosystems, disturbance intensity affects the ability of species with varying shade tolera...
The creation of natural canopy gaps is an important ecological process in the Acadian forest. Design...
The canopy is one of the last frontiers of forest research, due to the difficulty of gaining direct ...
We examined the short-term effects of group-selection harvesting with seed tree retention on the div...
Group selection and gap-based silvicultural systems are often proposed to promote compositional and ...
Minimum opening sizes and time required for successful canopy recruitment of tree saplings are not w...
After decades focused on promoting economically valuable species, management of northern temperate f...
Conventional forestry practices in Great Lakes northern hardwoods tend to promote the regeneration o...
Northern hardwood stands in the Great Lakes region are often managed using single-tree selection, wh...
Innovative forestry practices that use natural disturbance and stand developmental processes as mode...
Northern hardwood forests in the Upper Great Lakes region—often existing on mesic, nutrient-rich sit...
The recruitment of saplings in forest stands into merchantable stems is a very complex process, thus...
Uneven-aged northern hardwoods of the Great Lakes region are managed primarily through single-tree s...
Group selection is one potential tool in contemporary, uneven-aged silviculture for mitigating incre...
The response of forest regeneration to canopy gap formation plays a key role in forest stand dynamic...
In forest ecosystems, disturbance intensity affects the ability of species with varying shade tolera...
The creation of natural canopy gaps is an important ecological process in the Acadian forest. Design...
The canopy is one of the last frontiers of forest research, due to the difficulty of gaining direct ...
We examined the short-term effects of group-selection harvesting with seed tree retention on the div...
Group selection and gap-based silvicultural systems are often proposed to promote compositional and ...
Minimum opening sizes and time required for successful canopy recruitment of tree saplings are not w...
After decades focused on promoting economically valuable species, management of northern temperate f...
Conventional forestry practices in Great Lakes northern hardwoods tend to promote the regeneration o...
Northern hardwood stands in the Great Lakes region are often managed using single-tree selection, wh...
Innovative forestry practices that use natural disturbance and stand developmental processes as mode...
Northern hardwood forests in the Upper Great Lakes region—often existing on mesic, nutrient-rich sit...
The recruitment of saplings in forest stands into merchantable stems is a very complex process, thus...
Uneven-aged northern hardwoods of the Great Lakes region are managed primarily through single-tree s...
Group selection is one potential tool in contemporary, uneven-aged silviculture for mitigating incre...
The response of forest regeneration to canopy gap formation plays a key role in forest stand dynamic...
In forest ecosystems, disturbance intensity affects the ability of species with varying shade tolera...
The creation of natural canopy gaps is an important ecological process in the Acadian forest. Design...
The canopy is one of the last frontiers of forest research, due to the difficulty of gaining direct ...