Effects of advance regeneration and germinated seedlings on forest recovery after clearcutting of Chamaecyparis obtusa plantations in Southern Kyushu, Southwestern Japan

2021 
We clarified the effect of advance regeneration on natural forest recovery after clearcutting of conifer plantations over the mid-term observation period (12–14 years to allow formation of the forest canopy). We established understory-intact plot (UI-plot), where advance regeneration (AR; DBH more than 1 cm before clearcutting) were retained, and understory-cleared plot (UC-plot), where all ARs were removed at felling of conifer crops. We surveyed individual density, species richness, and tree height with reference to different regeneration origins 1 year after and 12 or 14 years after clearcutting. Then, we compared the structural changes in UI-plot with that in UC-plot. The resprouted AR in UC-plot has provided the same effect as the retained AR in UI-plot in forming their height distribution patterns and stratification over a mid-term recovery process. We also found that individual density and species richness attributed by the individuals of newly established seedlings after clearcutting (SE), have contributed to the stand development in the both plots. Furthermore, SE was found to have a large contribution to forest recovery in terms of tree density and species number, while its significance for the recovery of gravity-dispersal, lucidophyllous trees was limited. We concluded that the advantage of AR retention is limited to the fast recovery of forest structure at the early stage after clearcutting, and mostly disappeared over a mid-term observation period as far as abundant advance regeneration was sufficiently accumulated and surrounding seed sources were effectively secured.
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