The Demographic Structure of European Aspen (Populus Tremula) Populations in Managed and Old-Growth Boreal Forests in Eastern Finland. Latva-Karjanmaa, T., Penttilä, R., & Siitonen, J. 37(6):1070–1081.
The Demographic Structure of European Aspen (Populus Tremula) Populations in Managed and Old-Growth Boreal Forests in Eastern Finland [link]Paper  doi  abstract   bibtex   
European aspen (Populus tremula L.) is a keystone species for biodiversity in boreal forests. However, large aspen have largely been removed from managed forests, whereas regeneration and the long-term persistence of mature trees in protected areas are matters of concern. We recorded the numbers of mature (≥20~cm diameter) aspen in old-growth and managed forests in eastern Finland, based on a large-scale inventory (11~400~ha, 36~000 living and dead trees). In addition, saplings and small aspen trees were surveyed on thirty-six 1 ha sample plots. The average volumes of mature living and dead aspen were 4.0 and 1.3~m3/ha in continuous old-growth forests and 0.2 and 0.6~m3/ha in managed forests, respectively. These results indicate that large aspen trees in managed forests are a legacy of the past, when forest landscapes were less intensively managed. We conclude that the long-term persistence of aspen in protected areas can only be secured by means of restoration measures that create gaps large enough for regeneration to occur. More emphasis should be given to sparing aspen during thinning and to retaining mature aspen during regeneration cutting in managed forests.
@article{latva-karjanmaaDemographicStructureEuropean2007,
  title = {The Demographic Structure of {{European}} Aspen ({{Populus}} Tremula) Populations in Managed and Old-Growth Boreal Forests in Eastern {{Finland}}},
  author = {Latva-Karjanmaa, Tarja and Penttilä, Reijo and Siitonen, Juha},
  date = {2007-06},
  journaltitle = {Can. J. For. Res.},
  volume = {37},
  pages = {1070--1081},
  doi = {10.1139/x06-289},
  url = {https://doi.org/10.1139/x06-289},
  abstract = {European aspen (Populus tremula L.) is a keystone species for biodiversity in boreal forests. However, large aspen have largely been removed from managed forests, whereas regeneration and the long-term persistence of mature trees in protected areas are matters of concern. We recorded the numbers of mature (≥20~cm diameter) aspen in old-growth and managed forests in eastern Finland, based on a large-scale inventory (11~400~ha, 36~000 living and dead trees). In addition, saplings and small aspen trees were surveyed on thirty-six 1 ha sample plots. The average volumes of mature living and dead aspen were 4.0 and 1.3~m3/ha in continuous old-growth forests and 0.2 and 0.6~m3/ha in managed forests, respectively. These results indicate that large aspen trees in managed forests are a legacy of the past, when forest landscapes were less intensively managed. We conclude that the long-term persistence of aspen in protected areas can only be secured by means of restoration measures that create gaps large enough for regeneration to occur. More emphasis should be given to sparing aspen during thinning and to retaining mature aspen during regeneration cutting in managed forests.},
  keywords = {*imported-from-citeulike-INRMM,~INRMM-MiD:c-13501299,age-distribution,finland,population-structuring,populus-tremula},
  number = {6}
}

Downloads: 0