Titel
Best Management Practices, Erosion, Residual Woody Biomass, and Soil Disturbances Within Biomass and Conventional Clearcut Harvests in Virginia’s Coastal Plain
Verfasser
Erscheinungsjahr
2023
Material
Artikel aus einer Zeitschrift
Standardsignatur
7380
Datensatznummer
200210556
Quelle
Abstract
Forest residue utilization for energy has increased in the southeastern United States and additional increases are anticipated. However, such removals generate concerns regarding potential accelerated erosion and nutrient drains, which could affect site productivity and stream water quality. To address erosion and water quality concerns, postharvest erosion rates, operational feature areas, best management practice (BMP) implementation, residual ground cover, soil disturbance, and forest residue concentrations were evaluated on ten biomass and ten conventional clearcut harvests in Virginia’s Coastal Plain. No significant differences in erosion rates (P = 0.4727) were observed between biomass (0.71 tons ac-1 yr-1) and conventional (0.61 tons ac-1 yr-1) harvests. BMP compliance percentages were similar (P = 0.6776) for both biomass (88.54%) and conventional (90.99%) harvests. BMP implementation scores were determined to be a significant predictor of erosion rates (P < 0.0001). A significant reduction (28%) in postharvest residue concentrations was observed for biomass (10.22 tons ac-1) versus conventional harvests (14.24 tons ac-1) (P = 0.0173). Scores for BMP implementation and erosion rates were not significantly different between treatments, indicating that sufficient residual biomass exists for appropriate implementation of BMPs. BMPs provided similar erosion protection on both biomass and conventional clearcut harvests.