Salvage Logging by Indigenous People in a Chilean Conifer Forest

Smith-Ramirez C.; Maturana V.; Gaxiola, A; Carmona, M.

Keywords: Burned forests; Cubication; Deadwood; Ethnoecology; Fitzroya cupressoides; Southern temperate forests

Abstract

Salvage logging has been described as a controversial environmental practice in developed countries, but in developing countries this conflict has not been evaluated. We describe salvage logging of Fitzroya cupressoides, an endemic conifer of the South American temperate forests. In Chile, the Huilliche-an ethnical group-extract deadwood of Fitzroya to produce sawn timber and shingles. The objectives of this study were (i) to estimate the volume of deadwood that is removed by salvage logging performed by Huilliches and (ii) to evaluate the effects of this local activity on the regeneration of Fitzroya, especially regarding the amount of waste wood left behind. In 54 (10 x 10 m) plots we measured length, height and dbh of logs, snags, and stumps. We quantified the regeneration of Fitzroya by counting all individuals with heights below 2 m. Each plot was characterized by its altitude, slope, aspect, microtopography, canopy cover, and quantity of waste wood covering the forest soil. We found a total of 279.51 m(3) of deadwood of which 53.9% was rotten and 3.6% was used to make sawn timber and shingles. Contrary to expected, the number of seedlings (1-50 cm) was positively related to waste wood. Juvenile's density (1-200 cm) was mainly explained by altitude, microtopography, and the interaction of these variables with slope. We concluded that salvage logging by Huilliches is an activity that removes a minimum of the ecosystem biomass. It apparently has no negative effects on the regeneration of Fitzroya, which is explained mainly by biotic and some abiotic factors, especially altitude.

Más información

Título según WOS: Salvage Logging by Indigenous People in a Chilean Conifer Forest
Título según SCOPUS: Salvage logging by indigenous people in a Chilean Conifer forest
Título de la Revista: FOREST SCIENCE
Volumen: 60
Número: 6
Editorial: Oxford University Press
Fecha de publicación: 2014
Página de inicio: 1100
Página final: 1106
Idioma: English
DOI:

10.5849/forsci.12-079

Notas: ISI, SCOPUS