Skip to main content

Petawawa Research Forest - Treatments

Hero Banner

Management Goals & Treatments

A team of natural resource specialists from the Canadian Forest Service, regional managers, and scientists participated in a three-day workshop in July 2019 to develop the ASCC treatments for the site. Within the region, white pine forests are typically managed under the uniform shelterwood system that includes 1-3 partial harvests (preparatory, seed cut, first removal) designed to support regeneration establishment by providing a seed source and regulating light conditions. Once the white pine regeneration has surpassed a height of 6 meters (20 ft), the threat of weevil damage is minimized and the remaining overstory is harvested leaving a single-age stand to grow to maturity. The number of harvests will depend on the health, composition and basal area of the pre-harvest stand. For example, stands with lower pine components often have only the seed cut and a final removal.

The team developed a set of management objectives, desired future conditions, and silvicultural tactics for each of the ASCC Network adaptation options (Resistance, Resilience, and Transition). The ASCC project at the PRF will have 5 treatments: Control (business as usual), Resistance, Resilience, Transition, and un-treated reference conditions (no action). In each scenario, the existing forest is harvested and renewal activities initiated. 

Resistance

maintain relatively unchanged conditions over time

*Achieve the Desired Future Condition (DFC) with mild deviation from standard strategies & approaches at the Petawawa Research Forest 

Management Goals:

  • Regenerate a well-stocked, productive, pine-dominated stand (white pine and other drought-tolerant species common to the site) 

  • Maintain or increase production of high quality sawlogs and other forest products

  • Manage for wildlife habitat and mitigation of pests through partial harvesting and planned retention of the original overstory species

  • Establish white pine adapted to future climate conditions

Strategies & Approaches: 

  • Two-cut shelterwood 

    • Seed cut, 12-14 m2/ha residual (129-151 ft2/acre) basal area 

    • Final cut when height of white pine regeneration is 6 meters, 600 stems/ha (243 stems/ acre) of desirable species; approx. 20 years

  • Mechanical site preparation (MSIP) following harvest for slash management and seedbed creation

  • Chemical site preparation (CHSIP) 1 year after MSIP for understory vegetation management

  • In autumn following CHSIP, plant 1250 seedlings/ha (500 seedlings/acre)

    • 250 local white pine

    • 300 white pine optimized for 2011-2040 climate

    • 350 white pine optimized for 2041-2070 climate

    • 350 white pine optimized for 2071-2100 climate

  • Allow for natural regeneration of white pine, red pine, red oak and spruce.

  • Tending as needed to ensure survival and growth of target species

  • Thinning (pre- and/or commercial) to accelerate sawlog production

  • Final rotation in 80-100 years

Resilience

allow some change in current conditions, but encourage eventual return to original conditions

*Achieve a similar Desired Future Condition (DFC) with moderate deviation from standard strategies & approaches at the Petawawa Research Forest 

Management Goals:

  • Create a well-stocked, multi-aged structure (promote species composition of white pine > red oak > aspen > red pine > other species) 

  • Maintain/increase productivity and quality of wood products, and diversify wood products, including pine sawlogs  

  • Promote low susceptibility to disturbances, including drought, wildfire, wind, ice storms, insects and diseases

  • Enhance species diversity particularly among dominant species (including functional diversity, structural diversity, and genetic diversity)

  • Establish trees adapted to future climate conditions

  • Increase resilience to low intensity wildfires and reduce susceptibility to stand-replacing wildfires

  • Manage for wildlife habitat and mitigation of pests by utilizing expanding gaps to create a multi-aged stand with a gradient of light conditions.

Strategies & Approaches: 

  • Irregular shelterwood with expanding gaps

    • Clearcut gaps 30 m diameter (707 m2; 0.2 acre)

    • Additional 10 m feathered edge thinned like shelterwood seed cut (1257 m2; 0.3 acre)

    • Gaps + Edges (0.2 ha; 0.5 acre) allocated to cover 20-25% of the stand area

    • Gap expansion every 15-20 years

    • Subsequent plantings allow adjustment of species and seed zones to reflect changing climatic conditions

  • CHSIP 1 year after harvest for understory vegetation management

  • In autumn following CHSIP, plant 1400 seedlings/ha (570 seedlings/acre)

    • 420 white pine optimized for 2011-2040 climate

    • 420 white pine optimized for 2041-2070 climate

    • 210 red oak optimized for 2011-2040 climate

    • 210 red oak optimized for 2041-2070 climate

    • 140 white oak optimized for 2011-2040 climate

  • Allow for natural regeneration of pines and oaks

  • Tending as needed to ensure survival and growth of target species

  • Each expansion allows adjustments of species and seed zones to reflect changing climatic conditions and knowledge

Transition

Actively facilitate change to encourage adaptive responses

Management Goals:

  • Provide quality wood products  

  • Promote a diverse species mix that is adapted to drought, wildfire, wind, ice storms, insects, and diseases, and adapted to future climate conditions

  • Maintain wildlife habitat through structural retention and an increase in mast species

Strategies & Approaches: 

  • Clearcut with seed trees; retain 16-35 stems/ha of dispersed large white and/or red pine to

    retain structure and provide a limited seed source for natural regeneration

  • MSIP following harvest for slash management and seedbed creation 

  • CHSIP 1 year after MSIP for understory vegetation management

  • In autumn following CHSIP, plant 1760 seedlings/ha (710 seedlings/acre)

    • 165 local red pine

    • 165 red pine optimized for 2041-2070 climate

    • 600 pitch pine optimized for 2011-2040 climate

    • 500 red oak optimized for 2041-2070 climate

    • 330 white oak optimized for 2011-2040 climate

  • Tending as needed to ensure survival and growth of desired species

  • Species mix will be conducive to commercial thinning and irregular shelterwood management after 60-80 years

No Action

allow forests to respond to climate change without direct management intervention

Since climate change impacts all forests globally, we cannot maintain a true “control.” With this in mind, we consider an approach in which forests are allowed to respond to climate change in the absence of direct silvicultural intervention as an appropriate baseline for many questions.

“BUSINESS AS USUAL” CONTROL

*Standard strategies and approaches to achieve the Desired Future Condition (DFC) at the Petawawa Research Forest 

Management Goals: 

Under a no-change scenario, the DFC at maturity (100 years) for white pine forests in the region is:

  • Regenerate a well-stocked, productive, pine-dominated stand (white pine and other drought-tolerant species common to the site)

  • Maintain or increase production of high quality sawlogs and other forest products

  • Manage for wildlife habitat and mitigation of pests through partial harvesting and planned retention of the original overstory species

Strategies & Approaches (mature stands, 30-40 m2/ha (320-430 ft2 /acre), 60-80% white and red pine): 

  • Two-cut shelterwood

    • Seed cut 12-14 m2/ha (52-60 ft2/acre) basal area

    • Final cut when height of white pine regeneration is 6 meters (20 ft) and contains 600 stems/ha (243 stems/acre) of desirable species

  • Mechanical and chemical site preparation (MSIP) following harvest for slash management and seedbed creation

  • Chemical site preparation (CHSIP) 1 year after MSIP for understory vegetation management

  • In autumn following CHSIP, plant 1125 seedlings/ha (455 seedlings/acre) of white pine from local seed zones, and 125 seedlings/ha (50 seedlings/acre) of red pine from local sources

  • Allow for natural regeneration of white pine, red pine, red oak, and spruce

  • Tending as needed until final cut to ensure species composition targets is achieved

  • Final rotation in 80-100 years