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Northwest Advanced Renewables Alliance How do residual biomass removals affect long- term forest productivity?: Long-term Soil Productivity (LTSP) studies Scott M. Holub, Ph.D. Silviculture Research Scientist Weyerhaeuser Company Springfield Oregon February 18, 2015 MOSS Imagine Tomorrow Webinar

Northwest Advanced Renewables Alliance How do residual biomass removals affect long- term forest productivity?: Long-term Soil Productivity (LTSP) studies

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Northwest Advanced Renewables Alliance

How do residual biomass removals affect long-term forest productivity?:

Long-term Soil Productivity (LTSP) studies

Scott M. Holub, Ph.D.Silviculture Research Scientist

Weyerhaeuser CompanySpringfield Oregon

February 18, 2015MOSS Imagine Tomorrow Webinar

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OBJECTIVE OF TODAY'S PRESENTATION

• Briefly describe Weyerhaeuser Company and the processes we use to achieve sustainable site productivity and meet stewardship objectives to:

minimize soil erosion and harmful soil disturbance

maintain or enhance organic matter and soil nutrition

• Present information about two studies looking at the effects of biomass removal on Long Term Soil Productivity.

WEYERHAEUSER IS ONE OF THE WORLD’S

LARGEST PRIVATE FOREST LANDOWNERSAND HARVEST ONLY A SMALL PERCENTAGE EACH YEAR

~2.5 million acres in western Oregon and Washington

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WEYERHAEUSER FORESTRY

Weyerhaeuser Forestry has resource strategies for:

- Forest Products- Water Quality- Wildlife Habitat

-Soil Productivity

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WEYERHAEUSER FORESTRY

•Commitment to sustainable forestry:

Soil is an integral part of the forest – no crop can be managed sustainably without considering the soil that supports it.

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Organic Matter/Soil Nutrient - Management Principles

• Conserve organic matter/nutrients throughout the managed forest cycle

• Balance nutrient inputs/outputs through successive rotations

• Follow Best Management Practices

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SOIL & NUTRIENT MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES

Loss of topsoil and associated litter layers can reduce soil productivity potential by:

•Reducing organic matter - reduces moisture holding capacity/infiltration

•Relocating nutrients -- leading to localized areas of low soil fertility

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Soil aeration and macro-pore space are critical determinants of soil productivity:

–Soil compaction can be detrimental, neutral, or beneficial depending on the level of pore space and texture of the undisturbed soil and the degree of macro-pore space

–Disruption of pore space continuity can also impact water movement

SOIL & NUTRIENT MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES

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Soil productivity potential can be enhanced:

•Compacted soil layers -- soil cultivation

•Nutrient deficiencies -- nutrient amendments

SOIL & NUTRIENT MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES

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NARA Biomass Removal Research

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WHAT IS NARA?

NorthwestAdvancedRenewablesAlliance

www.nararenewables.org

NARA is the name given to the group of organizations involved in a $40 million biofuel grant from USDA AFRI.

Goal:Convert Douglas-fir woody biomass to jet fuel.

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ENVIRONMENTAL SUSTAINABILITYPart of NARA’s Mission:

… meet the high environmental standards of the Pacific Northwest.

15 | 8/13/2014

SOIL PRODUCTIVITY/SLASH REMOVALConcern:Removing slash removes nutrients and

compacts soil.

Question:Does slash harvest for biofuel feedstock affect future site growth capacity?

Implications: Sustainability / Carbon neutrality / Policy

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LONG TERM SOIL PRODUCTIVITY NETWORK

Map Credit: Andy Scott, USFS

Regional Studies in Coastal

Douglas-fir

Matlock, WAFall River, WA

Molalla, ORNARA LTSP

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NARA LTSP TIMELINE

2012 – Site indentified/plotted – 83 acres near Springfield, Oregon. 28 1-acre plots.Soil nutrients (June/July) / Pre-harvest tree, etc. measurements (Sept/Oct).

2013 – Harvest (Feb-May) / Biomass removal and compaction treatments (May-July). Install weather instruments and soil water collection (July-Sept). Fence site (Nov) 2014 – Plant seedlings, initial tree measurements (March/April).First season tree measurements / 15 year measurements at Fall River LTSPContinue monitoring site conditions / Grad student projects.

2015 – Second-year tree measurements (Oct). Report drafted by mid-2016.

2016-beyond Monitor site conditions, measure trees at year 5, 10, 15, etc.

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CompactionOM Removal

C0 – No compaction C1 - Moderate compaction

OM0 – Bole only OM0 C0Boles removed /No compaction

OM0 C1Boles removed /Moderate compaction

OM1 - Boles and crowns removed

OM1 C0Boles & crowns removed /No compaction

OM1 C1Boles & crowns removed /Moderate compaction

OM2 - Boles, crowns, forest floor removed

OM2 C1Boles, crowns & forest floor removed /Moderate compaction

* F&G = + mid-rotation fertilization

NARA LTSP Treatments-L

evels

of

Sla

sh

Rem

oval-

A C

B D/F*

E/G*

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NARA POST-TREATMENT AERIAL PHOTO

Photo taken October 2013 – Post treatment – looking west across the north part of the study

Total Tree Removal

No Forest Floor

Bole only Removal

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NARA LTSP - TREATMENT LAYOUT

Bole only / No compTotal Tree/ No compTotal Tree/ Compacted

Bole only/ CompactedForest Floor/ CompTotal Tree/ Compacted*Forest Floor/ Comp*

* With mid-rotation fertilization

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NARA POST-TREATMENT CONDITIONS

Good separation. Pre-harvest range also shown

A

B

C

D/F

E/GPre-harvest range

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INSTRUMENTATION - NARA LTSP

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• Standard Weather Stations (2)– Harvested area – Forest

Every plot (28) + 4 in Forest:• Soil moisture and temperature

– 10, 20, 30, 100 cm

• 15 cm Air temperature and Relative Humidity

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COLLABORATION - NARA LTSP

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• Jim Rivers / Matt Betts– OSU– Wildlife: Pollinators

• Jeff Hatten / Adrian Gallo – OSU – Soil Nutrients, Carbon/respiration

• Rob Harrison / Marcella Menegale – UW – Nutrient leaching

• Mike Barber / Mohammad Hasan– U. Utah (WSU) – Water issues / Microbial assessment

• Larger LTSP Network

Looking for more…

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PRELIMINARY RESULTS: SOIL TEMPERATURE

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Fall River LTSP

Weyerhaeuser's 15 year oldSoil Productivitystudy in western Washington

Summer 2009

Block 1

Block 2Block 3

Block 4

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FALL RIVER LTSP - OBJECTIVES

Determine the impact of:

Biomass removalCompaction and tillage Weed control(Fertilization)on stand productivity and soil and nutrient processes in a fertile Pacific Northwest Douglas-fir plantation

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BIOMASS REMOVAL TREATMENTS

Bole only (BO)Conventional harvest

Total-tree plus all coarse woody debris (TT+)

Total tree

Bole only to 5-cm top

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BIOMASS REMOVAL - TREE VOLUME AGE 10

Reference Treatment

No significant difference

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COMPACTION +/- TILLAGE TREATMENT

47% of area trafficked during shovel-yardingAerial view

“Non-compacted”Cable-Yarding

“Compacted” Shovel-Yarding

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COMPACTION/TILLAGE - TREE VOLUME

Reference Treatment

No significant difference

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FALL RIVER LTSP - CONCLUSIONSAt this productive, nutrient rich site very modest, if any, declines in tree growth were seen in high biomass removal vs standard practices.

Compaction/Disturbance at the level we did had no negative effects on tree growth.

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GENERAL LTSP - CONCLUSIONSAcross the network of other LTSP sites generally we don’t see large losses in productivity from the experimental removal of residual biomass.

Where fall-down has occurred it was on sites with low nutrient levels prior to harvest so those are potentially the most at risk.

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End