Ecosystem Management in Paludified Boreal Forests - Enhancing Wood Production, Biodiversity, and Carbon Sequestration at the Landscape Level

This paper examines ecosystem management strategies for the paludified boreal forests of Canada, emphasizing how to simultaneously enhance wood production, biodiversity, and carbon sequestration. The authors delve into how natural disturbances, particularly fire severity, influence forest dynamics, soil properties, and the diversity of plant and invertebrate communities. They then contrast these natural processes with the impacts of different logging methods on soil, productivity, and understory vegetation, highlighting how traditional clearcutting and careful logging compare to natural fire regimes. Finally, the paper discusses the critical role of these forests in carbon sequestration and proposes management approaches that emulate natural disturbances to maintain old-growth forest characteristics and mitigate climate change.

Data and Materials

Organization

University of Quebec

No description provided

Additional Info

Field Value
Author B. Lafleur, N. J. Fenton, M. Simard, A. Leduc, D. Pare, O. Valeria, Y. Bergeron
Publication Year 2018
License Creative Commons Attribution
Last Updated January 28, 2026, 18:06 (UTC)
Created January 28, 2026, 18:04 (UTC)