Post-Harvest Nitrogen Cycling in Clearcut and Alternative Silvicultural Systems in a Montane Forest in Coastal British Columbia

The Montane Alternative Silvicultural Systems trial was designed to compare the ecological effects of traditional clearcutting against alternative silvicultural systems regarding forest nutrient dynamics in coastal British Columbia. Researchers observed that while harvesting led to a slight, short-lived increase in soil nitrogen availability, the resulting fluxes of nitrogen below the rooting zone were negligible. A key finding was that mineralized nitrogen remained predominantly in the form of ammonium, and subsequent nitrate increases were primarily due to decreased microbial consumption rather than increased production. The study concluded that since the estimated nitrogen losses from the rooting zone were minimal compared to vast soil reserves and natural atmospheric inputs, harvesting is unlikely to negatively impact future site productivity.

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Natural Resources Canada

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Author B.D. Titus, C.E. Prescott, D.G. Maynard, A.K. Mitchell, R.L. Bradley, M.C. Feller, W.J. Beese, B.A. Seely, R.A. Benton, J.P. Senyk, B.J. Hawkins, R. Koppenaal
Publication Year 2006
Descriptive Location Campbell River
License Creative Commons Non-Commercial, No-Derivatives (CC BY-NC-ND)
Last Updated January 28, 2026, 18:19 (UTC)
Created January 28, 2026, 18:19 (UTC)