2009
DOI: 10.2980/16-4-3252
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Augmentation du couvert en peuplier faux-tremble dans les pessières noires du nord-ouest du Québec après coupe totale

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Cited by 38 publications
(35 citation statements)
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“…However, its presence in the more northerly black spruce forests of the claybelt region of Quebec and Ontario was likely restricted mostly to localized upland sites prior to large-scale industrial forest harvesting. While Chen and Wang (2006) found virtually no increase in hardwood density following group seed tree and careful logging in lowland black spruce forests of the Ontario claybelt, other studies in northeastern Ontario (Brumelis and Carleton 1988, Carleton and MacLellan 1994, Carleton 2000 and northwestern Quebec (Grondin et al 2003a, Laquerre et al 2009 confirm that aspen's northerly expansion into the black spruce forest is indeed occurring and is a relatively recent, industrially driven phenomenon.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 76%
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“…However, its presence in the more northerly black spruce forests of the claybelt region of Quebec and Ontario was likely restricted mostly to localized upland sites prior to large-scale industrial forest harvesting. While Chen and Wang (2006) found virtually no increase in hardwood density following group seed tree and careful logging in lowland black spruce forests of the Ontario claybelt, other studies in northeastern Ontario (Brumelis and Carleton 1988, Carleton and MacLellan 1994, Carleton 2000 and northwestern Quebec (Grondin et al 2003a, Laquerre et al 2009 confirm that aspen's northerly expansion into the black spruce forest is indeed occurring and is a relatively recent, industrially driven phenomenon.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 76%
“…While the extent of this recent local expansion has been variable, depending on the size and density of previous aspen patches and site factors (Laquerre et al 2009), it represents what could be the first wave of a more important forest cover transformation in the future. In effect, as this new landscape contains more aspen than 30 years ago, a longer-term transformation towards greater intolerant hardwood presence, possibly exacerbated by climate warming effects (Landhäusser et al (2010), is very likely if corrective measures are not taken.…”
Section: Implications For Managementmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Distance to the nearest main road (DistRoad) and agricultural area (DistAgri), as well as total road length per square kilometer within a radius of 15 and 25 km around the stand (DensRoad15Km and DensRoad25Km) was estimated and considered as proxies to control for the human effect on the natural environment. Anthropogenic disturbances change the landscape dynamics, acting at different scales of natural disturbances [47] particularly through fire occurrence (increased ignition sources). We know that changes in fire regimes as an interaction with forest harvesting have a direct impact on the composition and structure of forests [5,25].…”
Section: Predictive Variablesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Like stand-replacing fires, human activities naturally promote the establishment of shade-intolerant deciduous stands [47]. Distance to the nearest main road (DistRoad) and agricultural area (DistAgri), as well as total road length per square kilometer within a radius of 15 and 25 km around the stand (DensRoad15Km and DensRoad25Km) was estimated and considered as proxies to control for the human effect on the natural environment.…”
Section: Predictive Variablesmentioning
confidence: 99%