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Thinning Red Pine Plantations and the Langsaeter Hypothesis: A Northern Minnesota Case Study

Authors: Gilmore Daniel W.1; O'Brien Timothy C.1; Hoganson Howard M.1

Source: Northern Journal of Applied Forestry, Volume 22, Number 1, March 2005 , pp. 19-26(8)

Abstract:

The Langsaeter hypothesis states, “The total production of cubic volume by a stand of given age and composition on a given site is, for all practical purposes, constant and optimum for a wide range of density of stocking. It can be decreased, but not increased, by altering the amount of growing stock to levels outside this range.” We used a multistep approach to test this hypothesis in a 46-year-old red pine plantation growing on a site of moderate quality in northern Minnesota. First, we used stem analysis data to construct tree-level red pine volume equations and compared them to existing equations. We then calculated stand-level volume. Doing this allowed us to evaluate the performance of two stand-level volume prediction equations, a growth and yield spreadsheet package, and a computer simulation model using 10-year pre- and post-thinning measurements. Tree volume prediction equations were similar to existing equations. For 10-year projections, the stand-level volume prediction equations and growth projection models provided volume estimates within 10% of actual volumes on average. Ten-year post-thinning measurements showed that a geometric, strip thinning to 100 ft2 of basal area resulted in a 40% volume gain, a crown thinning to 125 ft2 of basal area a 35% volume gain, and a low thinning to 140 ft2 of basal area a 30% volume gain, while an unharvested control had a 22% gain in volume relative to residual stand volumes. Although we found the 10-year volume growth varied less than 1 cord ac-1 between residual growing stock volumes retained in this study, we do not have strong evidence to support the Langsaeter hypothesis for red pine.

Keywords: Growth and yield; silviculture; tree growth; volume equations

Document Type: Regular article

Affiliations: 1: Department of Forest Resources, North Central Research and Outreach Center University of Minnesota 1861 Highway 169 East Grand Rapids MN 55744-3396

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