Variable retention harvesting in Victoria’s Mountain Ash (Eucalyptus regnans) forests (southeastern Australia)
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Lindenmayer, David B
Blair, David
McBurney, Lachlan
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Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Abstract
Variable retention harvesting is a silvicultural system that focuses on retaining key elements of stand structure at
the time of logging and is increasingly being used worldwide. We describe the design and establishment of a
variable retention harvesting experiment established in the Mountain Ash (Eucalyptus regnans) forests of the Central
Highlands of Victoria, south-eastern Australia. The experiment was instigated in 2003, and the work to date has
shown that it has environmental benefits for certain groups of small mammals, birds, and vascular plants. The
experiment has been integrated with an ongoing long-term monitoring program as well as other experiments such
as those in post-fire salvage-logged areas. Collectively, the results of various studies suggest that the potential value
of variable retention harvesting extends beyond green-tree logging to post-fire salvage logging environments.
We outline some of the challenges in, and new perspectives derived from, implementing and maintaining our
experiment. This included difficulties protecting islands from high-intensity post-harvest regeneration burns and
threat of declining funding undermining ongoing project viability. A critically important perspective concerns the
ecological and economic context in which variable retention harvesting is implemented. In the particular case of
Mountain Ash forests, assessments using formal IUCN criteria classify the ecosystem as being Critically Endangered
under the Red Listed Ecosystem approach. As a result, Mountain Ash forests are at a high risk of ecosystem
collapse. Further logging will increase that risk, making the basis for continued harvesting questionable. In addition,
economic analyses suggest that the value of natural assets, like water production, far outweigh the value of the
wood products harvested from the Mountain Ash ecosystem, again leading to questions about the viability of
ongoing harvesting. We therefore conclude that whilst variable retention harvesting has the potential to contribute
to biodiversity conservation in Mountain Ash forests, broader ecological and economic contextual issues (such as
the values of competing resources like water yields and the heavily degraded state of the forest) may erode the
case for its broader application.
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Ecological Processes
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Open Access
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Open Access This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made.