Soils are included as a key resource value under the Forest and Range Practices Act (FRPA).
Soil conservation research is being conducted in an effort to make sure the provincial government is achieving objectives for soil productivity as specified by FRPA.
Provincial forest management strives to be consistent with FRPA objectives. Soil conservation research is aimed at improving scientific understanding of how this can best be achieved. Ongoing soils research in all areas of the province addresses a wide variety of issues affecting natural resource management.
Objectives
The underlying assumption being tested in the long-term soil productivity (LTSP) research study is that forest management practices that alter soil porosity and site organic matter can lead to undesirable changes in site productivity (biomass production). The LTSP study:
Determines the effects of different levels of organic matter (above-ground biomass and forest floor) retention and soil compaction on long-term forest soil productivity on a range of sites and ecological conditions.
Studies the long-term effects of organic matter removal and soil compaction on soil nutrient status, soil physical properties, soil microclimate, soil biological activity, biodiversity of soil organisms, and nutrient cycling.
Identifies causal relationships between soil properties that are altered by soil disturbance and long-term forest productivity.
Investigates the influence of ecosystem unit on the effects of soil disturbance on long-term soil productivity.
Provides research sites for detailed studies into forest soils, nutrient cycling, forest productivity, and reclamation.
Provides sites that illustrate the effects of soil disturbance on forest productivity for extension/demonstration purposes.
Extends the results to operations, resource management, and policy evolution to demonstrate and ensure sustainable forest development
Summary
The long-term soil productivity (LTSP) study was established to demonstrate how alteration of soil porosity and organic matter affects soil processes and site productivity in B.C. forests. In B.C. there are LTSP study sites in Skeena, Omineca, Cariboo, Kootenay-Boundary, Northeast and Thompson-Okanagan regions.
The experimental design is a 3 x 3 factorial with 3 levels of organic matter removal and 3 levels of soil compaction. There are three replicate blocks in the Sub-boreal Spruce (SBS) biogeoclimatic zone with one replicate in each of the Skeena, Omineca, and Cariboo Natural Resource Regions. The replicated site in the Boreal White and Black Spruce (BWBS) zone is in the Northeast Region. The fully replicated Interior Douglas-fir (IDF) zone installation on common, acidic forest soil is in the Thompson Okanagan Region. The fully replicated IDF installation on calcareous soils is in the Kootenay Boundary Region. Two replicates are being installed in the Interior Cedar Hemlock (ICH) zone to complete an installation initiated by the USDA Forest Service in Idaho.
The LTSP is a full rotation length study of the impacts of soil disturbance on site productivity, therefore short-term responses to soil disturbance treatments need to be interpreted with caution. The LTSP is the only replicated long-term study of soil productivity and the effects of soil disturbance in the world. The Long-Term Soil Productivity program is the world's largest co-ordinated effort to understand how soil disturbance affects long-term forest productivity. To be competitive in the global market, BC must demonstrate that it is carrying out research on the impacts of site disturbance on forest productivity. To better manage the forest resource and to incorporate science into decision making, BC must invest in long-term studies that provide concrete results that can be applied to the refinement of forest practices, regulations, guidebooks, and 'best management practices'.
Interim Results
Ongoing Products and Benefits
Study Sites
Site number |
Site name |
Natural Resource Region |
Location |
---|---|---|---|
BWBS-1,2,3 |
Kiskatinaw |
Northeast |
40 km N of Dawson Creek |
SBS-1 PG |
Log Lake |
Omineca |
65 km N of Prince George |
SBS-2 SM |
Topley |
Skeena |
12 km N of Topley |
SBS-3 WL |
Skulow Lake |
Cariboo |
30 km E of Williams Lake |
IDF-1 DC |
Dairy Creek |
Thompson Okanagan |
30 km NW of Kamloops |
IDF-2 BP |
Black Pines |
Thompson Okanagan |
50 km N of Kamloops |
IDF-3 OL |
O'Connor Lake |
Thompson Okanagan |
40 km N of Kamloops |
IDF Nel-1 |
Mud Creek |
Kootenay Boundary |
70 km N of Cranbrook |
IDF Nel-2 |
Emily Creek |
Kootenay Boundary |
80 km N of Cranbrook |
IDF Nel-3 |
Kootenay East |
Kootenay Boundary |
75 km N of Cranbrook |
ICH-1 |
Rover Creek |
Kootenay Boundary |
15 km W of Nelson |
ICH-2 |
McPhee Creek* |
Kootenay Boundary |
5 km E of Castlegar |
Online Publications
Technical Note 122 . Long-term Soil Productivity Study: the Effects of Soil Compaction and Organic matter Removal on Long-term Soil Productivity in British Columbia (E.P. 1148): Establishment Report.
LTSPS Research Note 01 Second year response of plant communities; The SBS Long-term Soil Productivity Study
LTSPS Research Note 02 Fourth Year Responses of Aspen and White Spruce; The BWBS Long-Term Soil Productivity Study
LTSPS Research Note 03 Fourth-Year Plant Community Responses: The BWBS Long-Term Soil Productivity Study
LTSPS Research Note 04 Nutrient Removals in Woody Biomass: Preliminary Estimates from the Sub-Boreal Spruce Long-Term Soil Productivity Study
LTSPS Research Note 05 Soil Fauna in the Sub-Boreal Spruce (SBS) Installations of the Long-Term Soil Productivity (LTSP) Study of Central British Columbia: One-Year Results for Soil Mesofauna and Macrofauna
LTSPS Research Note 06 Aspen and white spruce responses to organic matter removal and soil compaction in the BWBS Long-Term Soil Productivity Study
LTSPS Research Note 07 Short-term Effects of Forest Soil Compaction and Site Organic Matter Removal on Mineralizable Soil Nitrogen in Central British
LTSPS Research Note 08 Establishment of Long-term Soil Productivity Studies on Acidic Soils in the Interior Douglas-fir Zone.
The Long-Term Soil Productivity Study in British Columbia. FRDA report 256.
Soil compaction and soil organic matter loss: criteria for long-term soil productivity. Poster presented at 2003 North America Forest Soils Conference.
Journal Articles from LTSP in BC and NA
Wilhelm RC, Cardenas E, Maas KR, Leung H, McNeil L, Berch S, Chapman W, Hope G, Kranabetter JM, Dubé S, Busse M, Fleming R, Hazlett P, Webster KL, Morris D, Scott DA and Mohn WW. 2017. Biogeography and organic matter removal shape long-term effects of timber harvesting on forest soil microbial communities. The ISME Journal 1–17
Kranabetter, J.M., Haeussler, S., and Wood, C. 2017. Vulnerability of boreal indicators (ground beetles, understory plants and ectomycorrhizal fungi) to severe soil disturbance. Forest Ecology and Management 402: 213-222.
Kranabetter, J.M., Dube, S, and Lilles E.B. 2017. An investigation into the contrasting growth response of lodgepole pine and white spruce to harvest-related soil disturbance. Canadian Journal of Forest Research 47: 340-348.
Cardenas E, Kranabetter JM, Hope G, Maas KR, Hallam S, and Mohn WW. 2015. Forest harvesting reduces the soil metagenomic potential for biomass decomposition. The ISME Journal 1–12
Reid AM, Chapman, WK, Kranabetter, JM, and Prescott, CE. 2015. Response of lodgepole pine health to soil disturbance treatments in British Columbia, Canada. Can. J. For. Res. 45: 1045–1055
Kabzems, R. 2012. Aspen and white spruce productivity is reduced by organic matter removal and soil compaction. Forestry Chronicle 88: 306-316.
Ponder, F. Jr., Fleming, R.L., Berch, S., Busse, M.D., Elioff, J.D. Hazlett, P.W., Kabzems, R.D., Kranabetter, J.M., Morris, D.M., Page-Dumroese, D., Palik, B.J., Powers, R.F., Sanchez, F.G., Scott, D.A., Stagg, R.H., Stone, D.M., Young, D.H., Zhang, J., Ludovici, K.H., McKenney, D.W., Mossa, D.S., Sanborn, P.T., Voldseth, R.A. 2012. Effects of organic matter removal, soil compaction and vegetation control on 10th year biomass and foliar nutrition: LTSP continent-wide comparisons. Forest Ecology and Management 278: 35-54.
Hartmann, M., Howes, C.G., VanInsberghe, D., Yu, H., Bachar,D. Christen, R., Nilsson, R.H., Hallam, S,J., and Mohn, W.H. 2012. Significant and persistent impact of timber harvesting on soil microbial communities in Northern coniferous forests, Isme J. 6: 2199–2218.
Hartmann, M., Lee, S., Hallam, S.J., Mohn, W.W. 2009. Bacterial, archaeal and eukaryal community structures throughout soil horizons of harvested and naturally disturbed forest stands. Environ. Microbiol. 11: 3045-3062.
Tan, X., M.P. Curran, S.X. Chang, and D.G. Maynard. 2009. Early growth responses of lodgepole pine and Douglas-fir to soil compaction, organic matter removal, and rehabilitation treatments in southeastern British Columbia. For. Sci. 55: 210-220.
Tan, X., S.X. Chang, and R. Kabzems. 2008. Soil compaction and forest floor removal reduced microbial biomass and enzyme activities in a boreal aspen forest soil. Biol Fertil Soils 44: 471–479.
Arocena, J.M., Chen, Z., and Sanborn, P. 2008. Soil microstructure and solution chemistry of a compacted forest soil in a Sub-boreal Spruce zone in Canada. In Kapur, S. et al. (eds.) New Trends in Soil Micromorphology. Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg. pp. 253-270.
Fleming, R.L., R.F. Powers, N.W. Foster, J.M. Kranabetter, D.A. Scott, S. Berch, W. Chapman, R.D. Kabzems, K. Ludovici, D.M. Morris, F. Ponder, D.S. Page-Dumroese, P. Sanborn, F.G. Sanchez, D.M. Stone, and A.E. Tiarks. 2006. Effects of organic matter removal and soil compaction on seedling performance: Response after 5 years on the LTSP sites. Can. J. For. Res. 36: 529-550.
Kranabetter, JM, Sanborn, P, Chapman, WK and S Dubé. 2006. The contrasting response to soil disturbance between lodgepole pine and hybrid white spruce in sub-boreal forests. Soil Sci. Soc. Am. J. 70:1591-1599.
Mariani, L., S.X. Chang and R. Kabzems. 2006. Effects of tree harvesting, forest floor removal, and compaction on soil microbial biomass, microbial respiration, and N availability in a boreal aspen forest in British Columbia. Soil Biol. Biochem. 38: 1734-1744.
Tan, X., Kabzems, R., and Chang, S.X. 2006. Response of forest vegetation and foliar δ13C and δ15N to soil compaction and forest floor removal in a boreal aspen forest. Forest Ecology and Management 222: 450–458.
Page-Dumroese, DS, Jurgensen, MF, Tiarks, AE, Ponder, Jr., F, Sanchez, FG, Fleming, RL, Kranabetter, JM, Powers, RF, Stone, DM, Elioff, JD, and Scott, DA. 2006. Soil physical property changes at the North American Long-Term Soil Productivity study sites: 1 and 5 years after compaction. Can. J. For. Res. 36: 551-564.
Sanchez, FG, Tiarks, AE, Kranabetter, JM, Page-Dumroese, DS, Powers, RF, Sanborn, PT, and Chapman, WK. 2006. Effects of organic matter removal and soil compaction on fifth-year mineral soil carbon and nitrogen contents for sites across the United States and Canada. Can J For Res 36: 565-576.
Choi, W-J., S.X. Chang, M.P. Curran, and H-M. Ro. 2005. Foliar δ13C and δ15N response of lodgepole pine and Douglas-fir seedlings to soil compaction and forest floor removal. For. Sci. 51: 546-555.
Curran, M.P., R.E. Miller, S. W Howes, D.G. Maynard, T.A. Terry, R.L. Heninger, T. Niemann, K. van Rees, R.F. Powers, and S.H. Shoenholtz. 2005. Progress towards more uniform assessment and reporting of soil disturbance for operations, research and sustainability protocols. For. Ecol. and Mgmt. 220: 17-30.
Haeussler, S., and R. Kabzems. 2005. Aspen plant community response to organic matter removal and soil compaction. Can J For Res 35: 2030-2044.
Kabzems, T., and S. Haeussler. 2005. Soil properties, aspen, and white spruce responses 5 years after organic matter removal and compaction treatments. Can. J. For. Res. 35: 2045-2055.
Kamaluddin, M., S.X. Chang, M.P. Curran, and J.J. Zwiazek. 2005. Soil compaction and forest floor removal affect early growth and physiology of lodgepole pine and Douglas-fir in British Columbia. For. Sci. 51: 513-521.
Tan, X, S.X. Chang and R. Kabzems. 2005. Effects of soil compaction and forest floor removal on soil microbial properties and N transformations in a boreal forest long-term soil productivity study. For. Ecol. Mgmt. 217:158-170.
Battigelli, J.P., John R. Spence, David W. Langor, and Shannon M. Berch. 2004. Short-term impact of forest soil compaction and organic matter removal on soil mesofauna density and oribatid mite diversity. Can. J. For. Res. 34: 1136-1149.
Kranabetter, J. M., and Chapman, B. K. 2004. An analysis of litter nitrogen dynamics using artificial soils across a gradient of forest soil disturbances. Can. J. Soil Sci. 84: 159-167.
Axelrood, P.E., M.L. Chow, C.C. Radomski, J.M. McDermott, and J. Davies. 2002. Molecular characterization of bacterial diversity from British Columbia forest soils subjected to disturbance. Can. J. Microbiol. 48: 655-674.
Axelrood, P.E., M.L. Chow, C.S. Arnold, K. Lu, J.M. McDermott, and J. Davies. 2002. Cultivation-dependant characterization of bacterial diversity from British Columbia forest soils subjected to disturbance. Can. J. Microbiol. 48: 643-654.
Chow, M.L., C.C. Radomski, J.M. McDermott, J. Davies, and P.E. Axelrood. 2002. Molecular characterization of bacterial diversity in lodgepole pine (Pinus contorta) rhizosphere soils from British Columbia forest soils differing in disturbance and geographic source. FEMS Microbiology Ecology 42: 347-357.
Haeussler, S., L. Bedford, A. Leduc, Y. Bergeron, and J.M. Kranabetter. 2002. Silvicultural disturbance severity and plant communities of the southern Canadian boreal forest. Silva Fennica 36: 307-327.
Stone, D.M. and R. Kabzems. 2002. Aspen development on similar soils in Minnesota and British Columbia after compaction and forest floor removal. For. Chron. 78: 886-891.
Arocena, J.M. 2000. Cations in solution form forest soil subjected to forest floor removal and compaction treatments. Forest Ecology and Management 133: 71-80.
Conlin, T.S.S., and R. van den Driessche. 2000. Response of soil CO2 and O2 concentrations to forest soil compaction at the Long-term Soil Productivity sites in central British Columbia. Can. J. Soil Sci. 80: 625-632.
Arocena, J.M., and P. Sanborn. 1999. Mineralogy and genesis of selected soils and their implications for forest management in central and northeastern British Columbia. Can. J. Soil Sc. 79:571-592.
Kranabetter, J.M. and Chapman, B.K. 1999. Effects of forest soil compaction and organic matter removal on leaf litter decomposition in central British Columbia. Can. J. Soil Sci. 79: 543-550.
Related Links
Above: Biological soil crust.