Glasnik Sumarskog fakulteta 2017 Issue 115, Pages: 31-54
https://doi.org/10.2298/GSF1715031B
Full text ( 10332 KB)
Cited by


Effects of heavy thinnings on the increment and selection of trees for tending in Norway spruce monoculture in natural hazard conditions

Bobinac Martin ORCID iD icon (Faculty of forestry, Belgrade)
Andrašev Siniša ORCID iD icon (Institute of Lowland Forestry and Environment, Belgrade)
Bauer-Živković Andrijana (Faculty of forestry, Belgrade, PhD Student)
Šušić Nikola ORCID iD icon

The paper studies the effects of two heavy selection thinnings on the increment of Norway spruce trees exposed to ice and snow breaks in eastern Serbia. In a thinning that was carried out at 32 years of age, 556 candidates per hectare were selected for tending, and at the age of 40, of the initial candidates, 311 trees per hectare (55.9%) were selected as future trees. In all trees at 41-50 age period, diameter increment was higher by 31%, basal area increment by 64% and volume increment by 67% compared to 32-40 age period. The collective of indifferent trees is significantly falling behind compared to future trees in terms of increment values in both observed periods. However, the value of diameter, basal area and volume increments, of the collective of "comparable" indifferent trees are lower in comparison to the values of increments of future trees by 10-15% in the 32-40 age period, and by 15-21% in the 41-50 age period and there are no significant differences. The results show that heavy selective thinnings, initially directed at a larger number of candidates for tending at stand age that does not differ much from the period of carrying out first "commercial" thinnings, improve the growth potential of future and indifferent trees, where it is rational to do the tree replacement for the final crop in "susceptible" growth stage to snow and ice breaks.

Keywords: Picea abies (L.) Karst., selective thinning, heavy thinning, increment, snow breaks, ice breaks

Project of the Serbian Ministry of Education, Science and Technological Development, Grant no. 43007: Studying climate change and its influence on the environment: impacts, adaptation and mitigation