ABSTRACT:
Three watersheds in the poorly drained pine flatwoods region of north central Florida were monitored for 6 years. Three silvicultural treatments were imposed during the second year: harvest with minimum disturbance and site preparation, harvest with maximum disturbance and site preparation, and an undisturbed control. The minimum treatment included manual shortwood harvesting, slash chopping, soil bedding, and machine planting. The maximum treatment included machine tree-length harvesting, slash burning, windrowing, soil bedding, and machine planting. There were small but significant increases in pH, suspended sediment, Ca, and K, proportional to the degree of disturbance during the treatment year. Only K and Ca levels remained significant during the first post-treatment year. Minimum-disturbance practices with protective stream management zones will minimize nonpoint-source pollution.
Footnotes
H. Riekerk is an associate professor in the School of Forest Resources and Conservation, University of Florida, Gainesville, 32611. This is Journal Series No. 6041 of the Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences.
- Copyright 1985 by the Soil and Water Conservation Society
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