Regeneration result of excavator-mounted rototiller in direct seeding of Scots pine on forestry-drained peatland
The need to regenerate peatland forests is expected to increase in the near future in Finland due to harvest of large amounts of peatlands drained during the 1950s and 1960s. In anticipation of this, a new type of excavator-mounted rototiller for soil scarification in peatlands has
been developed in Finland to improve the moisture conditions of the seedbed by mixing the ground vegetation, raw humus layer, and peat. The regeneration result of the new rototiller was compared with traditional patch scarification (i.e. scalping) in direct seeding of Scots pine in three forestry-drained
peatland sites in eastern Finland. After two growing seasons, rototilling offered no advantage over scalping in terms of the number of established seedlings, probability of empty patches, or seedling height. Seedling establishment was on average higher on scalping (10%) than on rototilling
(8%). The main problem in rototilling may have been the loose and porous structure of the seedbed resulting in drought and frost damages.
Keywords: Pinus sylvestris; excavator; peatland forest regeneration; scalping; seedlings; soil scarification
Document Type: Research Article
Affiliations: 1: METLA, Suonenjoki Research Unit, Juntintie 154, FI-77600, Suonenjoki, Finland 2: METLA, Parkano Research Unit, Kaironiementie 15, FI-39700, Parkano, Finland
Publication date: 01 December 2013
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