E. Ring, M. Andersson, L. Hansson, G. Jansson, L. Högbom
{"title":"Logging Mats and Logging Residue as Ground Protection during Forwarder Traffic along Till Hillslopes","authors":"E. Ring, M. Andersson, L. Hansson, G. Jansson, L. Högbom","doi":"10.5552/crojfe.2021.875","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Forest soils in Northern Europe are generally trafficked by forest machinery on several occasions during a forest rotation. This may create ruts (wheel tracks), which could increase sediment transport to nearby surface water, reduce recreational value, and affect tree growth. It is therefore important to reduce soil disturbance during off-road forest transportation. In this study, rut depth was measured following forwarder traffic on study plots located along four harvested till hillslopes in Northern Sweden with drier soil conditions uphill and wet conditions downhill. The treatments included driving 1) using no ground protection, 2) on logging residue (on average, 38–50 kg m–2) and 3) on logging mats measuring 5×1×0.2 m. The hillslopes contain areas with a high content of boulders, stones, and gravel as well as areas with a significant content of silt. Six passes with a laden forwarder with four bogie tracks were performed. On the plots with ground protection, the application of logging residue and the application and removal of logging mats necessitated additional passes. Rut depth was measured using two methods: 1) as the difference in elevation between the interpolated original soil surface and the surface of the rut using GNSS positioning (Global Navigation Satellite Systems), and 2) manually with a folding rule from an aluminium profile, placed across the rut, to the bottom of the rut. The two methods generally gave similar results. Driving without ground protection in the upper part of the hillslopes generated ruts with depths <0.2 m. Here, the rut depth was probably modified by the high content of boulders and stones in the upper soil and drier soil conditions. In the lower part of the hillslopes, the mean rut depth ranged from 0.21 to 0.34 m. With a few exceptions, driving on logging residue or logging mats prevented exposure of mineral soil along the entire hillslope. Soil disturbance can thus be reduced by acknowledging the onsite variability in ground conditions and considering the need for ground protection when planning forest operations.","PeriodicalId":55204,"journal":{"name":"Croatian Journal of Forest Engineering","volume":" ","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":2.7000,"publicationDate":"2021-06-30","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"9","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Croatian Journal of Forest Engineering","FirstCategoryId":"97","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.5552/crojfe.2021.875","RegionNum":2,"RegionCategory":"农林科学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"FORESTRY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 9
Abstract
Forest soils in Northern Europe are generally trafficked by forest machinery on several occasions during a forest rotation. This may create ruts (wheel tracks), which could increase sediment transport to nearby surface water, reduce recreational value, and affect tree growth. It is therefore important to reduce soil disturbance during off-road forest transportation. In this study, rut depth was measured following forwarder traffic on study plots located along four harvested till hillslopes in Northern Sweden with drier soil conditions uphill and wet conditions downhill. The treatments included driving 1) using no ground protection, 2) on logging residue (on average, 38–50 kg m–2) and 3) on logging mats measuring 5×1×0.2 m. The hillslopes contain areas with a high content of boulders, stones, and gravel as well as areas with a significant content of silt. Six passes with a laden forwarder with four bogie tracks were performed. On the plots with ground protection, the application of logging residue and the application and removal of logging mats necessitated additional passes. Rut depth was measured using two methods: 1) as the difference in elevation between the interpolated original soil surface and the surface of the rut using GNSS positioning (Global Navigation Satellite Systems), and 2) manually with a folding rule from an aluminium profile, placed across the rut, to the bottom of the rut. The two methods generally gave similar results. Driving without ground protection in the upper part of the hillslopes generated ruts with depths <0.2 m. Here, the rut depth was probably modified by the high content of boulders and stones in the upper soil and drier soil conditions. In the lower part of the hillslopes, the mean rut depth ranged from 0.21 to 0.34 m. With a few exceptions, driving on logging residue or logging mats prevented exposure of mineral soil along the entire hillslope. Soil disturbance can thus be reduced by acknowledging the onsite variability in ground conditions and considering the need for ground protection when planning forest operations.
在森林轮作期间,北欧的森林土壤通常由森林机械进行多次运输。这可能会产生车辙,增加沉积物向附近地表水的输送,降低娱乐价值,并影响树木生长。因此,减少越野森林运输过程中的土壤扰动非常重要。在这项研究中,在瑞典北部四个收获的耕地山坡上的研究地块上,在运输后测量了车辙深度,上坡土壤条件干燥,下坡土壤条件潮湿。处理包括:1)不使用地面保护,2)对伐木残留物(平均38-50 kg m–2)进行打桩,3)对5×1×0.2 m的伐木垫进行打桩。山坡上有大量巨石、石块和砾石的区域,也有大量淤泥的区域。使用一个带有四个转向架轨道的满载货代进行了六次通过。在有地面保护的地块上,应用测井残留物以及应用和移除测井垫需要额外的通行证。使用两种方法测量车辙深度:1)使用GNSS定位(全球导航卫星系统)作为插值原始土壤表面和车辙表面之间的高程差,以及2)使用折叠尺从放置在车辙上的铝型材手动测量至车辙底部。这两种方法通常给出相似的结果。在没有地面保护的情况下,在山坡上部行驶会产生深度<0.2m的车辙。此处,车辙深度可能是由于上部土壤中巨石含量高以及土壤条件干燥而改变的。在山坡的下部,平均车辙深度为0.21至0.34米。除少数例外,在伐木残留物或伐木垫上行驶可防止整个山坡上的矿物土壤暴露。因此,在规划森林作业时,可以通过确认现场地面条件的可变性并考虑地面保护的必要性来减少土壤扰动。
期刊介绍:
Croatian Journal of Forest Engineering (CROJFE) is a refereed journal distributed internationally, publishing original research articles concerning forest engineering, both theoretical and empirical. The journal covers all aspects of forest engineering research, ranging from basic to applied subjects. In addition to research articles, preliminary research notes and subject reviews are published.
Journal Subjects and Fields:
-Harvesting systems and technologies-
Forest biomass and carbon sequestration-
Forest road network planning, management and construction-
System organization and forest operations-
IT technologies and remote sensing-
Engineering in urban forestry-
Vehicle/machine design and evaluation-
Modelling and sustainable management-
Eco-efficient technologies in forestry-
Ergonomics and work safety