Coppice response of Khasru (Quercus semecarpifolia) under partial cuttings

Appropriate coppice treatments could help establish regeneration and structural complexity in degraded forests dominated by Khasru (Quercus semecarpifolia) – the most prominent species among Himalayan oaks. However, the effect of varying cutting intensities on the response of coppiced Khasru stumps...

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Main Authors: Shrabya Timsina, Nora G. Hardy, Mark S. Ashton
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2025-03-01
Series:Trees, Forests and People
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Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666719325000251
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author Shrabya Timsina
Nora G. Hardy
Mark S. Ashton
author_facet Shrabya Timsina
Nora G. Hardy
Mark S. Ashton
author_sort Shrabya Timsina
collection DOAJ
description Appropriate coppice treatments could help establish regeneration and structural complexity in degraded forests dominated by Khasru (Quercus semecarpifolia) – the most prominent species among Himalayan oaks. However, the effect of varying cutting intensities on the response of coppiced Khasru stumps has not been fully explored. In a Khasru forest in Nepal, we performed two partial cutting treatments – High-intensity Coppice (HighCop) and Low-Intensity Coppice (LowCop), with mean residual canopy cover of 11 % and 40 %, respectively. After ten months, we measured and compared sprouting response between the two treatments and modelled the probability of stump-sprouting with a logistic regression, using treatment-type and stump dimensions as predictors. Eighty-five percent of stumps (n = 41) resprouted in the LowCop treatment, while only 48 % resprouted in HighCop (n = 42). LowCop had a significantly greater number of coppice shoots per stump, but the total basal area of shoots and height of tallest shoot per stump were not significantly different. Shoot heights across both treatments suggest that Khasru coppice can grow faster than reported previously. Treatment-type was the only significant predictor of stump-sprouting success. Holding their dimensions constant, stumps were five times more likely to resprout in LowCop than HighCop. Our results contradict prior studies for other species of oak that report that the probability of sprouting either increases with, or is unaffected by, the intensity of cuttings. We establish that partial cuttings can promote satisfactory coppice response in Khasru and demonstrate that wider experimentation into Khasru coppice management is justified.
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spelling doaj-art-4bbde199b96248c59cc6f8ec510d90432025-08-20T02:55:10ZengElsevierTrees, Forests and People2666-71932025-03-011910079710.1016/j.tfp.2025.100797Coppice response of Khasru (Quercus semecarpifolia) under partial cuttingsShrabya Timsina0Nora G. Hardy1Mark S. Ashton2Department of Landscape Architecture & Environmental Planning, University of California Berkeley, 230 Bauer Wurster Hall #1820, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA; ForestAction Nepal, House No 71, Ashram Street, Bagdol, Lalitpur Metropolitan City-4, GPO Box: 12207, Nepal; Corresponding author.The Forest School, Yale School of the Environment, 360 Prospect St, New Haven, CT 06511, USAThe Forest School, Yale School of the Environment, 360 Prospect St, New Haven, CT 06511, USAAppropriate coppice treatments could help establish regeneration and structural complexity in degraded forests dominated by Khasru (Quercus semecarpifolia) – the most prominent species among Himalayan oaks. However, the effect of varying cutting intensities on the response of coppiced Khasru stumps has not been fully explored. In a Khasru forest in Nepal, we performed two partial cutting treatments – High-intensity Coppice (HighCop) and Low-Intensity Coppice (LowCop), with mean residual canopy cover of 11 % and 40 %, respectively. After ten months, we measured and compared sprouting response between the two treatments and modelled the probability of stump-sprouting with a logistic regression, using treatment-type and stump dimensions as predictors. Eighty-five percent of stumps (n = 41) resprouted in the LowCop treatment, while only 48 % resprouted in HighCop (n = 42). LowCop had a significantly greater number of coppice shoots per stump, but the total basal area of shoots and height of tallest shoot per stump were not significantly different. Shoot heights across both treatments suggest that Khasru coppice can grow faster than reported previously. Treatment-type was the only significant predictor of stump-sprouting success. Holding their dimensions constant, stumps were five times more likely to resprout in LowCop than HighCop. Our results contradict prior studies for other species of oak that report that the probability of sprouting either increases with, or is unaffected by, the intensity of cuttings. We establish that partial cuttings can promote satisfactory coppice response in Khasru and demonstrate that wider experimentation into Khasru coppice management is justified.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666719325000251Oak silvicultureCoppice regenerationStump-sproutingHimalayan oaksHimalayan forest degradation
spellingShingle Shrabya Timsina
Nora G. Hardy
Mark S. Ashton
Coppice response of Khasru (Quercus semecarpifolia) under partial cuttings
Trees, Forests and People
Oak silviculture
Coppice regeneration
Stump-sprouting
Himalayan oaks
Himalayan forest degradation
title Coppice response of Khasru (Quercus semecarpifolia) under partial cuttings
title_full Coppice response of Khasru (Quercus semecarpifolia) under partial cuttings
title_fullStr Coppice response of Khasru (Quercus semecarpifolia) under partial cuttings
title_full_unstemmed Coppice response of Khasru (Quercus semecarpifolia) under partial cuttings
title_short Coppice response of Khasru (Quercus semecarpifolia) under partial cuttings
title_sort coppice response of khasru quercus semecarpifolia under partial cuttings
topic Oak silviculture
Coppice regeneration
Stump-sprouting
Himalayan oaks
Himalayan forest degradation
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666719325000251
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