The white spruce–aspen mixedwood forest type is common in the Prairie Provinces. These mixedwood stands have a variety of compositions ranging from pure
aspen to pure
white spruce, to mixtures of both.
Balsam poplar,
white birch,
black spruce,
balsam fir, and
pines may also occur. Silvicultural treatments have generally been aimed at promoting white spruce, primarily through plantation establishment and management. The type of stand of a given association is as much a product of successional stage and stand history as it is of site type. Depending on seed source and seedbed conditions, recruitment of white spruce may begin relatively soon after disturbance or may be spread over many decades. A major ecological factor in mixedwood management is the
spruce budworm; another is the problem of providing for sufficient spruce
regeneration. Management of mixedwoods in the Prairie Provinces in the 1990s usually used
clearcutting. When
aspen is the main species to be regenerated, little treatment is applied to the site, but slash piles, compaction of soil, and damage to aspen root systems are minimized as much as is feasible in order to encourage suckering. In the
coniferous harvest, aspen that is not harvested is usually left standing to reduce suckering, as well as for the benefit of wildlife. Regeneration of white spruce is more difficult. ==References==