2025 Volume 59 Issue 2 Pages 163-174
We empirically examined coppice growth characteristics after one- and two-stage thinning in a coppiced teak plantation (2 × 4 m plant spacing) in Nong Bua Lamphu, Thailand, in June 2011. For the one-stage thinning, we thinned all but one sprout per stump (P1), while in the two-stage thinning, we thinned all but two sprouts per stump in the first thinning and a dominant sprout per stump (P2ds) in the second thinning 4 years later. Teak trees were clear-cut at 15 years old in December 2010 at the study site; their growth and stem condition data were available until 8.6 and 4.5 years, respectively. The relative growth rate was estimated by integrating hierarchical Bayesian modeling with a generalized linear mixed model to determine the treatment effects. P2ds caught up with P1 in both diameter at breast height and tree height by year 7 (P > 0.05). At year 4.5, P2ds showed 86% healthy coppices, whereas 74% of P1 were healthy due to wind damage within ~2 years of the first thinning. Self-thinning was implied to occur in year 5 for both treatments. In year 4, the growth diameter decelerated, with asymptotically decreasing relative spacing indices of 23 and 20 on the one- and two-sprout plots, respectively. On growth and stem conditions, two-stage thinning showed higher potential than one-stage thinning for teak reforestation under coppice regeneration.