Natural disturbances such as wildfires, storms and insect outbreaks shape the ecological and evolutionary dynamics of terrestrial ecosystems around the world (Pausas & Keeley, 2014). As a result, ecosystems are generally resistant-able to avoid disturbance impacts-and resilient-able to recover after disturbance-under the local disturbance regime (Johnstone et al., 2016;Nimmo et al., 2015).However, disturbance regimes are changing around the world, as disturbances are becoming more frequent, widespread and intense, and occurring at unprecedented times and places (Seidl et al., 2017). Such shifts are sparking concerns about the capacity of ecosystems to recover (Johnstone et al., 2016), thus increasing the need to understand the factors that affect resilience.One key concern about forest resilience is the impact of compounded disturbances, among which salvage logging is widespread (Kleinman et al., 2019;. Salvage logging, which involves felling and extracting disturbance-affected trees, is a