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Encyclopedia > Silviculture

Silviculture is the art and science of controlling the establishment, growth, composition, health, and quality of forests to meet diverse needs and values of landowners, society and the many cultures throughout the globe Temperate rainforest on Northern Slopes of the Alborz mountain ranges, Iran A dense growth of softwoods (a conifer forest) in the Sierra Nevada Range of Northern California A deciduous broadleaf (Beech) forest in Slovenia. ...

Contents

Regeneration

Forest regeneration is the act of renewing tree cover by establishing young trees naturally or artificially, generally promptly after the previous stand or forest has been removed. The method, species, and density are chosen to meet the goal of the landowner. Forest regeneration includes practices such as changes in tree plant density through human-assisted natural regeneration, enrichment planting, reduced grazing of forested savannas, and changes in tree provenances/genetics or tree species. "Human-assisted natural regeneration" means establishment of a forest age class from natural seeding or sprouting after harvesting through selection cutting, shelter (or seed-tree) harvest, soil preparation, or restricting the size of a clear-cut stand to secure natural regeneration from surrounding trees. "Enrichment planting" means increasing the planting density (i.e., the numbers of plants per hectare) in an already growing forest stand." [1]


Common Methods

Silvicultural regeneration methods combine both the harvest of the timber on the stand and re-establishment of the forest. The proper practice of sustainable forestry [2] should mitigate the potential negative impacts, but all harvest methods will have some impacts on the land and residual stand.[3] The practice of sustainable forestry limits the impacts such that the values of the forest are maintained in-perpetuity.


There are five different regeneration methods:[4]

  • Single-tree selection - The single-tree selection method is an uneven-aged harvest method most suitable when shade tolerant species regeneration is desired. It is typical for large and valuable specimens from the overstory to be removed thus creating a gap in the canopy simulating the death of an old-growth tree. Single-tree selection can be very difficult to implement in dense stands and residual stand damage can occur.
  • Group selection - The group selection method is an uneven-aged regeneration method that can be used when shade intolerant species regeneration is desired. The group selection method can still result in residual stand damage in dense stands, however directional falling can minimize the damage. Additionally, foresters can select across the range of diameter classes in the stand and maintain a mosaic of age and diameter classes.
  • Clearcut - An even-aged regeneration method that can employ either natural or artificial regeneration. Clear cutting can be biologically appropriate with species that typically regenerate from stand replacing fires, such as lodgepole pine (Pinus contorta). Alternatively, clearcutting can change the dominating species on a stand with the introduction of non-native and invasive species as was shown at the Blodgett Experimental Forest near Georgetown California. Additionally, clearcutting can prolong slash decomposition, expose soil to erosion, impact visual appeal of a landscape and remove essential wildlife habitat.
  • Seed-Tree - An even-aged regeneration method that retains widely spaced residual trees in order to provide uniform seed dispersal across a harvested area. In the seed-tree method, 2-12 seed trees per acre (5-30/ha) are left standing in order to regenerate the forest. They will be retained until regeneration has become established at which point they may be removed. It may not always be economically viable or biologically desirable to re-enter the stand to remove the remaining seed trees. Seed tree cuts can also be viewed as a clearcut with natural regeneration and can also have all of the problems associated with clearcutting. This method is most suited for light seeded species and those not prone to windthrow.
  • Shelterwood - A regeneration method that removes trees in a series of three harvests: 1) Preparatory cut; 2) Establishment cut; and 3) Removal cut. The method's objective is establish new forest reproduction under the shelter of the retained trees. Unlike the seed tree method, residual trees alter understory environmental conditions (i.e. sunlight, temperature, and moisture) that influence tree seedling growth.

Clearfelling or clearcutting is the process where every tree is taken in a logging operation. ... Treeplanting is the process of transplanting tree seedlings, generally for forestry, land reclamation, or landscaping purposes. ... Binomial name Pinus contorta Douglas Lodgepole Pine (Pinus contorta) is a common tree in western North America. ... Seedstock - trees left after clearfelling to provide seed for natural regeneration. ... In forestry, windthrow refers to trees uprooted by wind, or to the phenomenon that causes such uprooting to occur. ...

Intermediate Stand Treatments

Release Treatments

  • Weeding: A treatment implemented during a stand's seedling stage which removes or reduces herbaceous or woody shrub competition.
  • Cleaning: Release of select saplings from competition by overtopping trees of a comparable age. The treatment favors trees of a desired species and stem quality.
  • Liberation Cutting: A treatment that releases tree seedling or saplings by removing older overtopping trees.

Thinning

The goal of thinning is to control the amount and distribution of available growing space. By altering stand density, foresters can influence the growth, quality, and health of residual trees. It also provides an opportunity to capture mortality and cull the commercially less desirable, usually smaller and malformed, trees. Unlike regeneration treatments, thinnings are not intended to establish a new tree crop or create permanent canopy openings. Thinning is in forestry a type of selective cutting primarily undertaken to make the forest more profitable in an upcoming final felling. ... A forester is a person who practices forestry, the science and profession of managing forests. ... It has been suggested that this article or section be merged with Tree (disambiguation). ...


Common thinning methods:

  • Low Thinning (thinning from below or German thinning)
  • Crown Thinning (thinning from above or French method)
  • Selection Thinning (thinning of dominants or Borggreve method)
  • Mechanical Thinning (row thinning or geometric thinning)
  • Free Thinning

Ecological thinning is where the primary aim of forest thinning is to increase growth of selected trees, favoring development of wildlife habitat (such as hollows) rather than focusing on increased timber yields. Ecological thinning can be considered a new approach to landscape restoration for some types of eucalypt forests and woodlands in Australia. Thinning, a silvicultural technique used in forest management, is a stand manipulation operation designed to modify tree growth. ...


Pruning

Pruning, as a silvicultural practice, refers to the removal of the lower branches of the young trees so clear knot free wood can subsequently grow over the branch stubs. Clear knot-free lumber has a higher value. Pruning has been extensively carried out in the Radiata pine plantations of New Zealand and Chile, however the development of Finger joint technology in the production of lumber and mouldings has lead to many forestry companies reconsidering their pruning practices. In microeconomics, pruning taken as a metaphor from gardening, refers to the removal of excess items from a budget. ... Trunks A tree trunk as found at the Veluwe, The Netherlands Wood is a solid material derived from woody plants, notably trees but also shrubs. ... Timber in storage for later processing at a sawmill Lumber or Timber is a term used to describe wood, either standing or that has been processed for use—from the time trees are felled, to its end product as a material suitable for industrial use—as structural material for construction... Binomial name Pinus radiata D.Don Pinus radiata (family Pinaceae) is known in English as Monterey Pine in some parts of the world (mainly in the USA, Canada and the British Isles), and Radiata Pine in others (primarily Australia, New Zealand and Chile). ... A finger joint is a woodworking technique used to join two pieces of wood at right angles to each other. ... Timber in storage for later processing at a sawmill Lumber or Timber is a term used to describe wood, either standing or that has been processed for use—from the time trees are felled, to its end product as a material suitable for industrial use—as structural material for construction... Molding (US) or moulding (UK) can be: molding (decorative) (or moulding) a decorative feature used in interior design and architecture molding (process) (or moulding) a process used in manufacturing This is a disambiguation page — a list of articles associated with the same title. ...


See also

A decidous beech forest in Slovenia. ... A sugarcane plantation at Ribeirão Preto, Brazil, 2005 A plantation is a large tract of monoculture, as a tree plantation, a cotton plantation, a tea plantation or a tobacco plantation. ... Thinning, a silvicultural technique used in forest management, is a stand manipulation operation designed to modify tree growth. ... Selection cutting is the logging practice of removing mature timber or thinning to improve the timber stand. ... Hardwood (deciduous trees) timber production is the process of managing hardwood stands for the purpose of maximizing woody output. ...

Citations

  1. ^ 'Fact Sheet 4.12. Forest Regeneration', IPCC Special Report on Land Use, Land-Use Change And Forestry
  2. ^ Oregon State University Extension Service
  3. ^ RESIDUAL DAMAGE IN A CONIFER STAND THINNED WITH A CTL SYSTEM, University of Idaho
  4. ^ Nyland, R. D. 2002 Silviculture: Concepts and Applications, Second Edition. The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. New York. 704 p. ISBN 0-07-366190-2

References

  • Daniel, T. W., J. A. Helms, and F. S. Baker 1979. Principles of Silviculture, Second Edition. McGraw-Hill, New York. 521 p. ISBN 0-07-015297-7
  • Evans, J. 1984. Silviculture of Broadleaved Woodland. Forestry Commission Bulletin 62. HMSO. London. 232 p. ISBN 0-11-710154-0
  • Hart, C. 1995. Alternative Silvicultural Systems to Clear Cutting in Britain: A Review. Forestry Commission Bulletin 115. HMSO. London. 93 p. ISBN 0-11-710334-9
  • Nyland, R. D. 1996. Silviculture, Concepts and Applications. The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. New York. 633 p. ISBN 0-07-056999-1
  • Nyland, R. D. 2002 Silviculture: Concepts and Applications, Second Edition. The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. New York. 704 p. ISBN 0-07-366190-2
  • Savill, P., Evans, J., Auclair, D., Falck, J. 1997. Plantation Silviculture in Europe. Oxford University Press, Oxford. 297 p. ISBN 0-19-854909-1
  • Smith, D. M. 1986. The Practice of Silviculture, 8th edition. John Wiley & Sons, Inc., New York. 527 p. ISBN 0-471-80020-1
  • Smith, D. M., B. C. Larson, M. J. Kelty, P. M. S. Ashton. 1997. The Practice of Silviculture, Applied Forest Ecology, 9th edition. John Wiley & Sons, New York. 560 p. ISBN 0-471-10941-Xen:Silviculture

  Results from FactBites:
 
Yale Silviculture: History (1387 words)
Silviculture has been variously defined as the art and science of producing and tending a forest; the application of knowledge of silvics in the treatment of a forest; or the theory and practice of controlling forest establishment, composition, and growth.
Silviculture is the oldest conscious application of the science of ecology and is a field recognized before the term ecology was coined.
Silviculture is not conducted in a pure state of nature, and this state ceased to be pure when society advanced beyond the food-gathering stage.
Silvics & Silviculture-The Agriculture of Trees (1594 words)
Silviculture is the agriculture of trees--how to grow them, how to maximize growth and return, and how to manipulate tree species compositions to meet landowner objectives.
Silviculture imitates a natural change--such as a windthrow, beetle infestation, or fire.
Remember, the choice of silvicultural method must be based upon the silvics and characteristics of the existing species in a stand and upon the species deemed desirable to grow in that future stand.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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