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Plantation Forestry: A Global Look

Plantation Forestry: A Global Look. Forest Area: 3,952,025,000 ha Woodland Area: 1,375,829,000 ha. 620,138,943 m 3 wood (USDA 2008). 620,138,943 m 3 wood (USDA 2008). 620,138,943 m 3 wood (USDA 2008). 620,138,943 m 3 wood (USDA 2008). 620,138,943 m 3 wood (USDA 2008).

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Plantation Forestry: A Global Look

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  1. Plantation Forestry: A Global Look

  2. Forest Area: 3,952,025,000 ha Woodland Area: 1,375,829,000 ha

  3. 620,138,943 m3 wood (USDA 2008) 620,138,943 m3 wood (USDA 2008) 620,138,943 m3 wood (USDA 2008) 620,138,943 m3 wood (USDA 2008) 620,138,943 m3 wood (USDA 2008) Annual World Wood Removal + + + 3.1 billion cubic meters =

  4. Total Wood Removal 2005: 3.1 billion cubic meters

  5. The Gorilla in the Room

  6. The Gorilla in the Room

  7. Let’s Do The Math • Current World Population: 7,203,245,326 • Forest/Woodland Area (ha): 5,327,854,000 • Forest/Woodland per Person

  8. Role of Plantations: Benefits • Plantations are < 4% of land base, but supply 35% of global roundwood • Increased productivity over natural forests • e.g., loblolly pine (400% increase) • Natural Stand: 42 tons per acre • Intensively Managed Plantation: 210 tons per acre • Restoration of Degraded Lands

  9. Copper Basin Tennessee Restoration of Degraded Lands

  10. Role of Plantations: Potential Tradeoffs • Biodiversity • Environmental Services • Impact on Local Communities • Nutrient Depletion • Monocultures of Exotics

  11. How can silviculture enhance productivity to such a degree?

  12. Tree Species • Physiologically suited to establishing on exposed sites and growing in competition • Examples • Pinus spp. (e.g., loblolly pine, radiata pine) • Eucalyptus spp. • Acacia spp. • Populus spp. (cottonwood, aspen, improved hybrids) • Douglas-fir • Norway spruce • Black locust

  13. Tree Planting and Density Management • Seed, seedling, or vegetative propagation • Initial plantation spacing controls stand development and growth rates • Thinning can be used to alter growing space utilization during rotation

  14. Genetic Improvement • Seed, Seedling, or Vegetative Propagation • Traditional breeding programs • “Natural” selection • Improved seed orchards • Hybrids and Clones • Pitch x loblolly pine hybrid • Hybrid poplar (cottonwood x Black Poplar) • Biotechnology and clonal forestry

  15. Loblolly Pine Improvement Program • Open pollinated • $45 to $70 per 1000 seedlings • Mass controlled pollinated • $140 to $230 per 1000 seedlings • Varietal • Produced through embryogenesis • $400 per 1000 seedlings

  16. FlexStand System

  17. Site Preparation

  18. Competition Control

  19. Fertilization

  20. Loblolly Pine

  21. Fundamental dissimilarities between naturally regenerating stands and plantations • Diversity in plant species composition • Configuration of vertical layers and horizontal patterns of vegetation • Differences in branching patterns and lower uniformity in within-stand tree height contribute to greater diversity in older natural stands

  22. 14 Year Old Loblolly Pine Plantation – 9 ft x 9ft Spacing

  23. Habitat quality of any given plantation (any forest stand) is defined by: • Within-stand characteristics • Adjacent land-uses • Alternative land-use • Cumulative landscape-scale and regional-scale land-use patterns

  24. Plantation Establishment, Past, and Alternative Land-Use Scenarios • Pine plantation replacing a mature stand of mixed pine-hardwoods • Pine plantation establishment on highly erodible cropland • Mature stand of mixed pine-hardwoods replaced by: • Pine plantation • A housing development or Walmart

  25. Plantations and Diversity A Regional Look at Wildlife Habitat in Southern Pine

  26. Patterns of habitat and wildlife species use reflect changes in stand development and composition • Newly established plantations that support abundant herbaceous vegetation will provide sustenance for species dependent on cover provided by such vegetation • 10 to 15 year-old pines furnishes a preferable combination of habitat traits for species like white-tailed deer • As the stand matures, habitat quality for these species linked with herbaceous component as this vegetation eliminated by a woody overstory

  27. Recommendations for improving wildlife habitat associated with even-aged, pine plantations in the southeastern United States • Species Composition • Diversify species • Advocate mixed pine-hardwood stands • Limit conversion of hardwood and pine/hardwood to plantations • Maintain and restore hardwood-dominated stream corridors • Encourage planting of the best genetically improved pine seedling stock for faster growth

  28. Recommendations for improving wildlife habitat associated with even-aged, pine plantations in the southeastern United States • Management • Encourage precommercial and commercial thinning • Increase flexibility in tree stocking rates • Wider spaces within rows (e.g., 8 ft). • Wider spacing between tree rows (e.g., 12 ft) • Advocate prescribed burning of younger stands • Encourage sawtimber-dominated stands • Encourage partial harvest to establish multi-age plantations • Emphasize low-intensity mechanical site preparation over use of herbicides. • When herbicides are needed, favor those products that have minimal effect of plant species

  29. Recommendations for improving wildlife habitat associated with even-aged, pine plantations in the southeastern United States Size and Configuration • Limit plantation size to 50 ac or smaller • Establish a ratio of 1 ac of permanent opening per 20 ac of trees within plantations > 50 ac • Establish irregular plantation boundaries • Establish or preserve hardwood corridors and firebreaks-roads planted to herbaceous cover to increase diversity • Plant borders roads to legumes or wildlife food plots • Establish soft borders between plantations and agricultural lands

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