1 / 13

Forestry Measurements

Forestry Measurements. Written by: Heather Dombroski July 2005. Pre-reading. Website reading http://forestry.msu.edu/uptreeid/History/Modern.htm After your finished take a look at “Facts About Today's Michigan Forests” . Let’s Review. What are our most popular trees?

lew
Télécharger la présentation

Forestry Measurements

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Forestry Measurements Written by: Heather Dombroski July 2005

  2. Pre-reading • Website reading • http://forestry.msu.edu/uptreeid/History/Modern.htm • After your finished take a look at “Facts About Today's Michigan Forests”

  3. Let’s Review • What are our most popular trees? • Who owns the most forested land in Michigan? • Where is the majority of our forest? • Why are forests important?

  4. Pacing • How far is one step? that is your pace • Everyone's will be different, you must remember yours • We’ll measure out 1 chain (66ft) • You will practice walking this distance to get an average pace measure

  5. Percent Crown Coverage • From a point looking up, what % of the sky is covered (no light gets through) • Our measurement tool is called a densitometer • We will be making our own and using them outside http://www.extension.umn.edu/distribution/naturalresources/images/3474-38.jpg

  6. Densitometer • Hold it above your face just an inch or so, you see several squares, their either covered or not • Count the ones covered • Multiply this number by 4 to get 100% canopy cover • From spot one move 5 paces rerecord, repeat until you have 8 readings This represents 25%

  7. What is a Board Foot? • 12”long X 12”wide by 1” thick • This is the measurement marketable timber is sold by (144 cubic inches per bd ft) • So if we have a 2X4 that’s 8ft long, how many Bd ft is that? • 2inch x 4inch (8ft x 12in/ft) = 768 cubic/in • 768/144 = 5.33 bd ft 12” 1” 12”

  8. Practicing Bd ft • We cut a 1 ½ x 8 on our sawmill in the bullpen, its 10ft long. What’s the bd ft? • 1.5x8 (10ft x 12in/ft) = 1440 cubic ft • 1440/144 = 10 Bd Ft

  9. Diameter at Breast Height • This is 4 ½ feet from the level ground • This helps us decide marketable timber • The sectional area is also called Basal area • We will use both; • diameter tape and • the Biltmore stick http://www.extension.umn.edu/distribution/naturalresources/images/3474-57.jpg

  10. Height in logs or bolts • Logs - 16ft marketable section of a hardwood tree • Bolts –8ft marketable section of a coniferous tree • This is measured until a break in the bole (trunk) on hardwoods or 8” diameter • And measured up to a 4” diameter on pines http://www.efi.fi/fine/kidscorner/images/plants/tree_tall2.jpg

  11. Measuring Marketable Timber • We use # of logs and DBH to figure Marketable timber or volume • By looking at the “How much Lumber is in that Tree” handout we see there is more than one way to figure this amount

  12. Aging Trees • Taking a core sample • Counting sections of limbs on conifers • Tree cookies http://www.efi.fi/fine/kidscorner/images/plants/tree_tall2.jpg

  13. Density of Trees per Acre • Usually estimates by 1/10 acre plots • Done in several random areas of a stand • These areas are then averaged • 1/10 plot = a circle with a 37.2ft radius At higher densities, the growth rates of individual trees slow down because there are more trees competing for the site's limited resources.  37.2

More Related