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Timber Prescriptions

Timber Prescriptions. Recommendations. After measuring trees, determining volumes, grades, and values What is the future goal of this site? Based on what is here and what you want to be here in the future, how do you proceed? More in Silviculture class. Prescriptions.

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Timber Prescriptions

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  1. Timber Prescriptions

  2. Recommendations • After measuring trees, determining volumes, grades, and values • What is the future goal of this site? • Based on what is here and what you want to be here in the future, how do you proceed? • More in Silviculture class

  3. Prescriptions • No Action – reserved habitat, scenic or old growth • Regeneration Harvest • Even Aged or Two-Aged • Clear Cut • Harvest, Salvage or Sanitation • Seed Tree • Shelterwood • Uneven Aged • Group Selection • Single Tree Selection • Intermediate Harvest – enhance Composition, Growth, or Quality • Thinning, Salvage or Sanitation • Understory Management – release treatments (thin or Herbicide)

  4. Clearcutting • Most economical harvest method • Mimics natural disasters • Most potential to damage site • Using BMPs helps reduce damage • Better for genetics than high grading • Unsightly • Politically unpopular • Not well suited to highly complex, multi-tiered ecosystems like the rain forest

  5. Clearcutting Types • Complete – includes removal of non-commercial stems • Patch – small tracts within a large forested area harvested creating a mosaic of different even-aged stands • Strip – trees removed in row perpendicular to prevailing wind direction to reduce windthrow • Cut with reserves – leaving certain trees such as snags for wildlife

  6. Patch Clearcuts

  7. Clearcutting - Then

  8. Clearcutting - Now

  9. Seed Tree Cut • Best for trees with wind-borne seeds (pines, ash, etc.) • Requires 2 harvest operations thus less economical but saves planting costs if successful (pines again) • Seed trees susceptible to damage (wind, lightning, etc.) • Less ugly and controversial

  10. Seed Tree Cut

  11. Seed Tree Cut

  12. Shelterwood Cut • Helps regenerate more shade tolerant species • Provides protective cover for developing stand • Similar to seed tree but with 3 treatments • 1. Remove about 50% of the overstory (~50 leave trees/acre) • 2. Remove about half of the remaining overstory • 3. Remove the rest of the overstory • Must take care to not damage regeneration during successive treatments • More visually appealing

  13. Shelterwood Types • Strip – reduces damage to residual stand • Uniform – spacing of residual trees • Group – residual trees in small groups • Irregular – residual trees left longer than normal • Natural – let the stand dictate the process

  14. Shade Tolerance

  15. Selection Cut • Removes trees (either singles or groups) leaving an uneven aged stand (generally 3 aged). • More difficult to implement. • Provides more economic returns than other systems. • Protects site better than other systems. • Best for Shade Tolerant species. • Best for sensitive wildlife

  16. USFS Regulation Classes • I = Even-aged Management • Clearcutting with or without thinning • Shelterwood with or without thinning • II = Special Conditions • Non-timber objectives = Longer rotations than optimum for timber • III = Marginal Timber Yield • Single tree/tree groups for sanitation, salvage or hazard reduction • Stand maintenance (SMZ or highways) • Regeneration encouragement • Single tree/Group selection

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