Title: Silviculture
1Silviculture
- Definition
- Objectives
- Terminology
- Regeneration methods
2Silviculture
- Definition
- The management of forest vegetation to meet
objectives - Includes the theory and practice of controlling
forest establishment, composition, structure and
growth
3Silvicultural objectives
- To increase wood production
- To enhance wildlife habitat
- To enhance scenic values
- To enhance recreational opportunities
- To enhance grazing for domestic livestock
4Silvicultural objectives
- To enhance water quality and quantity
- To enhance forest health
- To diminish susceptibility to stand-replacing
wildfires - To enhance ecosystem functioning
5Silvicultural objectives
- May be complementary to one another
- May vary by the type of ownership and objectives
of the owners
6Silvicultural Practicescommonly classified as
- Harvest /regeneration methods
- Intermediate treatments
7Harvest /regeneration
- Harvest/regeneration may rely on natural
seedfall, vegetative propagation, direct seeding
or planting to obtain adequate stocking - NFMA specifies that sites must be regenerated
within 5 years of harvest - Idaho State Forest Practices Act also specifies
that site must be adequately regenerated within 5
years
8Natural regeneration
9Regeneration by planting
10Planted forest
11Silvicultural practices can result in different
age structures
- Even-aged
- Stand may be considered even-aged if all of the
trees are within 20 age range at rotation - Un-even-aged
- Three or more age classes is considered an
un-even-aged forest or multi-aged forest
12Silvicultural practices can result in different
age structures
- All-aged forest
- Hardly ever happens in nature
- May get waves of regeneration due to variation in
weather, seed crops, soil moisture during
germination period and first growing season, and
variation in predator populations
13Lodgepole pine - even-aged, dog-hair stand
14Uneven-aged stand - mixed species
15Silvicultural Practices
- Harvest /regeneration methods that result in
even-aged stands - Clearcut method
- Seed-tree method
- Shelterwood method
- Coppice method
- Variations on the themes
16Original Fully-Stocked Stand
17Clearcutting method
- All trees in the treatment area are removed
18Clearcutting method
- New stand may include seedlings from advanced
regeneration, natural seedfall, direct seeding or
planting
19Clearcut viewed from above
20Seed Tree Method
21Seed tree harvest/regeneration
- Harvest removes most of the mature trees from the
original stand - Best 1 to 10 trees per acre left on site
22Seed tree harvest/regeneration
- Seed trees serve as seed source for next stand
- Provides more uniform disperal of seed
- Well-suited to wind-firm, intolerant species
23Seed tree harvest/regeneration(near Libby,
Montana)
24Original Fully-Stocked StandShelterwood Method
25Shelterwood method
- Preparatory cut removes 25-30 percent of the
trees - Promotes wind-firmness in remaining trees
- This step is often skipped
26Shelterwood method Seed tree step
- Seed tree cut removes all but the best trees
about 20-30 mature trees/acre left on site - Opens canopy to allow new seedlings to get
established
27Shelterwood methodOverstory removal
- Overstory removal harvests remaining mature trees
- This step is done after new seedlings are
well-established
28Shelterwood harvest/regeneration(north of
Potlatch, Idaho)
29Silvicultural Practices
- Harvest /regeneration methods that result in
uneven-aged stands - Single-tree selection method
- Group selection method
30Individual Tree SelectionA small number of trees
are removed on a regular cycle
31Group SelectionSmall groups of trees removed in
repeated entries
32Retention HarvestingRetains 15-20 percent of
preharvest stand
33Retention harvest
34Silvicultural practicescan affect
- Types of species that regenerate
- Even-aged methods favor intolerant species
- Uneven-aged methods favor tolerant species
35Silvicultural practicescan affect
- Forest structure
- Vertical and horizontal arrangement of vegetation
within the stand - Vegetation may all be at same level or at
multiple levels within the forest canopy
36Silvicultural practicescan affect
- Composition (species mix)
- Usually expressed in percent ()
- Pure stand 100 single species
- Mixed species stands usually described by percent
of each species
37Silvicultural Practices can affect
- Stand density
- Can be expressed as the number of trees per acre
(TPA) - Stand may have 2,000 to 3,000 TPA at year 1 and
only 300 TPA at maturity
38Silvicultural Practices have an effect on
- Stand density
- Can also be expressed as basal area/acre
- Basal area equals the cross-sectional area of
trees expressed in square feet at breast height
(4.5 ft.) - Example 180-200 square feet basal area is
common in northern Idaho - Management guidelines can describe the target
basal area/acre at a certain age - Neither TPA nor BA is adequate by itself to
describe stand density
39Crown class distribution
- Refers to the position of the live crowns in the
forest canopy - Crowns classified as
- dominant crown extends above the main canopy
- co-dominant crown helps form the general level
of the main canopy - intermediate crown is in lower portion of main
canopy - suppressed crown is completely overtopped by
neighbors
40Rotation vs Cutting Cycle
- Rotation
- Applies to even-aged stands
- Refers to the time between regeneration and
maturity (time of harvest) - In southeast US - 35 years In Idaho - 120 years
- Cutting cycle
- Applies to uneven-aged management
- Refers to the time interval between harvest
entries
41Regeneration
- Success will depend on
- The way the original stand was harvested
- Follow-up treatments
- Availability of seeds or other propagules
- Biological and ecological appropriateness of the
regeneration materials to the site - Speed with which regeneration materials reach the
site - Weather conditions during regeneration
42Silviculture
- Approaches to management
- Commodity /financial efficiency
- managing forests to provide timber products in
the most financially efficient manner - Preservation
- management by reserving forests so that no
commodity products are extracted - Integration
- managing forests to provide a variety of
commodity and non-commodity values, including
timber, wildlife habitat and recreational
opportunities
43Silvicultural Prescription
- Plan that translates land management objectives
into silviculturally sound treatments
44Silvicultural Prescriptions
- To prepare a silvicultural prescription
- Determine the current condition
- Define the desired condition
- Develop a plan on how to achieve the desired
condition, given the current condition
45Silvicultural Prescriptions
- Prescription should address the implications of
proposed actions for related resources and
resource use - Prescription should address the implications of a
do nothing alternative