Title: The Science of Forestry
1The Science of Forestry
- Boris Zeide
- zeide_at_uamont.edu
- Professor of Forestry
- School of Forestry
- University of Arkansas at Monticello
230 Years Ago
3Two Is Between the Extremes
- Of many (all) points on a curve
- and
- One
4What Has Been Done Since Then?
- In 1978
- Two-point method
- Purely an empirical finding
- No theoretical rationale.
- In 2008
- I now understand why this method works.
- As a result, it has become possible to describe
many other things, including the entire forestry.
5A Fundamental Equivalence
- of points
-
- of local parameters
-
- of growth factors
- Equations may contain global parameters or
constants.
6Reinforcement or Opposition?
each other?
7Empirical Support
- Current annual increment
- first increases, then decreases.
- This fact indicates that factors of growth are
opposites.
Increment
Age
8Two Sides
- Every complex problem has two opposing sides.
- The key is to recognize both.
9 and vice versa
- Many of our errors can be traced to taking one
side for the whole. - The rest of my talk is an illustration of these
simple points.
10A Description of Growth
- A complete, if coarse, description of growth
- where the increase of organism size, dy, during
an instant of time, dt, is presented as the
product of influences that facilitate the growth
and those that check it.
11Growth Expansion
- Basic growth process is
- Unrestricted cell division
- The growth rate is proportional to either
- the number of cells
- or
- the size of an organism
12Complications
- The proportion of living cells decreases
- where k is the coefficient of proportionality
- and p lt 1 is the allometric coefficient
specifying the diminishing portion of living
tissue.
13Growth Decline
- Unlimited expansion is checked by aging and
finite area. - The simplest assumption is that growth declines
linearly with age - where q is the constant rate of decline. This
module predicts the complete termination of
growth at age t 1/q. Afterwards, the growth
would be negative, which is not realistic.
14Adaptation
- The linear growth decline is counterbalanced by
phenotypic (built-in) adaptation. - Deceleration of growth decline is proportional to
the current rate of decline
15Adaptation Growth
- Integration results in a non-linear growth
decline - The requirement that . This module can be
viewed as the sum of the infinite number of terms
of a Taylor series.
16Combined Model of Tree Growth
- The product of the growth expansion and decline
modules unites two opposite trends in a model of
tree growth
17Structure of the Growth Model
18Growth Model Legend
19Empirical Verification
- The equation favored by foresters for growth
modeling - It does not look like the derived model.
20Empirical Verification
- Actually, the Richards equation is identical to
the derived model - Integration with specific values of the parameter
p produces the Gompertz (p 1), logistic (p
2), and Bertalanffy (p 2/3) equations.
21Empirical Verification
- In the Richards equation
- a, b, and c are
22What Does the Identity Tell Us?
- The biological processes and their analytical
forms have substance. - The success of the empirical equations, reflects
the fact that they unwittingly express the basic
processes of growth. - While the processes infuse meaning into the
empirical equations, the equations give shape to
the processes, making them tangible and
operational.
23Why Are Two Points Sufficient?
- Because those opposites are related.
- Out of three parameters of the Richards equation,
only two are independent. - Parameter c is global. It is determined by tree
structure rather than site quality, growth rates,
or tolerance.
24Growth curves combined at 50 years
- Heights of 36 spruce trees of site class 16.4
combined at 50 years
Guttenberg, A.R., von. 1915. Growth and yield of
spruce in Hochgebirge. Franz Deuticke, Wien. 153
p.
25Growth curves combined at inflection
- Rescaled heights and ages of 104 spruce trees
combined at the inflection point
26Shortcoming of Growth Equations
- Growth equations cannot reflect variations in
stand density.
27Density Module Opposites
- A total lack of competition among trees and full
availability of resources. - The extreme competition and density that preclude
any growth.
The growth model describes the first opposite.
28Density Module Solution
- Given adaptation, the decrease in volume growth,
-dy', is proportional to the product of volume
growth and density increase, y'dS, rather than to
the density increase dS alone - where S is stand density and m is a parameter.
29Tree Growth-Density Model
- Incorporating the density module into the growth
model produces a growth-density model describing
tree growth in stands of any age, size, and
density
30Stand Growth-Density Model
- Multiplying the volume growth of average tree,
v, by number of trees produces stand growth - Stand growth in terms of average diameter, age
and density
31Forest Management
- The theory outlined above exposes the inner
mechanisms of forest stand dynamics. It is about
regularities inferred from past observations. - In contrast, forest management is active and
forward-oriented it is prescriptive rather than
descriptive.
32Two Goals Of Management
- Preserving the environment, and
- Meeting the current and future wood products
needs of an increasing human population. - All the diversity of forest management is made of
various combinations of these two opposite goals.
33Solution Spatial Separation
- Conflicting goals cannot be satisfied at the same
time and at the same place - But they can be satisfied in different places.
34Solution Spatial Separation
- Spatial separation reverses the conflict between
the goals and makes sustainable intensive
management for wood products a prerequisite for
the existence of undisturbed forests.
35Maximizing Combined Utility
- Why not combine some use with some conservation
on the same land? - Why not thin stands before trees rot?
- Or leave some patches of native vegetation in the
middle of forest plantations and agricultural
fields?
36Maximizing Combined Utility
- Because curtailed preservation on the same land
would detract from both environmental quality and
production. - Spatial separation maximizes the combined utility.
37How To Manage For Preservation
- Opposites Restoration ecology versus the
"hands-off" approach. - Solution Leave nature alone.
38How To Manage For Preservation
- Nature is the generator and best manager of
biodiversity. It is counterproductive and
supercilious to interfere with its eternal work
of creation and destruction.
39How To Manage Wood Production
- A promising way to preserve nature is to increase
productivity on the portion of land devoted to
the second goal of forest management wood
production.
40How to Manage Wood Production
- Aside from expensive and not-always-rewarding
site alteration, this can be done by - minimizing interspecific competition and
- optimizing intraspecific competition.
41Interspecific Competition
- Among the various benefits ascribed to biodiverse
forests are - higher productivity,
- beauty, and
- stable dynamics.
- None of these claims is not supported by
evidence.
42Interspecific Competition
- In fact, interspecific competition is one of the
most harmful factors of tree life. - kills many trees
- prevents others from reaching their growth
potential. - Interspecific competition should be minimized.
43Intraspecific Competition
- Current consensus
- thinning can redistribute growth from smaller to
larger stems but not increase its amount - As long as the site is fully occupied (trees
making their full use of available resources),
the species will produce the same amount of wood
per year at various densities. Whether there are
many small trees or fewer large trees, a similar
wood volume is produced - (Spurr and Barnes 1980 p.376).
44Empirical Basis of Consensus
Langsaeter's curve
Relationship between standing volume and volume
increment by Langsaeter (1941)
45A Problem with the Consensus
- Stand growth is a function of average diameter,
age and density
46Optimal Density m
- Differentiating this equation with respect to
density and setting the derivative equal to zero
allows us to determine the density at which the
current stand volume growth reaches maximum.
47Optimal And Normal Densities
- m 67839
- For undisturbed permanent plots (control and
initial measurements) of the Monticello study,
normal density is 63816 - When the difference in diameter is taken into
account, the highest growth is observed in stands
of high, and not medium, density
48Volume Growth and Density
- Relationship between volume growth (m3/ha) and
current density for loblolly pine stands - equal age (20 years),
- diameter (25 cm), and
- site index (20 m) (base25 years).
49Sum of Growth Maxima Is Not Maximum
- If volume growth is maximum at the highest
current density, then this density should
maximize the total yield over rotation. - But this inference contradicts forestry
experience, which tells us that moderately dense
stands are more productive.
50Inverse Relationship
- An inverse relationship exists between tree size
and average density. - Although, at a given moment, normal density does
produce maximum growth, when it is maintained
over an extended period, the same density
suppresses diameter and, as a result, reduces
volume growth and volume, itself.
51Inverse Relationship
- For this reason, the sum of maxima at each moment
does not produce the maximum of final harvest.
52Growth-Density Model and Langsaeter's Curve
- Langsaeter's curve bundles the effect of tree
size together with that of current density. As a
result, the position of the optimum is misplaced
toward middle densities. - The model is not restricted to stands of the same
age and site as is Langsaeter's curve. It
includes the terms reflecting these variables and
is applicable to even-aged stands of any age and
site.
53Growth-Density Model and Langsaeter's Curve
54Optimization of Stand Density Trajectory
- For centuries, foresters have been searching for
a single level of optimal density to be
maintained throughout stand life. - But nobody has proven that keeping density at 15
years the same as at 35 years would maximize
harvest. - Now the challenge is to find an optimal
trajectory of current density.
55Conflicting Requirements
- To maximize average tree size, we need the lowest
density. - To maximize stand volume growth, we need the
highest density. - How do we minimize the negative side of density
(small size) and maximize its positive side
(maximum volume of trees with a given size)?
56Resolving the Conflict
Keep the number of trees per unit area constant.
- The number should be the minimum that assures the
density sufficient to maximize financial returns
by harvest time. - Such a prescription can be called the minimum
number-maximum yield (minimax) strategy. - Albeit unknown in forestry, it is not new for
millennia, farmers have grown only the plants
they intend to harvest.
57Advantages of Minimax
- Besides maximum returns from final harvest,
minimax has several other benefits - saving on planting and pre-commercial thinning
- minimization of root rot, insect infestation, and
other risks associated with high density - sturdy well-spaced trees with laterally
symmetrical crowns which reduces damage from ice,
wind, and other hazards. - - before the trees close their canopies, up to
90 of the land can be used for other purposes.
58Disadvantages of Minimax
- Minimax is one extreme.
- It may maximize final yield and profit in theory,
but it cannot be applied without some compromises
because of the following problems - establishment mortality
- the lack of selection
- interspecific competition
- wood quality
- forfeiting intermediate harvest
- rectangularity.
59The Science of Forestry
The Science of Forestry
BasicOpposites
Theory of Forest Stand Dynamics Forest Management
Proximate aim Passive description of what is Active prescription of what should be
Ultimate aim Truth Good
Output General laws Specific forward-oriented actions
60Opposites of Stand Dynamics
61Management Opposites
Forest Management
Preservation
Maximum profit
Action None
Environmental control
Genetic modification
Site
Competition
Interspecific
Intraspecific
Returns
Costs
Action Minimize
Life-long
Action Improve when it pays
Current
High at the end
Low at the beginning
Optimum Maximum
Action Keep the number of trees constant
62Knowledge Means or End?
- Along with practical utility, the science of
forestry refines research methods. - Do we use our mind to understand things and
improve our standard of living - or
- we study things to clarify our thinking?
- As with much else, science is a synthesis of
these means and ends.
63THE 1-2-1 METHOD
- It considers two opposite explanations
simultaneously. The method organizes research
into cycles containing three basic steps. - Defining a problem
- Exposing two oppose explanations
- Locating a solution
- The name1-2-1 methodrefers to the sequence of
one problem, two explanations, and one solution.