1' Silvicultural systems 2' Yield classes in British forestry Peter Savill University of Oxford - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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1' Silvicultural systems 2' Yield classes in British forestry Peter Savill University of Oxford

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a typical plantation life history for spruce (oak) Year. Obtain seed -3. Raise plants -2 ... that have evolved in monocultures (often pines, spruces, eucalypts) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: 1' Silvicultural systems 2' Yield classes in British forestry Peter Savill University of Oxford


1
1. Silvicultural systems2. Yield classes in
British forestryPeter Savill(University of
Oxford)
  • University of Reading
  • 11 November, 2009

2
Silvicultural systems are
  • The processes by which the crops that constitute
    a forest are tended, removed and replaced by new
    crops, resulting in the production of woods of a
    distinctive form.
  • Name of a system is based on
  • number of age classes (e.g. even-aged,
    uneven-aged), or
  • regeneration method (e.g. shelterwood, selection)

3
A silvicultural system involves
  • method of regeneration (e.g. coppice,
    planting, natural regeneration, direct seeding)
  • form of the crop produced (e.g. regular or
    irregular)
  • arrangement of the crops over the forest (a form
    of normality usually aimed at)

4
A sustainable 70 year-rotation in a 700 ha
even-aged forest
Area being thinned on a cycle
Area not contributing to production
5
Annual planting or felling areas
6
Forecast production from British forests
7
Intensive versus extensive forestryFeatures Int
ensive forests
  • Age distribution Even aged
  • Rotation Short (45-60 years)
  • Species composition Pure, exotic, clonal
  • Management Cheap
  • Establishment In open, by planting
  • Scale of operations Large, concentrated
  • Production 15-30 m3ha-1yr
  • Conservation value Low

8
Intensive versus extensive forestryFeatures Exte
nsive forests
  • Age distribution 0 to rotation
  • Rotation Long (150-200 years)
  • Species composition Many, indigenous
  • Management Expensive
  • Establishment Under canopy, natural
    regeneration
  • Scale of operations Small, scattered
  • Production 3-4 m3ha-1yr
  • Conservation value High

9
Classification of silvicultural systems
  • 1. coppice systems
  • 2. high forest systems
  • a) regeneration over whole forest which is
    uneven-aged polycyclic or selection systems
  • b) regeneration concentrated in one part of
    forest at any one time
  • i) old crop removed in several fellings over
    years shelterwood systems
  • ii) old crop removed by a single felling
    monocyclic or clear felling system

10
Intensive versus extensive systems
  • Intensive (monocyclic) systems
  • coppice
  • coppice with standards
  • clear felling
  • (shelterwood)
  • Extensive (polycyclic) systems
  • selection
  • group systems

11
Classification of silvicultural systems
  • 1. coppice systems
  • (simple coppice, coppice with standards,
    pollarding)
  • 2. high forest systems
  • a) regeneration over whole forest which is
    uneven-aged polycyclic or selection systems
  • b) regeneration concentrated in one part of
    forest at any one time
  • i) old crop removed in several fellings over
    years shelterwood systems
  • ii) old crop removed by a single felling
    monocyclic or clear felling system

12
Application of coppice systems
  • Where small dimensioned material is required
    (fuel wood Salix and Populus, pulp Eucalyptus)
  • Generally only with broadleaved trees
  • Where some forms of nature conservation are
    important
  • Formerly for basket willows, farm and household
    implements, etc

13
Selection system
14
Size distributions in tropical rain forest
15
Number of trees per hectare at different ages in
an even-aged stand
16
Application of selection systems
  • On steep sites for protection against soil
    erosion and avalanches
  • Where landscape continuity is required (urban
    forests)
  • Where wood production and profit are not major
    motives
  • Mainly appropriate for shade bearers (beech and
    silver firs)

17
Classification of silvicultural systems
  • 1. coppice systems
  • 2. high forest systems
  • a) regeneration over whole forest which is
    uneven-aged polycyclic or selection systems
  • b) regeneration concentrated in one part of
    forest at any one time
  • i) old crop removed in several fellings over
    years shelterwood systems
  • ii) old crop removed by a single felling
    monocyclic or clear felling system

18
Uniform shelterwood system
19
Application of shelterwood systems
  • Usually on rather similar sites to clear
    fellingwhere soil deterioration is not a serious
    risk
  • In environments where species grown produce
    viable seed regularly (oak and beech in parts of
    Europe, sycamore and ash in UK, Dipterocarps in
    SE Asia)

20
Clear felling systema typical plantation life
history for spruce (oak)
  • Year
  • Obtain seed -3
  • Raise plants -2
  • Prepare ground -0.5
  • Planting 0
  • Tending 4-15 (0-20)
  • Thinning 20-45 (30-100)
  • Clear felling 55 (120)
  • Replanting second rotation

21
Application of clear felling system
  • On sites where forest clearance will not cause
    erosion or other problems
  • Where profit is a major motive for planting
  • With light-demanding species that have evolved in
    monocultures (often pines, spruces, eucalypts)

22
Choice of system depends on
  • Regeneration ecology of trees
  • Site, topography, soil
  • Wildlife
  • Pests and diseases
  • Fire
  • Climatic risks
  • Size, age, vigour of existing stand
  • Introduction of new genotypes
  • Financial constraints

23
What is a
  • YIELD CLASS?

24
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25
Patterns of volume increment for an even-aged
stand
Yield Class
26
Mean annual increment curves for different species
27
Mean annual increment curves for a single species
28
Yield class curves for Douglas fir
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