| Terms Acre: A standard unit of area
measure. One acre equals: 43,560 square feet; 4840
square yards; 10 square chains.
Advanced regeneration: Natural regeneration that
is established prior to a timber harvest.
Adventitious buds: Buds that form in an unusual
spot on a tree, usually on the bole.
Age Class: One of the intervals, commonly 10-20
years, into which the age range of trees are divided for
classification.
Apical meristem: The growing tip of a tree stem
or root.
Aspect: The direction towards which a slope
faces.
Basal Area: The cross sectional area of the stem
of a tree at 4.5 feet above the ground (dbh). The basal
area of a stand is the summation of all the trees or
classes of trees per unit area of land. Basal area is
expressed in square feet per acre. Basal area is
directly related to stand volume and density.
Biomass: The total weight of all harvestable
vegetation from a stand. This term can also be used to
describe a harvest that results in all material being
processed into chips.
Board Foot: The volume of solid wood equivalent
to a piece 12 inches long, 12 inches wide and 1 inch
thick. A measure of standing or felled timber usually
related to sawlogs.
Bole: The stem of a tree.
Browse: Buds, leaves, and twigs of seedling and
sapling regeneration that are utilized as a food
resource by wildlife.
Canopy: The combined cover of individual tree
crowns.
Chain: A measurement of horizontal distance, 66
feet. Areas expressed in square chains can immediately
be converted to acres by dividing by 10.
Cleaning: The removal of competing vegetation to
release desired regeneration for optimal growth.
Clear-cut: A silvicultural method which removes
all trees from a designated area at one time for the
purpose of creating a new, even-aged stand. This
management system is usually used to regenerate
shade-intolerant tree species. Variations include patch
and strip clear-cutting.
Climax: An association of plants and animals that
will prevail in the absence of disturbance.
Co-Dominate: Trees with crowns forming the general
level of the forest canopy and receiving full sunlight
from above but comparatively little from the sides.
Crop Trees: Trees to be grown to the end of the
rotation.
Crown: The branches and twigs of the upper part
of a
tree.
Cruise: A survey of forest stands to determine
the number, size and species of trees, as well as
terrain, soil condition, access and any other factors
relevant
to forest management planning.
Cull: Trees that have no current or potential
commercial value.
Diameter at Breast Height (dbh): The diameter of
a standing tree measured at 4.5 feet above the ground
and expressed in inches.
Epicormic branching: Branches that sprout from
adventitious buds on the bole of a tree, usually when it
is stressed or is subjected to full sunlight.
Dominant: Trees with well developed crowns which
are above the canopy and receive direct sunlight from
above and partially from the side.
Even-aged: An age class description of a stand in
which the age of the trees is relatively close, usually
within 20 years. Stands with two distinct age
classes can also be referred to as even-aged.
Even-aged Management: Timber management that
produces a stand of trees with relatively little
difference in age usually 10-20 years. Even-age
silvicultural systems include clear-cut, seed-tree and
shelterwood.
Forest Management Plan (FMP): A long range plan
designed to identify a landowner’s goals and objectives
and the silvicultural methods that will be
employed to achieve those goals.
Forest Type: A natural group or association of
different species of trees which commonly occur together
over a large area. Forest types are defined
by one or more of the dominant species of trees in the
type. Common commercial types in the northeast are:
beech-birch-maple; beech-red maple; mixedwood;
spruce-fir; white pine.
Forestry: The art and science of growing and
managing forests and forest lands for the continuing use
of their resources.
Girdle: To destroy the conductive tissue of a
tree in a ring around the bole.
Group Selection: An uneven-aged harvesting method
designed to favor intolerant or intermediate species.
Trees are generally removed in groups in areas ranging
from 1/20-2 acres in size.
Habitat: The place where a plant or animal can
live and maintain itself.
Hardwoods: Broad-leaved trees which lose their
leaves in the fall.
Harvest: A silvicultural treatment that is
intended to establish regeneration. A harvest is
generally a higher level of cutting intensity than a
thinning.
High-grading: A liquidation cut in which only the
best quality, highest value trees are removed. Cuts of
this nature are short sighted and exploitative and
result in the degradation of the forest ecosystem.
Hydrologic Class: A measure of a bare soil's
runoff characteristics. Group A soil has a high water
infiltration rate and a low runoff potential. Group D
soil has a very slow rate of water infiltration and is
prone to high runoff.
Improvement Cutting: A silvicultural treatment in
which poor quality and low value trees are removed to
give the best trees more room to grow.
Individual Tree Selection: An uneven-aged
harvesting method designed to favor tolerant species.
Trees are removed individually to maintain a continuous
and uniform crown cover. Also referred to as single tree
selection.
Intermediate: Trees whose crowns reach the canopy
level but receive little or no direct light from above
and none from the sides.
Intermediate Treatments: Harvesting methods
employed during even-aged management. The removal of
trees from a stand between the time of establishment and
the final harvest with the purpose of improving stand
growth and/or species composition and/or health.
Intolerant Species: Trees unable to grow and
develop in the shade of other species.
Landing: Any place where logs are assembled for
further transport.
Liquidation Cutting: Removal of all merchantable
products from the forest with no regard for stand
improvement or regeneration, usually preceding the
sale of the land.
Log Rule: A table or formula showing estimated
volumes, usually in board feet, for various log
diameters and lengths.
Mast: Nuts, berries, and seeds utilized by
wildlife as a food resource.
Maturity: Expressed in two ways: 1. Financial
maturity occurs when a tree has reached the point where
it has maximized value growth from the prospective
market place; 2. Biological maturity occurs when a tree
has reached the point where the energy costs of
maintaining itself exceeds the energy input from
photosynthesis. Financial maturity is reached long
before biological maturity.
MBF: The abbreviation for one thousand board
feet.
Mean Stand Diameter (MSD): The arithmetic mean
diameter of the trees in a stand.
Medial Diameter (MDL): This is developed by
determining by the sum of each diameter class multiplied
by the basal area in that class and then dividing the
result by the total basal area. MDL is useful in stands
with a high proportion of saplings because it is less
influenced by these small trees and more accurately the
size of the crop trees.
Mixed Hardwoods: Timber stands characterized by a
mixture of hardwood species.
Overmature: A stand of trees that is older than
normal rotation age for the type.
Overstory: The upper crown canopy of the forest.
The overstory is usually referenced as the larger trees
in the stand.
Phloem: Tissue of the inner bark that conducts
photosynthate from the leaves down to the roots.
Pioneer: Shade intolerant species that are the
first trees to develop in an area after or the
abandonment of a field or after a disturbance that
covers a fairly
large area. Pioneer species include aspen and paper
birch.
Pole or Pole Timber: A tree or trees greater than
4.0 inches dbh and less than 10.0 inches dbh.
Pre-commercial Thinning: An intermediate
harvesting operation in a young stand that does not
generate
income.
Prescription: A course of action to effect change
in a forest stand (harvest, planting, TSI).
Q-factor: A device used to describe the structure
of an uneven aged stand. The q-factor is the ratio of
the number of trees in a diameter class divided by the
number of trees in the next smaller diameter class. The
lower the q-factor, the higher the proportion of large
diameter trees.
Regeneration: Renewal of a tree crop by natural
or artificial means.
Release: The freeing of well-established
seedlings or saplings from surrounding growth.
Residual: Trees that are left to grow in a stand
after a silvicultural treatment.
Rotation: The length of time required to grow an
even aged crop of trees to a desired age.
Rotation Age: The age at which an even aged stand
is considered ready for harvest.
Salvage Cut: The removal of dead, dying and
damaged trees after a natural disaster or insect or
disease infestation to utilize the wood before it loses
all of
its commercial value.
Sanitation Cut: The removal of dead, dying or
damaged trees to prevent or interrupt the spread of
insects or disease.
Sapling: Trees taller than 4.5 feet but less than
5.0 inches dbh.
Sawlog: A log considered suitable in size and
quality for producing lumber. Regional standards apply
for diameter, length and freedom from defect. Sawlog is
also used to refer to a tree that has reached sufficient
size to produce a sawlog. Small sawlog trees are 12-16
inches dbh, medium sawlog trees are
17-20 inches dbh, and large sawlog trees are 22 inches
dbh or greater.
Sawtimber: Trees that have obtained a minimum
diameter at breast height that can be felled and
processed into sawlogs. Typical minimum size limits for
commercial species in Vermont are 8 inches dbh for
softwoods and 12 inches dbh for hardwoods.
Seedlings: Trees that are less than 4.5 feet
tall.
Seed Tree: An even-aged silvicultural method in
which most of the merchantable trees are removed in the
first cut, leaving a few scattered trees of desirable
species to serve as a seed source for the new stand. The
seed trees are removed after successful regeneration has
developed. The seed tree method is a regeneration cut
used to create an even-aged stand of shade intolerant
species.
Selection method: An uneven-aged silvicultural
system where individual trees, or groups of trees, are
removed from a stand to ensure a sustained yield from an
uneven-aged stand.
Shade tolerance: The ability of trees to
reproduce and grow in the shade of other trees.
Tolerance ratings are very tolerant, tolerant,
intermediate, intolerant, and very intolerant.
Shelterwood: An even-aged silvicultural system in
which the mature trees are removed in a series of
partial cuts that take place over a small portion of
the rotation. The residual trees are left as a seed
source and to provide shade and protection for the new
seedlings. Three types of cuttings are used in this
method:
(1) The preparatory cut, in which the least
desirable trees are removed to improve the quality and
growth of the stand, (2) The seed cut, in which the
regeneration is established, (3) The removal cut (or
cuts) in which the mature trees are cut to release the
regeneration.
Variations of this method include the group, irregular,
strip, and uniform shelterwood.
Silviculture: Manipulation of the forest
ecosystem to achieve specific goals and objectives.
Site Class: A measurement of the quality of the
soil in terms of its potential productivity. A site
class of 1 indicates that the soil is highly productive
and
a site class of 4 is considered non-productive, usually
due to excessively wet, dry, or thin soil.
Site Index: A measure of the relative productive
capacity of an area. Site index is species specific and
is based on a comparison of tree age and height.
Skid Trail: Any path in the woods over which
multiple loads of logs are hauled, usually by a skidder
or tractor. Primary skid trails are the main pathways
that enter the landing.
Skidder: A four wheel drive, tractor-like
vehicle, articulated in the middle for maneuverability,
with a cable or grapple on the back end designed to
bring
logs or whole trees to the landing once that they have
been felled.
Slope: A relative measure of steepness of the
ground. Slope can be computed by dividing the rise
in elevation by the horizontal distance traveled. Slope
is usually expressed in percent (rise ft /run) X 100.
Slope can be derived automatically using various forest
measurement tools.
Snag: A standing, dead tree.
Softwood: Coniferous trees, usually 'evergreen'
(the exception being tamarack), with needles or
scale-like leaves.
Stand (Treatment Unit): A community of trees
possessing sufficient uniformity in regards to
composition, constitution, age, spatial arrangement or
condition to be distinguishable from adjacent
communities.
Stocking: An indication of the number of trees in
a stand as compared to the optimum number of trees
required to achieve some management objective, usually
improved growth rates or increased timber values.
Stocking Level: Stocking levels are calculated by
comparing either the basal area or the number of trees
the site could support, if the growth potential of the
land was fully utilized, to the basal area or number of
trees actually on the site.
Strip Cut: A timber harvesting operation where
all of the merchantable trees are cut within a long
narrow strip. An even-aged cutting method usually used
to
regenerate spruce and fir.
Stumpage: The value of timber as it stands in the
woods just before harvest (on the stump). Loggers are
usually bid on timber based on its stumpage value.
Stumpage can also be used to refer to standing timber.
Succession: The orderly and predictable replacement
of one plant community by another over time in the
absence of disturbance.
Suppressed: Trees with crowns entirely below the
general level of the forest canopy that receive no
direct sunlight from above or the sides.
Thinning: A silvicultural treatment that reduces
stand density to allow the best trees to grow with less
competition. There are three kinds of thinning: crown
thinning, low thinning, and free thinning.
Timber Stand Improvement (TSI): A non-commercial
timber harvest conducted in stands of timber to improve
the health, growth rate, and form of the
remaining trees.
Tolerant Species: Trees that can grow
satisfactorily in the shade of other trees. Tolerant
species of commercial importance in Vermont include
sugar maple, beech, red spruce, and hemlock.
Truck Road: A road capable of supporting a
trailer truck that hauls logs from the landing to the
mill.
Understory: Those plants growing under the main
canopy.
Uneven aged: An age class description of a stand
of trees that contains more than two distinct age
classes and a variety of size classes.
Uneven-aged (All-aged) Management: Timber
management that produces a stand composed of a variety
of age classes. Harvesting methods used in uneven-aged
management include individual tree and group selection.
Vigor: The health and vitality of a tree. Vigor
can most accurately be assessed by observations of
foliage (density, width and color) and percent live
crown.
Volume Table: A table that utilizes tree dbh or
log diameters and log length (usually 16 feet) to
estimate board foot volumes according to a set of
assumptions (“log rules”) about how the log will be
processed into boards.
Windthrow: A tree or trees that have been toppled
by high winds. A common phenomena along the edge of
strip cuts and clear-cuts.
Xylem: Vascular tissue of the outer wood that
conducts water and nutrients from the roots to the upper
part of the tree.
Yield: Total forest growth over a specified
period of time, less mortality, unmarketable fiber and
cull.
Yield Table: A species-specific representation of
the amount of useable wood fiber a forest can be
expected to produce during a single rotation based on
site index.
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