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Forestry

Forestry. A beginner’s guide. Trees. Anatomy of a Tree. Outer Bark- This keeps water and nutrients in, and pests out Inner Bark- A pipeline for food the tree needs Cambium- The g rowing portion of the t ree, shows age Sapwood- A pipeline For water the tree needs Heartwood- The

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Forestry

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  1. Forestry A beginner’s guide

  2. Trees

  3. Anatomy of a Tree • Outer Bark- This keeps water and nutrients in, and pests out • Inner Bark- A pipeline for food the tree needs • Cambium- The • growing portion of the • tree, shows age • Sapwood- A pipeline • For water the tree needs • Heartwood- The • dead portion of the • tree that gives it its main • support

  4. Tree Types • Study on your own! You’ll need to do some identification at the competition and sometimes the transition between black and white pictures and an actual leaf is confusing, so for more common trees you might want to look up real pictures online.

  5. Tips for Identification • Carefully study the tree you want to identify. Look at leaves, twigs, buds and any flowers or fruits. • When the leaves have fallen, you can still identify trees. It takes careful study of their twigs, buds, leaf scars and bark, and a little practice. • Individual trees vary in their characteristics. The amount of sun a leaf receives affects its shape. And bark often varies with the age of the tree—younger trees are often smoother and more lightly colored.

  6. Important Hardwoods • Red Maple • Red maple’s light-colored wood has many uses, including furniture, paneling, moldings, doors, turnings, and musical instruments. • Red maples are the most common trees in Pennsylvania. • Black Cherry • Uses for black cherry wood and veneer include high-quality furniture, cabinets, paneling, moldings, flooring, musical instruments, carvings, and turnings. • Black cherry is also a fairly common PA tree.

  7. Important Hardwoods • Northern Red Oak • Its wood and veneer uses include high-quality furniture, cabinets, paneling, moldings, construction, coffins, and floors. • White Oak • Uses for white oak are similar to Northern red oak, except it is also excellent for outside applications, barrels, and ships. Its wood is resistant to decay and impervious to liquids.

  8. Important Hardwoods • Yellow “Tulip” Poplar • The wood, which has a light greenish-yellow color, is useful for a variety of construction purposes. Uses for the wood include furniture, veneer, cabinets, doors, paneling, plywood, turnings, and carvings. • Sugar Maple • Prized as a strong, shock-resistant wood, maple makes solid furniture, moldings, veneer, paneling, tabletops. cabinets, woodenware, rifle stocks, handrails, doors, bowling alleys, and floors.

  9. Important Hardwoods • Chestnut Oak • Chestnut oak wood, often marketed as white oak, is similar in appearance and properties to white oak. The tree’s bark is rich in tannins and was once used to tan leather. The current uses for the wood are similar to those of white oak. • White Ash • Baseball bats, hockey sticks, boat oars, and tool handles are all manufactured from white ash. White ash wood also makes fine furniture, paneling, flooring, doors, moldings, turnings, and cabinets.

  10. Important Hardwoods • American Beech • American Beech is suited for furniture, flooring, paneling, brush handles, ties, and food containers (because it has no odor or taste). The smooth bark often invites carving, which defaces the beauty of the tree. • Hickory • It makes fine flooring, tool handles, ladders, dowels, and sporting goods. It is useful in furniture and cabinet making as well.

  11. Forest Ecology

  12. Forest Types

  13. Forest Types according to The United States Department of Agriculture-Forest Service

  14. Percentage of Forest Types

  15. Forest Growth Over Time Grass/Forbes Shrubs/Saplings Pole Stage Mature

  16. Wildlife and Succession • The type of wildlife in an area depends on the stage of succession a forest is in. • For example: • Shrubs/Saplings: Deer • Mature Forest: Birds • Pole and Mature: Aquatic Life

  17. 3 Factors that Determine Forest Types • Temperature • Minimum winter temperatures and the length of the growing season between the last spring freezes and the first frosts of autumn. • Rainfall • We average 42 inches of rain per year which encourages forest growth. • Topography • Elevation, slope and the direction a slope faces all effect what types of forest types are in an area. Trees that need more moisture are at the bottoms of slopes because they get more moisture, trees that need more sunlight live on the south of slopes because they receive more light.

  18. Biodiversity

  19. Ways We Benefit from Biodiversity • Economics • Biodiversity is necessary for things we use almost everyday- food, fiber, medicine, paper and plastics. Also, many medications require certain things from nature. • Environmental Benefits • Biodiversity is the basis for life sustaining ecological services such as nutrient cycling, photosynthesis, decomposition, soil creation, climate regulation, removal of pollutants, and insect control. All these processes contribute to the stability of the earth’s environment, on which we rely for the air we breathe, the water we drink, and the food we eat.

  20. Ways We Benefit from Biodiversity • Personal Values • People want to preserve the environment and they are undisturbed when nature is balanced. • Enjoyment • Biodiversity contributes to our enjoyment of natural beauty, outdoor recreation, and peace of mind. Some people are drawn to nature to escape the hurried pace of city life.

  21. Loss of Biodersity • How are we losing biodiversity? • Extinction- • Habitat Loss/Destruction • Introduced Species • Pollution • Poor Management Practices- improper timber harvesting can cause adverse environmental effects, such as soil erosion and stream sedimentation, damage to residual stands, long-term regeneration problems, and low species diversity.

  22. Lost PA Species • Mammals: gray wolf, timber wolf, eastern cougar, moose, bison, lynx, wolverine, mountain lion, pine marten, eastern elk, Delmarva Peninsula fox squirrel • Birds: Bachman’s sparrow, lark sparrow • Fishes: mud sunfish, long jaw cisco, lake whitefish, skipjack herring • Mollusks: butterfly mussel • Insects: American burying beetle, precious underwing moth, Karner blue butterfly, northeastern beach tiger beetle • Plants: flame azalea, Carolina petunia, American barberry, small white lady’s slipper, eastern prairie fringed orchid, Virginia spiraea, crested yellow orchid • Reptiles: eastern mud turtle, midland smooth soft-shell turtle • Amphibians: eastern tiger salamander

  23. Tools for Measuring Trees • Biltmore Stick • Diameter Stick • Clinometer

  24. Biltmore Stick

  25. Clinometer

  26. Forest Resource Management and Protection

  27. Forest Management • Silviculture—the art, science, and practice of establishing, tending, and reproducing forest stands. • Thinning—removal of trees to encourage growth of other selected individual trees. • Clearcut—a regeneration technique that removes all the trees, regardless of size, on an area in one operation. Clearcutting produces an even-aged forest stand. • Seed tree method—a regeneration technique where mature trees are left standing in a harvested area to provide seed for regeneration of the cut-over site.

  28. Forest Management • Selection method—a regeneration technique designed to create and perpetuate an uneven-aged forest. Trees may be removed singly or in small groups. • High-grading—a type of timber harvesting in which larger trees of commercially valuable species are removed with little regard for the quality, quantity, or distribution of trees and regeneration left on the site. • Diameter-limit cut—a timber harvesting treatment in which all trees over a specified diameter may be cut. Diameter-limit cuts often result in highgrading. • Salvage cut—the removal of dead, damaged, or diseased trees with the intent of recovering maximum value prior to deterioration.

  29. Things that are Going Good • Pennsylvania’s forest land area is stable with some parts gaining while other parts are losing forests. • The State’s 16.7 million acres of forest land consist mostly of mixed-oak (54 percent) and northern hardwoods (32 percent) forest-type groups. • The current distribution of timberland by stand-size class reveals continued build-up of sawtimber-size stands. • All of the rising trends in wood volume described in the 2004 report have continued during the period from 2004 to 2009, with few exceptions for the major species or species groups. • The overall net growth-to-removals ratio was 2:1 for both forest land and timberland, indicating the forest is growing twice as much wood than is being harvested. • Red maple, black cherry, and northern red oak remained the top three species by volume; sugar maple and chestnut oak are tied at fourth place.

  30. Current Issues • The loss of forest land in Pennsylvania is due primarily to the conversion of forest land to development (67 percent), essentially nonreversible. • The State’s forests continue to show signs of aging with nearly 40 percent of the forest land being 80 years or older. • Private landowners control 70 percent of the timberland acreage and consider forest management as a low priority. • Gypsy moths along with other pests, native, nonnative, and especially exotic or from foreign lands, have become entrenched. • Conditions for regeneration aren’t favorable for some trees.

  31. Role of Trees in Watersheds • Canopy Interception and Filtration • Canopy blocks and slows rainfall and can take in up to 18 inches of rainfall • Trees Consume Stormwater • Trees need water inside them and absorb thousands of gallons of water in a year • Pollutant Removal • Removes nutrients and contamineants from soil and water • Streamside Forest Buffers • Reduces pollution in streams, regulates water temperature, and keeps banks stabilized.

  32. Insect Threats- Emerald Ash Borer • An exotic beetle from Asia was discovered in July 2002 feeding on ash trees. • Jagged holes excavated by woodpeckers feeding on pre-pupal larvae may be the first sign that a tree has become infested. • When a tree has been infested for at least one year, the D-shaped exit holes left by emerging adults will be present on the branches and the trunk. • Bark may split vertically above larval feeding galleries.

  33. Insect Threats • The Asian longhorned beetle was first identified in North America in New York in 1996. • Larvae of the beetle feed in the stems and branches of many hardwood tree species. • Signs of Asian longhorned beetle infestation include dieback of the upper crown, sawdust around the tree, and dime-sized, round emergence holes.

  34. Insect Threats- Gypsy Moth • It is fairly easy to identify gypsy moth because colors of caterpillars, adults, and egg masses are so distinct. • Also, egg masses are large compared to those laid by most insects.

  35. Insect Threats- Hemlock Wooly Adelgid • The hemlock woolly adelgid is a sap-feeding insect that attacks hemlock trees throughout eastern North America. • The insects appear as white sacs clinging to hemlock twigs, resembling the tips of cotton swabs. These sacs are on the underside of the twigs at the base of the needles, making them hard to see at first.

  36. Invasive Plants • are not native to North America; • spread, reproducing by roots or shoots • mature quickly; if spread by seed, produce numerous seeds that disperse and sprout easily • are generalists that can grow in many different conditions

  37. Autumn Olive • Introduced to the United States from East Asia in the 1830's

  38. Bush Honeysuckle • Eurasia (Japan, China, Korea, Manchuria, Turkey and southern Russia); introduced to US for use as ornamentals, for wildlife cover and for soil erosion control.

  39. Garlic Mustard • From Europe

  40. Japanese Barberry • From Japan

  41. Japanese Knotweed • From Japan

  42. Multiflora Rose • Eastern Asia (Japan, Korea and eastern China) introduced for ornamental purposed in the mid to late 1800’s.

  43. Tree of Heaven • Eastern and central China

  44. Wildfires • Wildfires are unplanned, uncontrolled fires burning trees, shrubs and other vegetation on wild, uncultivated lands well as in the forest. • They need… • An available fuel source, such as grasslands or fields. • Dry conditions, including the fuel source. • An ignition source — some way for the fire to start.

  45. Wildfires • Ninety-eight percent of our wildfires are caused by people. • Our greatest danger of wildfires is in the spring months of March, April and May, and the autumn months of October and November. • As winter slowly recedes and the sun climbs higher in the sky, the days become longer and warmer. The trees are bare during this time allowing the sunlight to reach the forest floor warming the ground and drying last fall’s leaves.

  46. Community Forests Can… • Boost property values • Support retail activity • Improve municipal health • Protect water quality • Reduce stormwater runoff • Counter climate change • Manage temperature • Provide wildlife habitat • Ensure roadway safety

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