Index of forestry articles

Last updated

Articles on forestry topics include:.

A

Afforestation - Aldo Leopold - Analog forestry - Ancient woodland - Angle gauge - Appalachian balds - Arboriculture - Arborist - Forestry in Argentina - Assarting

Contents

B

Backpacking (hiking) - Forestry in Bangladesh - Bernard Fernow - Forestry in Bhutan - Biltmore Forest School - Biltmore stick - Biochar - Biscuit Fire publication controversy - Bog-wood - Borderline tree - Botany - Bottomland hardwood forest - British timber trade - Buchonia - Buffer strip

C

Caliper - Canopy research - Canopy walkway - Carl A. Schenck - Cellulosic ethanol - Certified wood - Forestry in Chad - Charcoal - Clearcutting - Clinometer - CODIT - Community forestry - Conservation biology - Coppicing - Cork - Creosote - Cultigen - Cultivar - Cultblock

D

Deforestation - Deforestation during the Roman period - Dendrochronology - Desertification - Diameter tape - Drunken trees

E

Ecoforestry - Ecological succession - Ecological thinning - Ecological yield - Eloise Gerry - Energy forestry - Forestry in Ethiopia - Exploration Logging - Extended rotation forest

F

Faustmann's Formula - Firewood - Forbidden Forest - Forest dwellers - Forest fire - Forest farming, the ecosystem approach to forest management - Forest fragmentation - Forest governance - Forest history - Forest interpretation - Forest management - Forest policy - Forest politics - Forest Principles - Forest produce - Forest protection - Forest ranger - Forest transition - Forester - Forestry - Forestry agencies - Forestry education - Forestry journals

G

Georg Ludwig Hartig - Forestry in Ghana - Gifford Pinchot - Girard form class - Girdling - Green Chain

H

Hand compass - Hardwood timber production - Hemispherical photography - Hendre-Dru Tramway - High forest (woodland) - High grading - Historic schools of forestry - Historical Logging Switchback Railway in Vychylovka - History of the New York State College of Forestry - Franklin B. Hough - Hotshot crew - Hydro axe mulching

I

Illegal logging - Increment borer - Independent Forest Monitoring - Forestry in India - Interception (water) - International Society of Tropical Foresters - International Year of Forests

J

Forestry in Japan - Jewish National Fund - Joint Forest Management - Journals

K

Károly Bund - Kerry Tramway - Krummholz

L

Forestry in Laos - Leaf Area Index - Limbing - Line plot survey - Living stump - Log bridge - Log bucking - Log driver - Log scaler - Logging - Lumber - Lumberjack - Lumberjack sports - Lumberjack World Championship

M

Management of Pacific Northwest riparian forests - Mean annual increment - Micropropagation - Multiple Use - Sustained Yield Act of 1960

N

Nalini Nadkarni - New York State College of Forestry - New Zealand Journal of Forestry - Non-timber forest product - Northwest Forest Plan

O

Old growth forest - Optimal rotation age

P

Pacing - Paper - Patch cut - Periodic annual increment - Pollarding - Pruning - Pulp and paper industry - Pulp and paper industry in Canada - Pulp and paper industry in Europe - Pulp and paper industry in Japan - Pulp and paper industry in the United States - Pulpwood

R

Rainforest - Reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation - Reforestation - Relascope - Research institutes - Restoration ecology - Riparian buffer - Robert Marshall - Royal Saxon Academy of Forestry - Natural rubber - Rubber tapper

S

Sakari Pinomäki - Salvage logging - Sawdust - Sawmill - Scleroderris canker - Secondary forest - Selection cutting - Shelterwood cutting - Short rotation coppice - Short rotation forestry - Shredding (tree pruning technique) - Silviculture - Site index - Site tree - Slash-and-char - Harry A. Slattery - Smokejumper - Snag - Softwood - Stand Density Index - Stand density management diagram - Stemflow - Stephen C. Sillett - Stihl Timbersports Series - Stump harvesting - Stumpage - Sustainable forest management - Kenneth Dupee Swan

T

Tall oil - Tall Timbers Research Station and Land Conservancy - Tar - Technical schools - Thinning - Throughfall - Timber - Timber rafting - Timberjack - Timberlands West Coast Limited - Town forest - Tree - Tree inventory - Tree preservation order - Tree shelter - Tree stump - Tree taper - Treethanol - Treeplanting - Turpentine - Types of formally designated forests

U

Forestry in Uganda - United Nations Forum on Forests - Universities and colleges - Urban forest - Urban forestry - Urban reforestation

V

Variable retention harvesting - Veteran tree - Volume table

W

Wedge prism - Whip (tree) - Wildfire - Windbreak - Windthrow - Wood - Wood chopping - Wood fuel - Wood management - Wood pellet - Wood processing - Woodchipping in New Zealand - Woodland management - Woodlot - Woodsman - Theodore Salisbury Woolsey, Jr. - World forestry - World Logging Championship

Z

Raphael Zon

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Forestry</span> Science and craft of managing woodlands

Forestry is the science and craft of creating, managing, planting, using, conserving and repairing forests and woodlands for associated resources for human and environmental benefits. Forestry is practiced in plantations and natural stands. The science of forestry has elements that belong to the biological, physical, social, political and managerial sciences. Forest management plays an essential role in the creation and modification of habitats and affects ecosystem services provisioning.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Logging</span> Process of cutting, processing, and moving trees

Logging is the process of cutting, processing, and moving trees to a location for transport. It may include skidding, on-site processing, and loading of trees or logs onto trucks or skeleton cars. In forestry, the term logging is sometimes used narrowly to describe the logistics of moving wood from the stump to somewhere outside the forest, usually a sawmill or a lumber yard. In common usage, however, the term may cover a range of forestry or silviculture activities.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Coppicing</span> Method of woodland management

Coppicing is the traditional method in woodland management of cutting down a tree to a stump, which in many species encourages new shoots to grow from the stump or roots, thus ultimately regrowing the tree. A forest or grove that has been subject to coppicing is called a copse or coppice, in which young tree stems are repeatedly cut down to near ground level. The resulting living stumps are called stools. New growth emerges, and after a number of years, the coppiced trees are harvested, and the cycle begins anew. Pollarding is a similar process carried out at a higher level on the tree in order to prevent grazing animals from eating new shoots. Daisugi, is a similar Japanese technique.

Silviculture is the practice of controlling the growth, composition/structure, as well as quality of forests to meet values and needs, specifically timber production.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ancient woodland</span> Type of woodland in the United Kingdom

In the United Kingdom, ancient woodland is that which has existed continuously since 1600 in England, Wales and Northern Ireland. Planting of woodland was uncommon before those dates, so a wood present in 1600 is likely to have developed naturally.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Clearcutting</span> Forestry/logging practice in which most or all trees in an area are uniformly cut down

Clearcutting, clearfelling or clearcut logging is a forestry/logging practice in which most or all trees in an area are uniformly cut down. Along with shelterwood and seed tree harvests, it is used by foresters to create certain types of forest ecosystems and to promote select species that require an abundance of sunlight or grow in large, even-age stands. Logging companies and forest-worker unions in some countries support the practice for scientific, safety and economic reasons, while detractors consider it a form of deforestation that destroys natural habitats and contributes to climate change. Environmentalists, traditional owners, local residents and others have regularly campaigned against clearcutting, including through the use of blockades and nonviolent direct action.

The following outline is provided as an overview of and guide to forestry:

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Woodchipping in Australia</span> Australian timber export sector

Woodchipping is the act and industry of chipping wood for pulp. Timber is converted to woodchips and sold, primarily, for paper manufacture. In Australia, woodchips are produced by clearcutting or thinning of native forests or plantations. In other parts of the world, forestry practices such as short rotation coppice are the usual methods adopted.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Farmer-managed natural regeneration</span> Technique to combat deforestation and desertification

Farmer-managed natural regeneration (FMNR) is a low-cost, sustainable land restoration technique used to combat poverty and hunger amongst poor subsistence farmers in developing countries by increasing food and timber production, and resilience to climate extremes. It involves the systematic regeneration and management of trees and shrubs from tree stumps, roots and seeds. FMNR was developed by the Australian agricultural economist Tony Rinaudo in the 1980s in West Africa. The background and development are described in Rinaudo's book The Forest Underground.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Forest product</span> Material derived from forestry

A forest product is any material derived from forestry for direct consumption or commercial use, such as lumber, paper, or fodder for livestock. Wood, by far the dominant product of forests, is used for many purposes, such as wood fuel or the finished structural materials used for the construction of buildings, or as a raw material, in the form of wood pulp, that is used in the production of paper. All other non-wood products derived from forest resources, comprising a broad variety of other forest products, are collectively described as non-timber forest products (NTFP). Non-timber forest products are viewed to have fewer negative effects on forest ecosystem when providing income sources for local community.

Variable retention is a relatively new silvicultural system that retains forest structural elements for at least one rotation in order to preserve environmental values associated with structurally complex forests.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Forestry in India</span> Environmental resource – India

Forestry in India is a significant rural industry and a major environmental resource. India is one of the ten most forest-rich countries of the world. Together, India and 9 other countries account for 67 percent of the total forest area of the world. India's forest cover grew at 0.20% annually over 1990–2000, and has grown at the rate of 0.7% per year over 2000–2010, after decades where forest degradation was a matter of serious concern.

Today, forest and woodland cover in Uganda stands at 49,000 km² or 24% of the total land area. Of these 9,242.08 km² is tropical rainforest, 350.60 km² are forest plantations and 39,741.02 km² is woodland. 30% of these areas are protected as national parks, wildlife reserves or central forest reserves.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Bedford Purlieus National Nature Reserve</span> Ancient woodland in Cambridgeshire, England

Bedford Purlieus is a 211-hectare (520-acre) ancient woodland in Cambridgeshire, in the United Kingdom. It is a national nature reserve and Site of Special Scientific Interest owned and managed by the Forestry Commission. In Thornhaugh civil parish, 10 km (6.2 mi) south of Stamford and 14 km (8.7 mi) west of Peterborough, the wood is within the Peterborough unitary authority area of Cambridgeshire, and borders Northamptonshire. In Roman times it was an iron smelting centre, during the medieval period it was in the Royal Forest of Rockingham, and later it became part of the estates of the Duke of Bedford. Bedford Purlieus appears to have been continuously wooded at least from Roman times, and probably since the ice receded. The woodland may have the richest range of vascular plants of any English lowland wood. It acquired particular significance in the 1970s as an early subject for the historical approach to ecology and woodland management.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Forestry in Bhutan</span>

One of Bhutan's significant natural resources in the late twentieth century was its rich forests and natural vegetation. Bhutan's location in the eastern Himalayas, with its subtropical plains and alpine terrain, gives it more rainfall than its neighbors to the west, a factor greatly facilitating forest growth. The forests contain numerous deciduous and evergreen species, ranging from tropical hardwoods to predominantly oak and pine forests.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Forestry in New Zealand</span>

Forestry in New Zealand has a history starting with European settlement in the 19th century and is now an industry worth seven percent of annual revenue. Much of the original native forest cover was burnt off and logged, however forests have been extensively planted, predominantly with fast-growing cultivars of the Monterey Pine. Wood chips, whole logs, lumber and paper products are exported from New Zealand.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Forestry in Estonia</span> Overview of the forestry in Estonia

Forests cover about 50% of the territory of Estonia, or around 2 million hectares, and so make out an important and dominating landscape type in the country. National law and policies recognize that forests are a natural and ecological resource, and the importance of forests is to be considered from an economic, social, ecological and cultural aspect.

The wood industry or timber industry is the industry concerned with forestry, logging, timber trade, and the production of primary forest products and wood products and secondary products like wood pulp for the pulp and paper industry. Some of the largest producers are also among the biggest owners of timberland. The wood industry has historically been and continues to be an important sector in many economies.

Forestry in Sudan includes both traditional gatherers of firewood and producers of charcoal—the main sources of fuel for homes and some industries—and a modern timber and sawmilling industry, the latter government-owned. Forestry activities started with Condominium rule in 1899, when the government commissioned an Indian forester to produce a comprehensive report on the state of forests in the country. As a result, the Woods and Forests Ordinance was published in 1901, and the Department of Woodlands and Forests established. The First Forest Act replaced the ordinance in 1908, and legislation continued to evolve over the next century.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Reforestation in Nigeria</span>

Reforestation in Nigeria employs both natural and artificial methods. Reforestation involves the deliberate planting of trees and restoring forested areas that have been depleted or destroyed. It involves a planned restocking of the forest to ensure sustainable supply of timber and other forest products. Reforestation, in essence, involves replenishing forests to guarantee a consistent and sustainable supply of timber and various other forest resources. This objective can be accomplished through either natural regeneration techniques or artificial regeneration methods. Both of these approaches have been utilized in the reforestation efforts within Nigeria's forests. At the initiation of the reforestation program in Nigeria, the natural regeneration approach was chosen for two primary reasons. Firstly, it aimed to preserve the rainforest in its original state by allowing it to regenerate naturally from the existing seed bank in the soil. Secondly, and of significant importance, this method was selected due to budgetary constraints, as there were insufficient funds available to establish plantations through direct means.