Growth and yield estimation from successive forest inventories. Selected papers from an IUFRO Conference in Copenhagen, 14-17 June 1993

Successive inventories of a silvicultural experiment in terra firme rain forest within the Tapajós National Forest in the Brazilian Amazon are examined to provide guidelines for operational forest management on a sustainable basis. The experiment was logged in 1979 without additional silvicultural t...

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Main Authors: Vanclay, J.K., Skovsgaard, J.P., Gertner, G. Z.
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: 1995
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/17638
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author Vanclay, J.K.
Skovsgaard, J.P.
Gertner, G. Z.
author_browse Gertner, G. Z.
Skovsgaard, J.P.
Vanclay, J.K.
author_facet Vanclay, J.K.
Skovsgaard, J.P.
Gertner, G. Z.
author_sort Vanclay, J.K.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Successive inventories of a silvicultural experiment in terra firme rain forest within the Tapajós National Forest in the Brazilian Amazon are examined to provide guidelines for operational forest management on a sustainable basis. The experiment was logged in 1979 without additional silvicultural treatment, but included protection from further logging and encroachment (`log and leave'). Thirty-six permanent plots established in 1981 were remeasured in 1987 and 1992. Logging changed the canopy structure and altered the composition of the stand, reducing the number of shade tolerant species and stimulating light demanding species. There was a net increase in stem number and stand basal area during the 11 year observation period, and this trend also holds for most of the individual species. The stand basal area 13 years after logging was about 75% of that in a comparable unlogged forest. Logging stimulated growth, but this effect was short-lived, lasting only about 3 years, and current growth rates are similar to those in the unlogged forest. Between the first and second remeasures, average diameter increment decreased from 0.4 to 0.2 cm year-1, mortality remained relatively constant at 2.5% year-1, while recruitment (at 5 cm diameter at breast height) decreased from 5 to 2%. Total volume production declined from approximately 6 to 4 m3 ha-1 year-1, while commercial production remained about 0.8 m3 ha-1 year-1. New commercial species increased the commercial volume in 1992 from 18 to 54 m3 ha-1, and the increment to 1.8 m3 ha-1 year-1. Results from this experiment provide the first quantitative information for management planning in the Tapajós Forest, and may guide the choice of cutting cycle and annual allowable cut. Silvicultural treatment to stimulate growth rates in forest areas zoned for timber production should be considered as a viable management option. Extrapolations of these results to an anticipated 30-35 year cutting cycle must be interpreted with caution. Ongoing remeasurement and analysis of these and other plots over the next 30 years or more are necessary to provide a stronger basis for management inferences.
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spelling CGSpace176382025-01-24T14:12:59Z Growth and yield estimation from successive forest inventories. Selected papers from an IUFRO Conference in Copenhagen, 14-17 June 1993 Vanclay, J.K. Skovsgaard, J.P. Gertner, G. Z. yields growth succession forest inventories Successive inventories of a silvicultural experiment in terra firme rain forest within the Tapajós National Forest in the Brazilian Amazon are examined to provide guidelines for operational forest management on a sustainable basis. The experiment was logged in 1979 without additional silvicultural treatment, but included protection from further logging and encroachment (`log and leave'). Thirty-six permanent plots established in 1981 were remeasured in 1987 and 1992. Logging changed the canopy structure and altered the composition of the stand, reducing the number of shade tolerant species and stimulating light demanding species. There was a net increase in stem number and stand basal area during the 11 year observation period, and this trend also holds for most of the individual species. The stand basal area 13 years after logging was about 75% of that in a comparable unlogged forest. Logging stimulated growth, but this effect was short-lived, lasting only about 3 years, and current growth rates are similar to those in the unlogged forest. Between the first and second remeasures, average diameter increment decreased from 0.4 to 0.2 cm year-1, mortality remained relatively constant at 2.5% year-1, while recruitment (at 5 cm diameter at breast height) decreased from 5 to 2%. Total volume production declined from approximately 6 to 4 m3 ha-1 year-1, while commercial production remained about 0.8 m3 ha-1 year-1. New commercial species increased the commercial volume in 1992 from 18 to 54 m3 ha-1, and the increment to 1.8 m3 ha-1 year-1. Results from this experiment provide the first quantitative information for management planning in the Tapajós Forest, and may guide the choice of cutting cycle and annual allowable cut. Silvicultural treatment to stimulate growth rates in forest areas zoned for timber production should be considered as a viable management option. Extrapolations of these results to an anticipated 30-35 year cutting cycle must be interpreted with caution. Ongoing remeasurement and analysis of these and other plots over the next 30 years or more are necessary to provide a stronger basis for management inferences. 1995 2012-06-04T09:02:17Z 2012-06-04T09:02:17Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/17638 en Vanclay, J.K., Skovsgaard, J. P., Gertner, G. Z., (eds.) 1995. Growth and yield estimation from successive forest inventories. Selected papers from an IUFRO Conference in Copenhagen, 14-17 June 1993 . Forest Ecology and Management Special issue 71 (3) :171-276. ISSN: 0378-1127.
spellingShingle yields
growth
succession
forest inventories
Vanclay, J.K.
Skovsgaard, J.P.
Gertner, G. Z.
Growth and yield estimation from successive forest inventories. Selected papers from an IUFRO Conference in Copenhagen, 14-17 June 1993
title Growth and yield estimation from successive forest inventories. Selected papers from an IUFRO Conference in Copenhagen, 14-17 June 1993
title_full Growth and yield estimation from successive forest inventories. Selected papers from an IUFRO Conference in Copenhagen, 14-17 June 1993
title_fullStr Growth and yield estimation from successive forest inventories. Selected papers from an IUFRO Conference in Copenhagen, 14-17 June 1993
title_full_unstemmed Growth and yield estimation from successive forest inventories. Selected papers from an IUFRO Conference in Copenhagen, 14-17 June 1993
title_short Growth and yield estimation from successive forest inventories. Selected papers from an IUFRO Conference in Copenhagen, 14-17 June 1993
title_sort growth and yield estimation from successive forest inventories selected papers from an iufro conference in copenhagen 14 17 june 1993
topic yields
growth
succession
forest inventories
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/17638
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AT skovsgaardjp growthandyieldestimationfromsuccessiveforestinventoriesselectedpapersfromaniufroconferenceincopenhagen1417june1993
AT gertnergz growthandyieldestimationfromsuccessiveforestinventoriesselectedpapersfromaniufroconferenceincopenhagen1417june1993