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Site Index

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Title: Site Index


1
Site Index
2
Site Index (a)
  • Site Index is a measure of the productive
    capability (biomass) of a forest stand, typically
    species and location specific.
  • The higher the site index, the higher the
    productivity of a given stand.
  • Mainly applies to even-aged stands, can be
    applied to specific species in uneven-aged stands.

3
Site Index (b)
  • Site index is the average height of dominant and
    codominant trees (Hd) at a certain age for a
    given stand
  • Regardless of the current age of the stand, site
    index is always expressed as the height of
    dominants and codominants (Hd) at that certain
    age which is called the base age
  • For fast growing plantations, the base age for
    site index is typically 25 years, for natural
    stands or slower growing plantations, the base
    age is typically 50 years.

4
GROWTH AND YIELD
5
Basic Terminology
  • Growth change in an attribute over time (ideally
    positive number but does not have to be)
  • Yield total amount of something available at a
    given point in time (present or future time)

6
Basic Terminology
  • Density (as applied to a forest as opposed to a
    sample of wood)
  • How much is out there it is a quantitative
    measure
  • Expressed in terms of trees per acre or basal
    area per acre

7
Basic Terminology
  • Stocking (as applied to a forest as opposed to a
    foot or a fireplace mantle on Christmas Eve)
  • Relates how much is out there to a given
    management objective it is a qualitative measure

8
Basic Terminology
  • Over-stocked too much density to meet a given
    objective
  • Fully-stocked (normal stocking) the correct
    (perfect) amount of density to meet an
    objective
  • Average-stocking slightly less dense that the
    the previous, but still enough to meet the
    objective in general
  • Under-stocked not enough density to meet the
    objective

9
Types of Growth and Yield Models
  • Stand-level models
  • grow stands as a whole by focusing on stand level
    attributes (BA/acre, TPA, volume/ac, average
    height, QMD)
  • Can back out individual tree data from them
  • Commonly applied to (developed for) even-aged
    stands

10
Types of Growth and Yield Models
  • Size Class Distribution (Stand Table Projection)
    Models
  • Focus on the trees per acre and volume per acre
    in diameter classes and project the classes over
    time
  • Can back out individual tree data from them
  • Can be applied to (developed for) even and
    uneven-aged stands

11
Types of Growth and Yield Models
  • Individual-Tree Models
  • Focus on growing individual trees over time, and
    combining results to obtain stand-level
    information
  • Primarily applied to (developed for) uneven-aged
    stands
  • Tough to apply to larger acreages

12
Measures of Growth
  • Mean Annual Increment (MAI)
  • MAI Size divided by Age
  • Measures how much growth occurred per year over
    the life of a tree or stand
  • The size attribute could be height, diameter,
    biomass, basal area, volume,

13
Measures of Growth
  • Periodic Annual Increment (PAI)
  • PAI Change in Size divided by Years in a given
    time period
  • Measures how much growth occurred per year over a
    set time frame (5 or 10 years common)
  • The size attribute could be height, diameter,
    biomass, basal area, volume,

14
Measures of Growth
  • Current Annual Increment (CAI)
  • CAI Change in Size over the most recent year
  • Measures how much growth occurred over the last
    year
  • The size attribute could be height, diameter,
    biomass, basal area, volume,

15
Other Forest/Tree Measures
16
Measures of Stand Density
  • Basal Area per Acre
  • Trees per Acre
  • Stand Density Index
  • Relative Spacing

17
Stand Density Index
  • A Standardized metric of relative density
    regardless of the size or age of an even aged
    stand

18
Stand Density Index
  • Stands with equal SDIs are equally dense,
    regardless of their respective stages of
    development
  • If one stands SDI is larger than another, it is
    more dense, comparatively speaking, then the
    stand with a lower SDI value

19
Stand Density Index
  • Can compare densities of very different sized
    even aged stands!

20
Relative Spacing
  • Average distance (ft.) between trees divided by
    the average height (ft.) of the dominant and
    codominant trees (Hd)
  • Is unitless (the units of feet cancel)
  • Does sort of assume a square spacing so the
    metric is useful for plantations

21
Relative Spacing
  • RS

22
Relative Spacing
Average growing space (sq.ft.) per tree
Length (ft.) of one side of one those squares
23
Relative Spacing
Hd
As plantations become more dense, what happens,
numerically, to relative spacing ?
24
Relative Spacing
  • RS

If TPA increases and Hd stays the same, what
happens to relative spacing?
If Hd increases and TPA stays the same, what
happens to relative spacing?
25
Relative Spacing
  • Can compare how dense different sized stands
    are in relation to one another (like SDI, RS is a
    measure of relative density)

26
Uses of Relative Spacing
  • Might want to manage a plantation by thinning
    once a given relative spacing is reached
  • Can assess potential for insect and disease based
    on relative spacing

27
Stocking
  • Stocking - adequacy of stand density to meet some
    management objective
  • It is a relative term
  • Understocked
  • Fully-Stocked
  • Overstocked

28
Understocked
  • Not enough density to meet a landowner objective
  • If timber is your objective, having a stand in an
    understocked condition can lead to
  • rough form (non-straight boles)
  • excessive taper
  • large live crown ratios (lack of lower
    branch mortality, possibility for
    epicormic branching)

29
Overstocked
  • Too much density to meet a landowner objective
  • If timber is your objective, having a stand in an
    overstocked condition leads to
  • stagnated growth
  • excessive mortality
  • trees in stressed condition
  • small crown ratios

30
Fully Stocked
  • The correct amount of density to meet a landowner
    objective
  • If timber is your objective, keeping a stand in a
    fully stocked condition leads to
  • a closed canopy
  • best growth

31
Stocking Guides/Charts
  • Charts that relate trees per acre and basal area
    per acre (and typically display quadratic mean
    diameter or average diameter) to different
    stocking levels with respect to a timber
    management objective
  • Are species (or forest type) and regionally
    specific
  • Can be developed for and applied to both even-
    and uneven aged stands

32
Stocking Guides/Charts
  • Lake States
  • First developed by Gingrich (1967) so sometimes
    they are called Gingrich charts of Gingrich
    stocking charts
  • Developed for upland hardwoods forests in the
    Central US
  • Gingrich, S.F. 1967. Measuring and evaluating
    stocking and stand density in upland hardwood
    forests in the central states. Forest Science.
    1338-52.

33
Upland hardwoods with QMDs in the 7 to 15 inch
diameter range
34
Upland hardwoods with QMDs in the 3 to 7 inch
diameter range
35
line A developed from stands at maximum density
line B developed from more open-grown trees
line C developed such that a stand could reach
line B within 10 years time (given a site index
base age 50 of 55 - 75)
36
If below line C, consider regenerating the
stand, it will take too long to reach line B and
when it does, trees will have those understocked
issues
If at or near line A, it is time for a
selective harvest. As one marks a stand for
selective harvesting, make sure the residual
stand non-marked trees remain at or above the B
line Watchout for epicormic branching!
37
If above line A, something needs to be done,
though the trees may not have enough crown or
vigor to react Be extremely cautious to watch
out for epicormic branching issues
38
Useful Publication
  • Dale, M.E. and D.E. Hilt. (year not known).
    Stocking chart for upland central hardwoods.
    North Central Forest Experiment Station Central
    Hardwoods Note 5.02. 3p.
  • Available at
  • http//www.ncrs.fs.fed.us/pubs/ch/ch_5_02.pdf

39
What about Red Pine?
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