The Forests of Connecticut

The Forests of Connecticut

Author: Eric H. Wharton

Publisher:

Published: 2004

Total Pages: 40

ISBN-13:

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...Comprehensive information on Connecticut's forests; sections include: Connecticut's Resilient Forests Historic Perspective / A New Forest Inventory / Land Base Characteristics and Trends / People and the Forest / Timberland / Composition and Structure of the Forest - Species Diversity / Timber Volume Changes / Distribution of Tree Species / Timber Supply - Levels of Stocking / Timber Quality / Products from Connecticut's Trees / Sustainability of the Timber Supply / Forest Health - Damaging Agents / Connecticut's Changing Forest - Stand Size / The Quality of Wildlife Habitat / The Future of Connecticut's Forests; maps and statistics include Location of Connecticut's Forests, Percentatge of Forest Land Cover, Distribution of Forest Land Area by Ownership, Average Size of Contiguous Forest Patch at Each Sample Photo Point, Distribution of Connecticut's Timberland by Forest-type Group [tree type], Top Ten Shrub Species, Top Ten Tree Species, Change in the Growing Stock Volume on Timberland (1953-1998), Change in the Sawtimber Volume on Timberland (1953-1998), Species Distribution on Selected Hardwood Species, Lumber Production in Connecticut 1799-1998, Average Annual Net Growth and Removals, Number of Dead and Cull Trees on Timberland, and many more...


Growth Trends in European Forests

Growth Trends in European Forests

Author: Heinrich Spiecker

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

Published: 2012-12-06

Total Pages: 368

ISBN-13: 3642611788

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The European Forest Institute (EFI) has five Research and Development priority ar eas: forest sustainability, forestry and possible climate change, structural changes in markets for forest products and services, policy analysis, and forest sector informa tion services and research methodology. In the area of forest sustainability our most important activity has been the project "Growth trends of European forests", the re sults of which are presented in this book. The project was started in August 1993 under the leadership of Prof. Dr. Heinrich Spiecker from the University of Freiburg, Germany, and it is one of the first EFI's research projects after its establishment in 1993. The main purpose of the project was to analyse whether site productivity has changed in European forests during the last decades. While several forest growth studies have been published at local, re gional and national levels, this project has aimed at stimulating a joint effort in iden tifying and quantifying possible growth trends and their spatial and temporal extent at the European level. Debate on forest decline and possible climate change, as well as considerations re lated to the long term supply of wood underline the importance of this project, both from environmental and industrial points of view. Knowledge on possible changes in growth trends is vital for the sustainable management of forest ecosystems.