2 research outputs found
B802: Base-Age Invariant Polymorphic Site Index Curves for Even-Aged Spruce-Fir Stands in Maine
The spruce-fir forest cover type, occupying nearly 8 million acres in Maine, accounts for approximately 50 percent of the growing stock volume in the State. A similar portion of Maine\u27s commercial forest land is owned and managed by forest industry, with spruce and fir being the mainstay of the industry.
Analyses in recent years of Maine\u27s timber supply have shown softwood removals to exceed growth. The dramatic effects of the spruce budworm (Choristoneura.fumiferana (Clemens)) on the spruce-fir forest of Maine has heightened concern over the timber supply. A greater emphasis on management is necessary if timber growth is to keep pace with demand. With increasing demand for timber, and the increasing value of timber products, intensive management is becoming economically feasible. High labor costs have led to an increase in mechanized harvesting. Consequently, the stage has been set for a greater emphasis on even-aged management of the spruce-fir forest type in Maine~ As red spruce (Picea rubens Sarg.), black spruce (Picea mariana (Mill.) B.S.P.), white spruce (Picea glauca (Moench) Voss), and balsam fir (Abies balsamea (L.) Mill.) are the backbone of Maine\u27s forest industry, it is desirable to identify those sites best suited to the growth of these species.
An easily attained and sufficiently accurate method of estimating the relative quality of a particular site is essential to sound forest management. Site index, defined as being the height attained by the dominant stand at an arbitrarily chosen age, commonly 50 years in the northeastern United States, has been the most widely used measure of site quality. In addition to being an easily measured indicator of relative site quality, site index provides a crucial parameter in the estimation of the ultimate capability of forest land to produce wood volume.https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/aes_bulletin/1100/thumbnail.jp
Explorations, Vol. 6, No. 1
Cover: Panthera pardus, Chui in Kiswatuli, was photographed by Dr. Linda Karbonit ar Dr. James A. Sherburne in Serengeti National Park, Tanzania. Karbonit was accompanying Sherburne who was working on the design and development of the University of Maine, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, assistance program in wildlife training and conservation education to Tanzania’s National Parks. Sherburne, who has worked in Tanzania for several years, was there most recently in 1988 and 1989 working on the parks project. He serves as the Director of International Natural Resources and Agricultural Programs at the University of Maine.
Articles include:
Research and Economic Development: from the U.S. Senate Statement, December 22, 1989, by Sen. George J. Mitchell
Politics and Research: Providing a Key for Economic Development, by Sen. William S. Cohen.
Publisher’s Perspective, by Gregory N. Brown, Vice President, Research and Public Service
What’s EPSCoR? Editorial Reflections, by Carole J. Bombard
Past and Present: Marine Geologists Explore the Old and Teach the Young, by Daniel Belknap and Joseph Kelley
High Biological Productivity: Salt Marshes, by Mark E. Wood
Barrier Beaches, by William Duffy
Sediment Budgets & Bluff Slump, by Rebecca Smith
Coastal Environments and Change, by Andrew Walsh
Mapping What You Can\u27t See, by Donald Robbins
Casco Bay: Sea Level and the Shoreline, by Bradley W.B. Hay
Christmas at Sea, by Molly Horvath
A Short Course and the Local Economy, by Richard Hale and James Philp
Dr. Bernard Lown: Alumnus Receives Golden Door Award
The Sky is Falling . . . well, maybe, by Carole J. Bombard
A Growing Interest in Timberland, by Robert A. Strong and Bret P. Vicar