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Tree Maturity?

Started by Jeff, March 22, 2002, 04:50:56 AM

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Jeff

This was the intended topic of another thread. "High grade or not" started by Tarm. I now, as a non-forester want to know the answer too, or answers.

How do we define the term maturity in relation to a tree, and how do we know when a tree has reached this point? Do we need to know what we want of our woodlot, and if our goals are different is the answer to the question different?
Just call me the midget doctor.
Forestry Forum Founder and Chief Cook and Bottle Washer.

Commercial circle sawmill sawyer in a past life for 25yrs.
Ezekiel 22:30

Tom

My Forester asked me, "What do you expect of the land?"

The points he gave me to think about included, Residential Development, Recreation, Wildlife habitat, pulpwood, sawtimber and firewood.  The suggestions for trees included hardwoods and conifers. The rotation depended on what I was aiming at for the end product. Most of my swamp is "overmature" because the commercial mills have a cutoff of 22" diameter.  My desire for a Wildlife passage and Recreation is not limited to tree size but rather to health.  Even the dead ones have a place.  Crowded trees become firewood and occasionally a board or two from my mill.

I have pine in plantation that is destined for sawtimber.  It will be cut for pulp as it reaches that stage (economic maturity) and the rest will be taken care of until it reaches marketable size for saw logs (its econonmic maturity).

I would suppose that a tree is measured in "economic maturity" until it reaches a point in its life when it begins to degrade from age and its ability to cope with the strains of life, just as we do.  Even then its use is based on economics.  It can be left, to die, to feed the forest or taken to feed the human.  

That's a non-forester answer but viewed as a landowner and an inspired keeper.

L. Wakefield

   Your definitions of 'economic maturity' are predicated on a market set limit of 22" in the case you mention. If the mills were less limited, would the trees themselves be capable of producing sound would of greater diameter? I'm not saying I'd expect you to cut your own throat and defy market reality to give the trees the chance to achieve their full potential  :) - but I can see that asking the question in the 2 different ways can give 2 different answers. It's like raising steers for slaughter versus raising a herd sire. Functional maturity and optimal growth curve will be drastically different.  lw
L. Wakefield, owner and operator of the beastly truck Heretik, that refuses to stay between the lines when parking

Texas Ranger

Hmm, more envolved topic than you may think.  I can call up three levels of maturity.  Economic, physiological, and cultural.  Each has a different purpose, and view from the individuals doing the looking (sure wish we had spell check to work out the bad typing I am exhibiting this morning).

Economic maturity is just that, the value has reached a level where it is time to cut.  This is at different ages for different species and products.  Obviously, poles will have an economic maturity later than pure pulp wood production.  Economic maturity has absolutely no connection to physiological maturity.

Physiological is just that, as well, when the tree has the markings of a mature plant, usually when it reaches the full potential in height growth.  Again different by species.  And this (height) varies with site, so there is a little slipage here as well.

Cultural is the kicker of the three.  That is maturity in the eyes of the human species, in terms of human life expectancy.  Few humans, other than those envolved in producing the forests for the future, think beyond a human life span.  They do not recognize that all life, even trees, have a life span and that 40 yearl old pine is as mature as the 80 year old pine, just not as old.  They see the land they remember as having big trees on it as a kid now in pulp production to meet the needs of the population, and wonder where all the "old growth" went, when it may have been the end life of an earlier plantation.

I suppose the "kid" foresters out there may have a few more refinements in maturity than us old hands, but I have never been much for reinventing the wheel.
The Ranger, home of Texas Forestry

L. Wakefield

   EXCELLENT post! Those with discerning eyes will recognize- as has been mentioned- that even snags- which are unlikely to evoke much tenderness in yer typical treehugger- will afford a wonderful resource for woodpeckers and possibly nesting raptors or other cool creatures.

   Take time out from the debate to realize how privileged we are to be living in these surroundings. Even if it is a cultural battleground at the moment, hopefully the level of consciousness is being raised by the debate- and more light and less heat is being generated.   lw
L. Wakefield, owner and operator of the beastly truck Heretik, that refuses to stay between the lines when parking

Ron Scott

A mature tree is a tree that based on ownership objectives has reached the desired size, age, or condition at which it should be cut. The tree should have attained the age or size at which it possesses the qualities characteristics of the species. You as the landowner determine when your trees are mature trees based on your management objectives whether is be social, economical, bilogical, etc.

When pertaining to an individual tree or even-aged stand it is one cabable of reproduction and has attained most of its potential height growth, or has reached established mechantability standards.

Again, select them by the "worst" first based on management objectives. Recognize that your "worst" beech tree might be your "best" wildlife tree if your objectives includes an emphasis on wildlife. This beech may provide mast and be an "animal inn".  
~Ron

Tillaway

I think all the previous post pretty much hit the nail on the head.  Maturity is what you decide it is.
Making Tillamook Bay safe for bait; one salmon at a time.

Frank_Pender

I heard  a rumor today that, Boise Cascade is not going to cut any more "old growth".  Have any of you folks heard anything of the kind in your neck-of-the-woods? :P
Frank Pender

psychotic1

If I remember what I "thought" I heard correctly.  they're defining "old growth" by a certain numbers of years "?" and in stands over 5000 acres.  I distinctly remember the tree-hugger they allowed to comment after the story not being satisfied.  Imagine that.

Bruce
Patience, hell.  I'm gonna kill something

Ron Scott

I've heard the same and seen it publicized. Boise isn't going to harvest in old growth. They will manage the same as the Feds in this respect.

Age is only one component of old growth.
~Ron

Cedar Eater

I define maturity as when the urge to whack it becomes darn near uncontrollable. :D :D :D :D

It's like the old supreme court justice who said about pornography, "I can't define obscene, but I know it when I see it."

The key seems to be having enough knowledge and experience to know what you are seeing. I've been getting a crash course in forestry for the last month or so, because some of my aspens and red maples appear to my uneducated eyes to be declining. The CD forester confimed this and pointed out things like conks that were "corrupting" the trees. I've now learned about seed trees and wolf trees and wildlife trees and other reasons why you wouldn't harvest a tree just because it was "big enough". I've also seen a graph with two curves that show a comparison between ideal and actual quantities for the different diameter classes in a given area. Graphs I can understand, but I know that they are just analysis tools. They don't help much when you have two trees in front of you and you can't decide which or whether either should go.

So for me, it's a matter of gaining enough education to balance my urges. One urge says to cut any tree that will probably die before the next cut in 10-15 years. Another urge says to take out all the crooked trees. Another urge says to leave all of the desirables and weed out all of the undesirables. I pity my consulting forester already, because he's gonna be justifying every tree he does or doesn't mark until I learn his trade. If he's patient enough, I will reward him with work on my "other" woodlot. Even I know that one's gonna be a challenge to make productive.
Cedar Eater

Bud Man

That could take a while. :P  At least you have a local familiar with the area. ;) Knowledge is exciting when you combine it with a usage.  Mikes you feel like you doing the right thing.  allthough sometimes you wanna just rip and snort, and theirs a lot that's not in the books, it just feels right !! 8)  Saw On
The groves were God's first temples.. " A Forest Hymn"  by.. William Cullen Bryant

Tarm

Jeff, the thread I started you moved over to here so I'm following it over.
As I've said before there seem to be many different beliefs as to what is a mature tree. From my experiences one could describe four different harvest philosophies.
1. The "if it makes a sawlog, cut it." This method is usually used by the diameter limit logging crews that cruise the countryside looking for a farmer who needs some quick cash. " Heh, Mister Farmer I'll give you $3,000 for all the trees over 12" in your woodlot." Farmer thinks " $3000! Wow! That woodlot hasn't done anything for me since I took the cows out in 1972. I was wondering where I was going to get the money to fix the transmission on the tractor." " Okay, where do I sign and when do I get my money." A 12" tree should make one, grade three, eight foot sawlog with a 10" top. This unfortunately is probably the most common form of harvest.
2. The "grow it until it has a number one sawlog in it" This method is popular in publicly owned timber companies. They carefully nuture their woodlands but harvest them aggressively. Most trees over 16" are harvested. They simply cannot afford to carry the huge capital investment in a forest of large diameter trees. If they do they become the target of corporate raiders who will buy the company, strip off the timberlands and resell the mill(s).
3. The "as long as it is increasing in grade let it grow". Privately owned timber companies and multigenerational families usually use this method. Trees are grown much larger and given a chance to be all they can be. Trees are harvested when they no longer will jump grades. Sawlog to veneer or #2 sawlog to #1 sawlog. This method increases the value output from an acre of forest but also increase the standing inventory and demands patience.
4. The "trees will be allow to grow as long as they remain low risk and show high vigor". Big Tree Silviculture is another name for this method. The Menominee Tribal Forest is the only place I know of where this method is used. Trees are allow to grow and grow and grow until they reach huge size by today's standards. 150 year old trees are common. Hard Maples 28" in diameter  White Pines 36" in diameter. Obviously very high quality logs are harvested from such a forest. Forest inventories are very high. I once went on a tour of the tribal forest. I asked one of the foresters how much would an acre of mature white pine and hemlock would be worth. He said, (ten years ago) stumpage value only, $9,000. Although I think this would be the ideal way to manage a forest I don't see how in the real world of taxes and human lifespans it would be possible outside of very special situations.
My confusion about all these methods is that they cannot all be right .Somebody has got to be wrong. So fellow forum members how should we manage hardwood forests? Which of these four method do you think is "THE RIGHT WAY". For your own forest, for the national forests, and for that matter for forest around the world.    

Tom

Tarm,
I'm not a forester nor an economics major.  I am a miniscule landowner with hardwoods in an area that is not known for them and pines planted in plantation.  

I approach my crop with the same attitude as I would the purchase of a tool.  I wouldn't buy a tool and then go out to try to find a use for it. I would have a need first and then puchase the tool to solve it.

By this token I manage my land.  The market for pines is post, pulp, chip and saw, sawlogs, poles and veneer.  My plantings have the opportunity to be sold in each of these catagories.  For esthetic purposes I would like to produce veneer ultimately but if the price of sawtimber is high enough to warrant their cutting when the time comes then I will replant rather than wait.

The thinnings produce each product.  The low grade will almost always make pulp.  I will not interplant but will manage to a clear cut.

The mechanical limits of the mills control the sizes of the product.......I am a grower. Maturity depends on the market and the availability of the product on the land.  

I think that a Cookbook/one-size-fits-all management plan is a fallacy.

Purhaps hardwoods could be managed much the same way.  Aim for the ultimate market.  Harvest today's market with the idea of grooming your better trees.  The difference is that Hardwoods can be interplanted,.I understand, so you could reach some sort of equalibrium where the woodlot was sustaining its growth.

And yes, in reality, my trees are probably for someone else.

Bud Man

Tarm  I think farmers are a tad smarter than your scenario in #1 In fact they are one of the smartest segments of the populace I know of, out of necessity. Want to learn how to barter , take on a Farmer, they turn a right smart amount of  money in a years time and have to be quick on their feet and with the smarts to get a modest return, dumb ones lost there farms years ago.  Yes, I suppose their are a few logging crews out there trying to seek out easy prey, but hopefully  woodlot owners are becoming educated and maybe Gordon will get a chance to oversee their predation efforts in the future.  #2 I don't know too many publicly owned Timber Companies and if there are I hope they aren't run on diameter limits.    #3 Privately owned Timber Companies squeeze their trees and holdings  for every nickle or % return they can get and plan for sustained maximum yield in the future. The bigger they are the more they have had to deal with the tree hugging envirofreaks and special interest groups to maintain their ability to survive and be able to provide the wood products and resources they tend.   #4  Approximates the usage of Silvicultural practices, in so much as some trees will reach a larger size.    You can bet their are some Economics being utilized in all of the scenarios you have listed or these folks, like fools and their money, will part with their money, land,  and or profit.    The Native Americans, were never use  to worrying about ownership or limited resources till they were confined to a specified amount of land and resources. They were not and are not wastefull people and utilize things to the maximum, and plan for the next crop. Next time you chat with them ask them how their harvesting is based.     All of the scenarios you created call for management and purposeful actions, and they all would most likely be vastly different.  There is no "Yellow Brick Road Or Universal Answer "   Maximizing yield and getting the most return of many, many kinds (timber and $ dollars being just one ) and maintaining a renewable resource for the future is not based on a Crap Shoot or hitting a diameter number. Have a great day.
The groves were God's first temples.. " A Forest Hymn"  by.. William Cullen Bryant

Ron Wenrich

Tarm

I like the way you broke them down into the 4 categories.  I would suggest that all 4 are valid in certain situations.  What would dictate the size of timber would most probably be site quality.

It would be futile to try and grow large trees on a poor site.  Growing to sawtimber size may be a viable alternative.  As the quality of the site improves, so would the size of timber.

The only drawback, there is never any mention of providing reproduction.  Is it supposed to be stump sprouts, seedlings or just releasing surpressed trees?  If you're releasing surpressed trees, trying to get large trees wouldn't be a wise management choice.  They'll go bad before you reach your objective.

There was a German forester on another board who was explaining some of their management techniques.  He also had posted some pictures of the German hardwood forests.

They were growing large sized trees in the overstory.  But, they also managed the middle forest - the secondary layer.  These were mainly shade tolerant species and were cut every 20 years for fuel wood.  An interesting concept.

Never under estimate the power of stupid people in large groups.

Tom

Ron,
Reproduction in my case would be seedlings.  It's not that seed trees lack the ability to reproduce the stems but nursury grown seedlings are generally much better.  What is being done on the nursury now days is unbelieveable.  The Super Slash I have planted on the front of my property is 2/3 the size of the trees in my other plantation and  only 1/2 the age.

When I get ready to replant, I'll bet they have something even better  For pulp, it's good. I think they will work for sawtimber because most of the growth is in height.  Time will tell.

The genetic engineering going on is what makes me lean toward a final clear cut.

uneven aged pines (interplanting) has already been proved to be non-viable..





Ron Wenrich

Very little planting in hardwood stands up this way.  Planting seedlings is usually reserved for Christmas trees and strip mines.

The reason I bring up regeneration is that everyone always talks about trees being mature but very little about growing the next stand.  The only regeneration cuts I see are on governement property or something the pulp companies are doing.

Most foresters do not mark any pulpwood timber, in this area.
Never under estimate the power of stupid people in large groups.

L. Wakefield


Quote.

It would be futile to try and grow large trees on a poor site.  Growing to sawtimber size may be a viable alternative.  As the quality of the site improves, so would the size of timber.


   Hi Ron. I'd like to zero in on this a bit. Are you defining 'a poor site' in terms of location (swamp for example)- or poor soil- or present timber or other trash? I see you mentioning the prospect of the site improving. I'm trying to see how this would happen (depending on what's wrong with it in the first place).

   I have a couple swampy areas where the trees seem to have a lot of bark defects suggestive to me of rot- and don't seem to be very well set in the ground. I think it's because it's a) too wet, b) too shaded, and c) maybe too acid. Is this the sort of thing you are talking about?

   In my case, I am not sure that removing some of the trees would lighten it up sufficiently to result in significant drying or lowering of the water table. It would help if it is a problem of too much shade. And i suppose lime might help IF it's too acid.

   What problems have you seen, and what strategies have worked?    :P   lw
L. Wakefield, owner and operator of the beastly truck Heretik, that refuses to stay between the lines when parking

Ron Wenrich

Site quality refers to how productive an area is for a particular species.  This is usually dictated by climate and soil. Neither would be very easy to adjust.

What I was refering to was as site quality increases, you have a wider range of choices as to what size your timber could reach.

Wet and swampy areas are really tough for most people.  It seems that cedar does well in the swamps.  There isn't much cedar in my area.

Have you ever gotten the soil maps for your land?  You should be able to get them at the county extension office.  There should also be something on the best types of trees to grow in each of those types of soils.  I used to get a book of photos of the entire counties I was working in with the soil types overlayed.  I found them to be very useful.  
Never under estimate the power of stupid people in large groups.

L. Wakefield

   Yes, I have em. Got those when I was first thinking of buying, but (at that time) more with an eye to agriculture and garden or grain crops.

   The forestor also referred to them in the PLAN. But then he jumped to what IS growing there, not what the OPTIMUM would be.

   Cedar we ain't got, tho I just brought one down from up north last year. What is the specific species you're talking about, Ron, and what is its preferred zone? I think hemlock hits that niche in part of my area, but not in the specific piece I was thinking about. THAT is an interesting puzzle- both wet, but one has sphagnum, one not. One closer to the crick, one is an area of general 'seep'. The hemlocks do better in the higher- but wet- land. I wonder if it is a temperature thing also.

   I did finally figure out you weren't talking about CHANGING the land, but rather looking at a different piece. (I got my piece, now I got to understand it change it, or adapt to it- or sell and start over.  lw
L. Wakefield, owner and operator of the beastly truck Heretik, that refuses to stay between the lines when parking

Ron Wenrich

Now you're making me hit the books. :P

Have you ever tried any spruce, fir or larch?  Black spruce will grow in bogs, but only gets 6-12".  

Red spruce is found in swamps or bogs with black spruce, tamarack, balsam firs, and red maple, but doesn't grow well.

All of these species should be within your range.  I would look into larch (tamarack) and balsam fir for the swamp areas.  Larch is very intolerant and will not survive with any overstory.  Balsam fir is a very tolerant species, right below hemlock.  

I would shy away from hardwoods in wet areas.  My experience has been that they just don't have the quality as those grown on drier sites.  Usually there are a lot of sucker branches, and those are defects in hardwoods.

Never under estimate the power of stupid people in large groups.

L. Wakefield

   I agree by observation on the hardwoods. Hard rock maple gives way to red maple. Apple suckers like crazy, falls over (but doesn't die)- and yields fruit poorly. I will print out your post for a wish list- gonna look at what's there 1st. it's curious. Down along one part of swamp just transitioning to brook there is a SNOOTFUL of balsam. But in the area I was grumbling about there's none. I wonder if I should try to change that? I certainly want more balsam. My distillation efforts on it are likely to turn into an annual thing. I quite like the scene of getting people's Christmas trees and chopping/stilling as I have time. Just need to know about the bug-icide question. I recently was looking for something to scent some shower gel and got the notion to dump in some balsam fir essential oil. I like it a lot! It's been a LONG time since I made bar soap (not BEAR soap, bar soap..) but it might be nice in that too.    lw
L. Wakefield, owner and operator of the beastly truck Heretik, that refuses to stay between the lines when parking

Cedar Eater

Lw, I've got some experience with swamp trees as most of my land falls into that category. I have very small amounts of eastern hemlock, black ash, black spruce and white spruce. I have large amounts of tamarack, northern white cedar, balsam fir and tag alder. The tamaracks are the dominant tree in the wettest marsh area next to the lake. They survived a several year flood (compliments of beavers) about five years before I bought the property. That same flood killed a lot of cedars and now my tamaracks are mostly growing in a bed of sphagnum about 18 inches deep with a fair amount of swampgrass. The cedar skeletons are still standing in much of the area. The cedars don't do as well in the sphagnum, but they do a good job of drying out an area slightly upstream that's seasonally wet and is just barely above the water table. The tag alders and balsam firs try to replace anything I cut down because the deer keep the cedar from regenerating. I wouldn't mind more black ash, spruce or hemlock, but the balsam fir is a weed I need to control. :(
Cedar Eater

Ron Scott

It's very hard to grow trees on Hydric soils where the water table is high or near the surface for most of the year.

Mead Paper Company in the U.P. has scalped in some of their wetland areas with a "Kilifer" plow which cuts out a scalp and flips the top bit of soil over. They then planted tamarack on the top of the scalp (dry side up). This was an effort to put some of their wetlands back into timber production.

This is quite expensive and certainly a disturbance to the wetland ecosystem. Might be better to retain your unique wetlands, develop ponds, manage for wildlife etc. Not a good growth timber site.
~Ron

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