Multiaged Silviculture: Managing for Complex Forest Stand Structures

£49.00

Multiaged Silviculture: Managing for Complex Forest Stand Structures Author: Format: Paperback First Published: Published By: Oxford University Press
string(3) "240"
Pages: 240 ISBN: 9780198703075 Category:

This book presents the latest scientific and management information on multiaged silviculture, an emerging strategy for managing forestry systems worldwide. Over recent decades, forest science and management have tended to emphasize plantation silviculture. Whilst this clearly meets our wood production needs, many of the world’s forests need to be managed far less intensively and more flexibly in order to maintain their natural ecosystem functions together with the values inherent in those processes. Developing multiaged management strategies for these complex forest ecosystems represents a global challenge to successfully integrate available science with sustainable management practices.

Multiaged Silviculture covers the ecology and dynamics of multiaged stands, the management operations associated with regeneration, tending, and stocking control, and the implications of this strategy on production, genetic diversity, and stand health. It is primarily aimed at graduate level students and researchers in the fields of forestry and silviculture, but will also be of relevance and use to all professional foresters and silviculturists.

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O'Hara provides a well-written synthesis of the social considerations connected to this type of forest management. Numerous photographs, diagrams, tables, and graphs; comprehensive reference list ... Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates and above. * CHOICE * It is a must read for every forester especially where these issues are important driving mandates. And I would encourage every forester to have a copy available for reference at the very least. * Mark S. Ashton, Quarterly Review of Biology * Multiaged Silviculture is a valuable addition to the bookshelf of all natural resource managers working in forests. * Andrew Nelson, Journal of Forestry. *