Comprehensive Database of Diameter-based Biomass Regressions for North American Tree Species


Book Description

A database consisting of 2,640 equations compiled from the literature for predicting the biomass of trees and tree components from diameter measurements of species found in North America. Bibliographic information, geographic locations, diameter limits, diameter and biomass units, equation forms, statistical errors, and coefficients are provided for each equation, along with examples of how to use the database. The CD-ROM included with the paper version of this publication contains the complete database (Table 3) in spreadsheet format (Microsoft Excel 2002® with Windows XP®). The database files can also be viewed in both spreadsheet and pdf formats by directing your browser to the Global Change page at http://www.fs.fed.us/ne/global/pubs/books/index.html













The Forests of Connecticut


Book Description

...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...







Test of Four Stand Growth Simulators for the Northeastern United States


Book Description

SILVAH, FIBER, NE-TWIGS, and OAKSIM simulators, commonly used in the northeastern United States, were evaluated by comparing predicted stand development with actual stand development records for periods ranging from 15 to 50 years. Results varied with stand parameter, forest type, projection length, and geographic area. Except in the spruce-fir forest type where FIBER stands out as the best simulator, no single simulator is clearly superior to the others for all locations within a forest type. In general, FIBER, NE-TWIGS, and SILVAH performed best in the northern hardwood (beech- birch-maple) forest type; NE-TWIGS and SILVAH performed best in the Allegheny hardwood (cherry-maple) forest type; SILVAH and OAKSIM performed best in the oak- hickory forest type; and SILVAH was most suitable in the transition hardwood (mixture of northern hardwoods and oaks) forest type. The results give growth and yield model users more information for selecting the simulator most suitable for their particular needs. The results also can be used as a diagnostic tool for growth and yield model development.