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Tree growth relationships and silvicultural tools to assist stand management in private native spotted gum dominant forests in Queensland and northern New South Wales.

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Lewis, T., Osborne, O., Hogg, B., Swift, S., Ryan, S., Taylor, D. and Macgregor-Skinner, J. (2010) Tree growth relationships and silvicultural tools to assist stand management in private native spotted gum dominant forests in Queensland and northern New South Wales. Technical Report. Forest and Wood Products Australia.

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Article URL: https://fwpa.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2010/08/PNC075-0708_Research_Report_Silvicultural.pdf

Abstract

Spotted gum dominant forests occur from Cooktown in northern Queensland (Qld) to Orbost in Victoria (Boland et al. 2006) and these forests are commercially very important with spotted gum the most commonly harvested hardwood timber in Qld and one of the most important in New South Wales (NSW). Spotted gum has a wide range of end uses from solid wood products through to power transmission poles and generally has excellent sawing and timber qualities (Hopewell 2004). The private native forest resource in southern Qld and northern NSW is a critical component of the hardwood timber industry (Anon 2005, Timber Qld 2006) and currently half or more of the native forest timber resource harvested in northern NSW and Qld is sourced from private land. However, in many cases productivity on private lands is well below what could be achieved with appropriate silvicultural management. This project provides silvicultural management tools to assist extension staff, land owners and managers in the south east Qld and north eastern NSW regions. The intent was that this would lead to improvement of the productivity of the private estate through implementation of appropriate management. The other intention of this project was to implement a number of silvicultural experiments and demonstration sites to provide data on growth rates of managed and unmanaged forests so that landholders can make informed decisions on the future management of their forests. To assist forest managers and improve the ability to predict forest productivity in the private resource, the project has developed:

• A set of spotted gum specific silvicultural guidelines for timber production on private land that cover both silvicultural treatment and harvesting. The guidelines were developed for extension officers and property owners.

• A simple decision support tool, referred to as the spotted gum productivity assessment tool (SPAT), that allows an estimation of:
1. Tree growth productivity on specific sites. Estimation is based on the analysis of site and growth data collected from a large number of yield and experimental plots on Crown land across a wide range of spotted gum forest types. Growth algorithms were developed using tree growth and site data and the algorithms were used to formulate basic economic predictors.
2. Pasture development under a range of tree stockings and the expected livestock carrying capacity at nominated tree stockings for a particular area.
3. Above-ground tree biomass and carbon stored in trees.

•A series of experiments in spotted gum forests on private lands across the study area to quantify growth and to provide measures of the effect of silvicultural thinning and different agro-forestry regimes.

The adoption and use of these tools by farm forestry extension officers and private land holders in both field operations and in training exercises will, over time, improve the commercial management of spotted gum forests for both timber and grazing. Future measurement of the experimental sites at ages five, 10 and 15 years will provide longer term data on the effects of various stocking rates and thinning regimes and facilitate modification and improvement of these silvicultural prescriptions.

Item Type:Monograph (Technical Report)
Business groups:Horticulture and Forestry Science
Additional Information:© Forest & Wood Products Australia Limited.
Keywords:Spotted gum; native forest; silviculture; decision support.
Subjects:Forestry > Sylviculture
Agriculture > Agriculture (General) > Agricultural economics
Live Archive:05 Apr 2011 07:32
Last Modified:15 Nov 2022 04:10

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