- Acre:
- An area of land
measuring 43,560 square feet. A square 1-acre plot measures 209 feet by 209
feet; a circular acre has a radius of 117.75 feet.
-
- Amphibian:
- Any of a class of
vertebrates that regulate their body temperature externally; lay shell-less
eggs in wet areas; live in water during early development and live both in
water and on land as adults; and use lungs, gills and their skin for
breathing. Most have four legs and smooth, moist skin without scales.
-
- Angiosperm:
- A plant that has true
flowers and bears its seeds in fruits. In temperate zones, many angiosperms
are deciduous trees, while in tropical zones, many are evergreen trees.
Examples include oaks, willows, maples and birches.
-
- Annual Ring:
- The combination of one
earlywood layer (light colored) and one latewood layer (dark colored) seen
in a cross-section of a tree. One annual ring usually represents one year of
growth.
-
- Artificial
Regeneration:
- The growth of new trees
through seeding and planting.
-
- Bark:
- The tough exterior
covering of a woody root or stem that protects the tree from injury caused
by insects and other animals, by other plants, by disease and by fire.
-
- Best Management
Practice:
- Forest management
practices that reduce erosion and prevent or control water pollution.
-
- Biltmore Stick:
- A stick similar to a
yardstick in appearance, but usually about 25 inches long. One side is
scaled to read a tree’s diameter by holding the stick horizontally at arm’s
length and against the tree at breast height. A Merritt hypsometer runs
along one edge of the stick and is scaled to read a tree’s height from 66
feet away from the tree’s base. These two measurements are then used to
find the tree’s volume according to the volume table printed on one face
of the stick.
-
- Biodiversity:
- The variety of life
forms in a given area; can be categorized in terms of number of species,
variety of plant and animal communities, genetic variability or some
combination of these categories.
-
- Bird:
- Any of a class of
vertebrates that regulate their body temperature internally, have bodies
that are covered almost entirely with feathers and have forelimbs modified
as wings that enable most to fly.
-
- Board Foot:
- A unit of measure equal
to a board that is 1 inch thick, 12 inches long and 12 inches wide, or 144
cubic inches.
-
- Bole:
- The main trunk of a
tree.
-
- Broadleaf:
- A class of trees that
have broad, flat leaves of many different shapes; most are deciduous; also
called hardwood because most broad-leaved trees have harder wood than do
conifers. Examples include oak, hickory, maple and ash.
-
- Buffer Strip:
- A narrow zone or strip
of land, trees or vegetation bordering an area. Common examples include
visual buffers, which screen the view along roads, and streamside buffers,
which are used to protect water quality. Buffers may also be used to prevent
the spread of forest pests.
-
- Cambium:
- A thin layer of
specialized cells within a tree’s trunk that divide to produce new inner
bark cells to the outside and new sapwood cells to the inside. The narrow
band of cells that is responsible for the tree’s growth in circumference.
-
- Canopy:
- The "roof" of
the forest formed by the crowns of the tallest trees.
-
- Carrying Capacity:
- The maximum number of
healthy wildlife that a given habitat or area can support without
degradation of the habitat.
-
- Cellulose:
- The scientific name for
wood fiber.
-
- Chain:
- A distance of 66 feet.
-
- Clearcut:
- A harvesting and
regeneration method that removes all trees within a given area. Most
commonly used in pine and hardwood forests that require full sunlight to
regenerate and grow efficiently.
-
- Clinometer:
- An instrument that is
held at eye level to read stump height and merchantable or total height when
standing 50 and 66 feet from the base of the tree. The difference between
the two readings yields the height.
-
- Competition:
- The struggle between
trees to obtain sunlight, nutrients, water and growing space. Every part of
the tree, from the roots to the crown, competes for space and food.
-
- Conifer:
- A class of trees that
are evergreen, have needle or scalelike foliage and conelike fruit; often
called softwood. Examples include pine, hemlock, cedar and cypress.
-
- Conservation:
- Planned management and
wise use of natural resources for present and future generations.
-
- Controlled
Burning: (See prescribed burning)
-
- Cord:
- A standard unit of
measure equivalent to 128 cubic feet of round or split wood. A standard cord
measures 4 feet by 4 feet by 8 feet. A face cord or short cord is 4 feet by
8 feet by any length of wood under 4 feet.
-
- Cover:
- (a) Any plant that
intercepts rain drops before they reach the soil or that holds soil in
place;
- (b) a hiding place or
vegetative shelter for wildlife from predators or inclement weather.
-
- Crown:
- The branches and
foliage at the top of a tree.
-
- Cruise:
- A survey or inventory
of forestland to locate timber and estimate its quantity by species,
products, size, quality or other characteristics.
-
- Deciduous:
- A group of trees that
lose all of their leaves every year.
-
- Decomposition:
- The process by which
organic material such as leaves and branches are broken down by bacteria,
fungi, protozoans and the many different kinds of animals that live in the
soil.
-
- Dendrology:
- The study of trees;
tree identification.
-
- Diameter at Breast
Height (DBH):
- Tree diameter measured
at 4.5 feet above ground level.
-
- Diameter Tape:
- A steel measuring tape
that has a scale calibrated to read a tree’s diameter when wrapped around
the tree’s circumference.
-
- Earlywood:
- Wood cells produced at
the beginning of a tree’s growing season that are generally light in
color. Also called springwood.
-
- Ecology:
- The science or study of
the relationships between organisms and their environment.
-
- Ecological Succession:
- The gradual change of
plant and animal communities over time.
-
- Ecosystem:
- A loosely defined area
consisting of numerous habitats.
-
- Edge:
- The transition between
two different types or ages of vegetation.
-
- Endangered Species:
- Any species that has
been classified by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service or a state wildlife
agency as being in danger of extinction throughout all or a significant
portion of its range. A species is endangered when the total number of
remaining members may not be sufficient to reproduce enough offspring to
ensure survival of the species.
-
- Environment:
- The sum of all external
living and non-living conditions and influences that affect the development
and survival of an organism.
-
- Erosion:
- The wearing away or
removal of land or soil by the action of wind, water, ice or gravity.
-
- Even-Aged Management:
- A forest management
method used to produce stands that are all the same age or nearly the same
age by harvesting all trees in an area at one time or in several cuttings
over a short time. This management method is commonly applied to
shade-intolerant conifers and hardwoods.
-
- Evergreen:
- A group of trees that
do not lose all of their leaves every year but go through a gradual
replacement by dropping only their oldest leaves each year. Instead of being
bare in winter, these trees have leaves all year.
-
- Foliage:
- The leaves of a tree or
other plant.
-
- Forage:
- Vegetation such as
leaves, stems, buds and some types of bark, that can be eaten for food and
energy.
-
- Forb:
- Any herb other than
grass.
-
- Forest Floor:
- The lowest level of the
forest that is made up of tree seedlings, dead leaves and needles, grasses,
ferns, flowers, fungi, and decaying plants and logs.
-
- Forest Management:
- Caring for a forest so
that it stays healthy and vigorous and provides the products and values the
landowner desires.
-
- Forest Stewardship
Plan:
- A written document
listing activities that enhance or improve forest resources (wildlife,
timber, soil, water, recreation and aesthetics) on private land over a
five-year period.
-
- Forest Type:
- A designation or name
given to a forest based on the most abundant tree type or types in the
stand; groups of tree species commonly growing in the same stand because
their environmental requirements are similar. Examples of North Carolina
forest types include (a) pine; (b) mixed hardwood; (c) cypress, tupelo and
black gum; and (d) oak and hickory.
-
- Forestry:
- The art and science of
managing forests to produce various products and benefits including timber,
wildlife habitat, clean water, biodiversity and recreation.
-
- Fuel Loading:
- A buildup of easily
ignited leaves, pine straw, branches and trees on the forest floor.
-
- Group
Selection:
- (a) The removal of
small groups of trees to regenerate shade-intolerant trees in the opening
(usually at least 1/4 acre);
(b) a specific type of selective cutting.
-
- Gymnosperm:
- A plant whose seeds are
not enclosed in flowers. Most gymnosperms produce their seeds on the surface
of the scales of female cones and are pollinated by wind. Conifers are the
most common type of gymnosperm.
-
- Habitat:
- An area in which a
specific plant or animal naturally lives, grows and reproduces; the area
that provides a plant or animal with adequate food, water, shelter and
living space.
-
- Hardwoods:
- Trees with broad, flat
leaves as opposed to coniferous or needled trees. Wood hardness varies among
the hardwood species, and some are actually softer than some softwoods.
-
- Heartwood:
- The central core of a
tree, which is made up of dense, dead wood and provides strength to the
tree.
-
- High-Grading:
- A harvesting technique
that removes only the biggest and most valuable trees from a stand and
provides high returns at the expense of future growth potential. Poor
quality, shade-loving trees tend to dominate in continually high-graded
sites.
-
- Hypsometer:
- Any device used for
measuring tree height.
-
- Increment Borer:
- A hollow auger-like
tool with a screw bit used to remove core samples from trees.
-
- Latewood:
- Wood cells produced at
the end of the growing season that make up the darker section of an annual
ring. Also called summerwood.
-
- Limiting Factor:
- Any requirement for
wildlife survival that is in limited supply.
-
- Mammal:
- Any of a class of
higher vertebrates whose bodies are covered with hair, who give birth to
live young, nourish their young with milk from mammary glands, regulate
their body temperature internally, have four types of well-developed teeth
and typically have four well-developed legs with toes that have nails, claws
or hoofs.
-
- Mast:
- Fruits or nuts used as
a food source by wildlife. Soft mast includes most fruits with fleshy
coverings, such as persimmon, dogwood seed or black gum seed. Hard mast
refers to nuts such as acorns and beech, pecan and hickory nuts.
-
- Merritt Hypsometer:
- A scale that measures
the number of 16-foot logs in a tree.
-
- Multiple-Use
Management:
- The management of land
or forest for more than one purpose, such as wood production, water quality,
wildlife, recreation, aesthetics and clean air.
-
- Natural Regeneration:
- The growth of new trees
in one of the following ways without human assistance: (a) from seeds
carried by wind or animals, (b) from seeds stored on the forest floor, or
(c) from stumps that sprout.
-
- Naval Stores:
- Products such as
turpentine, pitch and rosin that come from pine trees and are used in the
construction and maintenance of wooden sailing vessels.
-
- Phloem:
- The part of a tree that
carries sap from the leaves to the rest of the tree. Also called inner bark.
-
- Photosynthesis:
- The process by which a
plant or tree combines water and carbon dioxide with energy from the sun to
make glucose and oxygen.
-
- Plant Succession:
- The progression of
plants from bare ground to mature forest.
-
- Prescribed Burning:
- The practice of using
regulated fires to reduce or eliminate material on the forest floor, for
seedbed preparation or to control competing vegetation. Prescribed burning
simulates one of the most common natural disturbances. Also called
controlled burning.
-
- Pulpwood:
- Wood used in the
manufacture of paper, fiberboard or other wood fiber products.
Pulpwood-sized trees are usually a minimum of 4 inches in diameter.
-
- Reforestation:
- Reestablishing a forest
by planting or seeding an area from which forest vegetation has been
removed.
-
- Release:
- To free a tree from
competition with its immediate neighbors by removing the surrounding trees.
This occurs naturally and artificially.
-
- Renewable Resource:
- A naturally occurring
raw material or form of energy that has the capacity to replenish itself
through ecological cycles and sound management practices.
-
- Reptile:
- Any of a class of
vertebrates that regulates its body temperature externally, has dry,
glandless skin covered with scales, breathes through lungs and lays large
eggs that develop on land.
-
- Resin:
- A group of sticky
liquid substances secreted by plants that appear on the plant’s external
surface after a wound.
-
- Roots:
- The underground portion
of a tree that helps anchor the tree in the ground and absorbs water and
nutrients from the soil.
-
- Rotation:
- The number of years
required to establish and grow trees to a specified size, product or
condition of maturity. A pine rotation may range from as short as 20 years
for pulpwood to more than 60 years for sawtimber.
-
- Salvage
Cut:
- The harvesting of dead
or damaged trees, or the harvesting of trees in danger of being killed by
insects, disease, flooding or other factors in order to save their economic
value.
-
- Sawtimber:
- Wood of large enough
size to be used to produce lumber for construction and furniture.
-
- Sedimentation:
- The deposition or
settling of soil particles suspended in water.
-
- Seed Tree Cut:
- A harvesting method in
which a few scattered trees are left in the area to provide seeds for a new
forest stand. Selection of seed trees is based on growth rate, form, seeding
ability, wind firmness and future marketability. This harvesting method
produces an even-aged forest.
-
- Selective Cutting:
- The periodic removal of
individual trees or groups of trees to improve or regenerate a stand.
-
- Shade-Intolerant
Species:
- Trees that require full
sunlight to thrive and cannot grow in the shade of larger trees.
-
- Shade-Tolerant Species:
- Trees that have the
ability to grow in the shade of other trees and in competition with them.
-
- Shelterwood Cut:
- Removing trees in the
harvest area in a series of two or more cuttings so that new seedlings can
grow from the seeds of older trees. This method produces an even-aged
forest.
-
- Silviculture:
- The art, science and
practice of establishing, tending and reproducing forest stands of desired
characteristics. It is based on knowledge of species’ characteristics and
environmental requirements.
-
- Site Index:
- A relative measure of
forest site quality based on the height (in feet) of the dominant trees at a
specific age (usually 25 or 50 years, depending on rotation length). Site
index information helps estimate future returns and land productivity for
timber and wildlife.
-
- Snag:
- A standing dead or
dying tree.
-
- Softwood:
- A tree belonging to the
order Coniferales. Softwood trees are usually evergreen, bear cones and have
needles or scalelike leaves. Examples include pines, spruces, firs and
cedars. See conifer.
-
- Species:
- A group of related
organisms having common characteristics and capable of interbreeding.
Loblolly and Virginia pine are common tree species that can interbreed.
-
- Springwood:
- See earlywood.
-
- Stand:
- A group of trees that
are sufficiently the same in species composition and arrangement of age
classes and condition so that they can be managed as a unit.
-
- Streamside Management
Zone (SMZ):
- An area adjacent to a
stream in which vegetation is maintained or managed to protect water
quality.
-
- Summerwood:
- See latewood.
-
- Suppression:
- The process by which a
tree loses its vigor due to inadequate light, water and nutrients.
-
- Thinning:
- A tree removal practice
that reduces tree density and competition between trees in a stand. Thinning
concentrates growth on fewer, high-quality trees, provides periodic income
and generally enhances tree vigor. Heavy thinning can benefit wildlife
through the increased growth of ground vegetation.
-
- Threatened Species:
- Any species that has
been classified by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service or a state wildlife
agency as likely to become endangered within the foreseeable future
throughout all or a significant portion of its range. A threatened species
has declining or dangerously low populations but still has enough members to
maintain or increase numbers.
-
- Transpiration:
- The loss of water
through leaves.
-
- Tree Caliper:
- A metal or wooden
device consisting of an arm and two prongs, one of which is free to slide
along a graduated scale on the arm. The prongs are placed against opposite
sides of a tree to read its diameter on the scale.
-
- Turpentine:
- A distilled chemical
produced from tapping into a living pine and harvesting the sap.
-
- Understory:
- The area below the
forest canopy that comprises shrubs, snags and small tree. Because the
understory receives little light, many of the plants at this level tolerate
shade and will remain part of the understory. Others will grow and replace
older trees that fall.
-
- Wildlife:
- A broad term that
includes nondomesticated vertebrates, especially mammals, birds and fish.
-
- Wood:
- The solid interior of a
tree.
-
- Wood Chemicals:
- Chemicals that are
found naturally in the various parts of a tree.
-
- Xylem:
- The part of a tree that
transports water and nutrients up from the roots to the leaves. Older xylem
cells become part of the heartwood. Also called sapwood.
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