2020 Fundamentals and Best Practices for Forest Inventories (CANCELED)
Location: Springfield, OR
Meeting was CANCELED due to COVID-19. No future date has been set.
8:00 Building Blocks of Sound Inventory Design
- What is a working forest inventory? The evolution over 30 years from strata averages and yield tables to individual stand structures within strata.
- Why you should be cruising for inventory versus harvest. Your cruising objective is to capture silvicultural growth capacity and setup the ability to re-merchandize as markets change.
8:30 Sample Designs – Strata
- Stratifying the whole forest – What are the right classifications and levels of strata?
- Breaking the strata into unique stand polygons –Why we need unique stand identification.
- Sampling stands within each strata for cruising – Getting the right distribution, intensity and frequency of sampling and working with riparian buffers and setasides.
10:00 Break
10:20 Sample Design – Plots
- Distributing your plots across the entire stand –Why this makes a difference.
- Including small tree frequencies to define density.
- How large tree frequencies define silvicultural options and asset values.
- Defining clumpiness with systematic spatial plot patterns to quantify the impact on yield capacity.
- Determining the right plot frequency and distribution within each stand.
12:00 Lunch
1:00 Sample Design – Trees
- Sampling all trees of all species and sizes within each stand makes a difference.
- Applying a combination of prism-sweep and fixed area plot designs for sampling.
- Tally frequencies by species and size class, never by species alone.
- When and why to record tree condition and vigor class in cruise design.
- Methods for selecting large trees height samples – why this makes a difference.
- Estimating live crown length and percent defect in large trees.
- When and how to measure taper.
- When and why to measure age
- How to use a 1/20th acre fixed area circular plot for standing dead trees.
- Sampling down woody material using a minimum 100-foot transect line.
2:00 Break
2:20 Cruise Compilation Methods
- Compiling each stand cruise versus compiling by strata – within and between stands.
- Height estimation methods – why tree heights vary with silviculture.
3:30 Expanding the Cruise to Un-sampled Stands
- Assigning a stand structure to un-sampled stands from an average tree list generated from sampled stands – when and why these methods are important to understand and use.
- Do’s and don’ts of cruise expansions–methods, timing, frequency and assumptions.
4:15 Year-end Updates and Reporting – Getting the Sequence and Components Right
- Incorporating all new harvest units, deletions,acquisitions and boundary adjustments in a GIS stand polygon layer.
- Updating the GIS road network and road class buffer widths.
- Updating the GIS stream courses and riparian buffer widths.
- Updating all administrative, silvicultural and operational costs.
- Running reports for year-end harvest volume and value reports.
- Growing stands for one year from the previous year for annual growth reporting.
- Updating the inventory with all new cruises from all sampled stands within current year – identifying the actual impact of new information.
- Producing forest-wide reports of new current standing forest inventory.
5:00 Adjourn
Conference Photos
About the Speakers:
Dr. James Arney brings over fifty years of forest biometrics industrial experience touching every aspect of inventory design, growth & yield, and harvest planning in six western States and three Canadian Provinces. He has designed in-place inventory systems, calibrated yield models for over twenty (20) tree species, developed site index curves, taper models, managed GIS systems and staff, developed hydrographic, soil and wildlife databases and prepared and presented sustained yield plans for public and private organizations through the western North America. He has developed silvicultural regimes and forest management plans for almost every major species and forest type found in the American Northwest.
Dr. Arney is the only forest biometrician who has designed and built four separate and unique computerized forest growth models (PhD. Dissertation distant-dependent whole tree (1969), USFS-Weyerhaeuser distant-dependent (1975), SPS distant-independent (1981), and FPS distant-dependent (1995)). Both SPS and FPS have been distributed world-wide and represent the most-used, integrated forest management tool set for forest inventory and silvicultural planning on “working forests” in the western United States.
Jim is currently president of the Forest Biometrics Research Institute in Portland, OR
Dr. Dan Opalach is currently Senior Forest Biometrician with theForest Biometrics Research Institute. He spent the first 28 years of his career working for Green Diamond Resource Company on the North Coast of California developing forest inventories, silvicultural prescriptions, and management plans for their 2nd and 3rd growth redwood and Douglas-fir stands. Looking for new adventures and challenges, Dan retired from Green Diamond, moved to Redding and started his own consulting business where he assists timberland owners with their forest inventories, management plans, and timberland appraisals. He also teaches silviculture during the winter semesters at Shasta College in Redding. Dr. Opalach is Registered Professional Forester (RPF) No. 2459 in the state of California.