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Forestry

Forestry is the science and craft of creating, managing, planting, using, conserving and repairing forests and woodlands for associated resources for human and environmental benefits.[1] Forestry is practiced in plantations and natural stands.[2] The science of forestry has elements that belong to the biological, physical, social, political and managerial sciences.[3] Forest management plays an essential role in the creation and modification of habitats and affects ecosystem services provisioning.[4]

A Timberjack wheeled harvester stacking cut timber in Finland

Modern forestry generally embraces a broad range of concerns, in what is known as multiple-use management, including: the provision of timber, fuel wood, wildlife habitat, natural water quality management, recreation, landscape and community protection, employment, aesthetically appealing landscapes, biodiversity management, watershed management, erosion control, and preserving forests as "sinks" for atmospheric carbon dioxide.

Forest ecosystems have come to be seen as the most important component of the biosphere,[5] and forestry has emerged as a vital applied science, craft, and technology. A practitioner of forestry is known as a forester. Another common term is silviculturist. Silviculture is narrower than forestry, being concerned only with forest plants, but is often used synonymously with forestry.

All people depend upon forests and their biodiversity, some more than others.[6] Forestry is an important economic segment in various industrial countries,[7] as forests provide more than 86 million green jobs and support the livelihoods of many more people.[6] For example, in Germany, forests cover nearly a third of the land area,[8] wood is the most important renewable resource, and forestry supports more than a million jobs and about €181 billion of value to the German economy each year.[9]

Worldwide, an estimated 880 million people spend part of their time collecting fuelwood or producing charcoal, many of them women.[6][quantify] Human populations tend to be low in areas of low-income countries with high forest cover and high forest biodiversity, but poverty rates in these areas tend to be high.[6] Some 252 million people living in forests and savannahs have incomes of less than US$1.25 per day.[6]


Forestry in the 21st century edit

Today a strong body of research exists regarding the management of forest ecosystems and the genetic improvement of tree species and varieties. Forestry studies also include the development of better methods for the planting, protecting, thinning, controlled burning, felling, extracting, and processing of timber. One of the applications of modern forestry is reforestation, in which trees are planted and tended in a given area.

Trees provide numerous environmental, social and economic benefits for people.[10] In many regions, the forest industry is of major ecological, economic, and social importance, with the United States producing more timber than any other country in the world.[11] Third-party certification systems that provide independent verification of sound forest stewardship and sustainable forestry have become commonplace in many areas since the 1990s. These certification systems developed as a response to criticism of some forestry practices, particularly deforestation in less-developed regions along with concerns over resource management in the developed world. Sustainable forestry operations must also adhere to the International Labour Organization's 18 criteria on human and social rights. Gender equality, health and well-being and community consultation are examples of mentioned rights.[12][13]

In topographically severe forested terrain, proper forestry is important for the prevention or minimization of serious soil erosion or even landslides. In areas with a high potential for landslides, forests can stabilize soils and prevent property damage or loss, human injury, or loss of life.

Foresters edit

 
Foresters of the Austral University of Chile in the Valdivian forests of San Pablo de Tregua, Chile

Foresters work for the timber industry, government agencies, conservation groups, local authorities, urban parks boards, citizens' associations, and private landowners. The forestry profession includes a wide diversity of jobs, with educational requirements ranging from college bachelor's degrees to PhDs for highly specialized work. Industrial foresters plan forest regeneration starting with careful harvesting. Urban foresters manage trees in urban green spaces. Foresters work in tree nurseries growing seedlings for woodland creation or regeneration projects. Foresters improve tree genetics. Forest engineers develop new building systems. Professional foresters measure and model the growth of forests with tools like geographic information systems. Foresters may combat insect infestation, disease, forest and grassland wildfire, but increasingly allow these natural aspects of forest ecosystems to run their course when the likelihood of epidemics or risk of life or property are low. Increasingly, foresters participate in wildlife conservation planning and watershed protection. Foresters have been mainly concerned with timber management, especially reforestation, forests at prime conditions, and fire control.[14]

Forestry plans edit

Foresters develop and implement forest management plans relying on mapped resources, inventories showing an area's topographical features as well as its distribution of trees (by species) and other plant covers. Plans also include landowner objectives, roads, culverts, proximity to human habitation, water features and hydrological conditions, and soil information. Forest management plans typically include recommended silvicultural treatments and a timetable for their implementation. Application of digital maps in Geographic Information systems (GIS) that extracts and integrates different information about forest terrains, soil type and tree covers, etc. using, e.g. laser scanning enhances forest management plans in modern systems.[15]

Forest management plans include recommendations to achieve the landowner's objectives and desired future conditions for the property subject to ecological, financial, logistical (e.g. access to resources), and other constraints. On some properties, plans focus on producing quality wood products for processing or sale. Hence, tree species, quantity, and form, all central to the value of harvested products quality and quantity, tend to be important components of silvicultural plans.

Good management plans include consideration of future conditions of the stand after any recommended harvests treatments, including future treatments (particularly in intermediate stand treatments), and plans for natural or artificial regeneration after final harvests.

The objectives of landowners and leaseholders influence plans for harvest and subsequent site treatment. In Britain, plans featuring "good forestry practice" must always consider the needs of other stakeholders such as nearby communities or rural residents living within or adjacent to woodland areas. Foresters consider tree felling and environmental legislation when developing plans. Plans instruct the sustainable harvesting and replacement of trees.[16] They indicate whether road building or other forest engineering operations are required.

Agriculture and forest leaders are also trying to understand how the climate change legislation will affect what they do. The information gathered will provide the data that will determine the role of agriculture and forestry in a new climate change regulatory system.[14]

Forestry as a science edit

Over the past centuries, forestry was regarded as a separate science. With the rise of ecology and environmental science, there has been a reordering in the applied sciences. In line with this view, forestry is a primary land-use science comparable with agriculture.[17] Under these headings, the fundamentals behind the management of natural forests comes by way of natural ecology. Forests or tree plantations, those whose primary purpose is the extraction of forest products, are planned and managed to utilize a mix of ecological and agroecological principles.[18] In many regions of the world there is considerable conflict between forest practices and other societal priorities such as water quality, watershed preservation, sustainable fishing, conservation, and species preservation.[19]

Genetic diversity in forestry edit

The provenance of forest reproductive material used to plant forests has a great influence on how the trees develop, hence why it is important to use forest reproductive material of good quality and of high genetic diversity.[20] More generally, all forest management practices, including in natural regeneration systems, may impact the genetic diversity of trees.

The term genetic diversity describes the differences in DNA sequence between individuals as distinct from variation caused by environmental influences. The unique genetic composition of an individual (its genotype) will determine its performance (its phenotype) at a particular site.[21]

Genetic diversity is needed to maintain the vitality of forests and to provide resilience to pests and diseases. Genetic diversity also ensures that forest trees can survive, adapt and evolve under changing environmental conditions. Furthermore, genetic diversity is the foundation of biological diversity at species and ecosystem levels. Forest genetic resources are therefore important to consider in forest management.[20]

Genetic diversity in forests is threatened by forest fires, pests and diseases, habitat fragmentation, poor silvicultural practices and inappropriate use of forest reproductive material.

About 98 million hectares of forest were affected by fire in 2015; this was mainly in the tropical domain, where fire burned about 4 percent of the total forest area in that year. More than two-thirds of the total forest area affected was in Africa and South America. Insects, diseases and severe weather events damaged about 40 million hectares of forests in 2015, mainly in the temperate and boreal domains.[22]

Furthermore, the marginal populations of many tree species are facing new threats due to the effects of climate change.[20]

Most countries in Europe have recommendations or guidelines for selecting species and provenances that can be used in a given site or zone.[21]

History and background edit

The preindustrial age has been dubbed by Werner Sombart and others as the 'wooden age', as timber and firewood were the basic resources for energy, construction and housing. The development of modern forestry is closely connected with the rise of capitalism, the economy as a science and varying notions of land use and property.[23] Roman Latifundiae, large agricultural estates, were quite successful in maintaining the large supply of wood that was necessary for the Roman Empire.[24] Large deforestations came with the decline of the Romans.[24] However already in the 5th century, monks in the then Byzantine Romagna on the Adriatic coast, were able to establish stone pine plantations to provide fuelwood and food.[25] This was the beginning of the massive forest mentioned by Dante Alighieri in his 1308 poem Divine Comedy.[25]

Similar sustainable formal forestry practices were developed by the Visigoths in the 7th century when, faced with the ever-increasing shortage of wood, they instituted a code concerned with the preservation of oak and pine forests.[25] The use and management of many forest resources has a long history in China as well, dating back to the Han dynasty and taking place under the landowning gentry. A similar approach was used in Japan. It was also later written about by the Ming dynasty Chinese scholar Xu Guangqi (1562–1633).

In Europe, land usage rights in medieval and early modern times allowed different users to access forests and pastures. Plant litter and resin extraction were important, as pitch (resin) was essential for the caulking of ships, falking and hunting rights, firewood and building, timber gathering in wood pastures, and grazing animals in forests. The notion of "commons" (German "Allmende") refers to the underlying traditional legal term of common land. The idea of enclosed private property came about during modern times. However, most hunting rights were retained by members of the nobility which preserved the right of the nobility to access and use common land for recreation, like fox hunting.

Early modern forestry development edit

 
Forestry work in Austria
 
Exploitation of brushwood at the Golden Steinrueck, Vogelsberg
 
Hans Carl von Carlowitz, German miner

Systematic management of forests for a sustainable yield of timber began in Portugal in the 13th century when King Afonso III planted the Pinhal do Rei (King's Pine Forest) near Leiria to prevent coastal erosion and soil degradation, and as a sustainable source for timber used in naval construction.[26] His successor King Denis of Portugal continued the practice and the forest exists still today.[27]

Forest management also flourished in the German states in the 14th century, e.g. in Nuremberg,[28] and in 16th-century Japan.[29] Typically, a forest was divided into specific sections and mapped; the harvest of timber was planned with an eye to regeneration. As timber rafting allowed for connecting large continental forests, as in south western Germany, via Main, Neckar, Danube and Rhine with the coastal cities and states, early modern forestry and remote trading were closely connected. Large firs in the black forest were called „Holländer“, as they were traded to the Dutch ship yards. Large timber rafts on the Rhine were 200 to 400m in length, 40m in width and consisted of several thousand logs. The crew consisted of 400 to 500 men, including shelter, bakeries, ovens and livestock stables.[30] Timber rafting infrastructure allowed for large interconnected networks all over continental Europe and is still of importance in Finland.

Starting with the 16th century, enhanced world maritime trade, a boom in housing construction in Europe, and the success and further Berggeschrey (rushes) of the mining industry increased timber consumption sharply. The notion of 'Nachhaltigkeit', sustainability in forestry, is closely connected to the work of Hans Carl von Carlowitz (1645–1714), a mining administrator in Saxony. His book Sylvicultura oeconomica, oder haußwirthliche Nachricht und Naturmäßige Anweisung zur wilden Baum-Zucht (1713) was the first comprehensive treatise about sustainable yield forestry.[31] In the UK, and, to an extent, in continental Europe, the enclosure movement and the Clearances favored strictly enclosed private property.[32] The Agrarian reformers, early economic writers and scientists tried to get rid of the traditional commons.[33] At the time, an alleged tragedy of the commons together with fears of a Holznot, an imminent wood shortage played a watershed role in the controversies about cooperative land use patterns.[34]

The practice of establishing tree plantations in the British Isles was promoted by John Evelyn, though it had already acquired some popularity. Louis XIV's minister Jean-Baptiste Colbert's oak Forest of Tronçais, planted for the future use of the French Navy, matured as expected in the mid-19th century: "Colbert had thought of everything except the steamship," Fernand Braudel observed.[35] Colbert's vision of forestry management was encoded in the French forestry Ordinance of 1669, which proved to be an influential management system throughout Europe.[36] In parallel, schools of forestry were established beginning in the late 18th century in Hesse, Russia, Austria-Hungary, Sweden, France and elsewhere in Europe.

Forest conservation and early globalization edit

Starting from the 1750s modern scientific forestry was developed in France and the German speaking countries in the context of natural history scholarship and state administration inspired by physiocracy and cameralism.[37] Its main traits were centralized management by professional foresters, the adherence to sustainable yield concepts with a bias towards fuelwood and timber production, artificial afforestation, and a critical view of pastoral and agricultural uses of forests.[38]

During the late 19th and early 20th centuries, forest preservation programs were established in British India, the United States, and Europe. Many foresters were either from continental Europe (like Sir Dietrich Brandis), or educated there (like Gifford Pinchot). Sir Dietrich Brandis is considered the father of tropical forestry, European concepts and practices had to be adapted in tropical and semi-arid climate zones. The development of plantation forestry was one of the (controversial) answers to the specific challenges in the tropical colonies. The enactment and evolution of forest laws and binding regulations occurred in most Western nations in the 20th century in response to growing conservation concerns and the increasing technological capacity of logging companies. Tropical forestry is a separate branch of forestry which deals mainly with equatorial forests that yield woods such as teak and mahogany.

Forest and landscape restoration edit

Forest and landscape restoration (FLR) is defined as a process that aims to regain ecological functionality and enhance human well-being in deforested or degraded landscapes.[39] FLR has been developed as a response to the growing degradation and loss of forest and land, which resulted in declined biodiversity and ecosystem services.[39] Effective FLR will support the achievement of the Sustainable Development Goals.[39] The United Nations Decade on Ecosystem Restoration (2021–2030)  provides the opportunity to restore hundreds of millions of hectares of degraded forests and other ecosystems.[39]

Mechanization edit

Forestry mechanization was always in close connection to metal working and the development of mechanical tools to cut and transport timber to its destination.[40] Rafting belongs to the earliest means of transport. Steel saws came up in the 15th century. The 19th century widely increased the availability of steel for whipsaws and introduced forest railways and railways in general for transport and as forestry customer. Further human induced changes, however, came since World War II, respectively in line with the "1950s syndrome".[41] The first portable chainsaw was invented in 1918 in Canada, but large impact of mechanization in forestry started after World War II.[42] Forestry harvesters are among the most recent developments. Although drones, planes, laser scanning, satellites and robots also play a part in forestry.

Early journals which are still present edit

Education edit

History of forestry education edit

The first dedicated forestry school was established by Georg Ludwig Hartig at Hungen in the Wetterau, Hesse, in 1787, though forestry had been taught earlier in central Europe, including at the University of Giessen, in Hesse-Darmstadt.

In Spain, the first forestry school was the Forest Engineering School of Madrid (Escuela Técnica Superior de Ingenieros de Montes), founded in 1844.

The first in North America, the Biltmore Forest School was established near Asheville, North Carolina, by Carl A. Schenck on September 1, 1898, on the grounds of George W. Vanderbilt's Biltmore Estate. Another early school was the New York State College of Forestry, established at Cornell University just a few weeks later, in September 1898.

Early 19th century North American foresters went to Germany to study forestry. Some early German foresters also emigrated to North America.

In South America the first forestry school was established in Brazil, in Viçosa, Minas Gerais, in 1962, and moved the next year to become a faculty at the Federal University of Paraná, in Curitiba.[52]

Forestry education today edit

 
Prescribed burning is used by foresters to reduce fuel loads.

Today, forestry education typically includes training in general biology, ecology, botany, genetics, soil science, climatology, hydrology, economics and forest management. Education in the basics of sociology and political science is often considered an advantage. Professional skills in conflict resolution and communication are also important in training programs.[53]

In India, forestry education is imparted in the agricultural universities and in Forest Research Institutes (deemed universities). Four year degree programmes are conducted in these universities at the undergraduate level. Masters and Doctorate degrees are also available in these universities.

In the United States, postsecondary forestry education leading to a Bachelor's degree or Master's degree is accredited by the Society of American Foresters.[54]

In Canada the Canadian Institute of Forestry awards silver rings to graduates from accredited university BSc programs, as well as college and technical programs.[55]

In many European countries, training in forestry is made in accordance with requirements of the Bologna Process and the European Higher Education Area.

The International Union of Forest Research Organizations is the only international organization that coordinates forest science efforts worldwide.[56]

Continuing education edit

In order to keep up with changing demands and environmental factors, forestry education does not stop at graduation. Increasingly, forestry professionals engage in regular training to maintain and improve on their management practices. An increasingly popular tool are marteloscopes; one hectare large, rectangular forest sites where all trees are numbered, mapped and recorded.

These sites can be used to do virtual thinnings and test one's wood quality and volume estimations as well as tree microhabitats. This system is mainly suitable to regions with small-scale multi-functional forest management systems.

Miscellaneous about forestry research and education edit

See also edit

Sources edit

  This article incorporates text from a free content work. Licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0 (license statement/permission). Text taken from Global Forest Resources Assessment 2020 Key findings​, FAO, FAO.

  This article incorporates text from a free content work. Licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0 IGO (license statement/permission). Text taken from The State of the World's Forests 2020. Forests, biodiversity and people – In brief​, FAO & UNEP, FAO & UNEP.

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Further reading edit

  • Eyle, Alexandra. 1992. Charles Lathrop Pack: Timberman, Forest Conservationist, and Pioneer in Forest Education. Syracuse, NY: ESF College Foundation and College of Environmental Science and Forestry. Distributed by Syracuse University Press. Available: Internet Archive.
  • Hammond, Herbert. 1991. Seeing the Forest Among the Trees. Winlaw/Vancouver: Polestar Press, 1991.
  • Hart, C. 1994. Practical Forestry for the Agent and Surveyor. Stroud. Sutton Publishing. ISBN 0-86299-962-6
  • Hibberd, B.G. (Ed). 1991. Forestry Practice. Forestry Commission Handbook 6. London. HMSO. ISBN 0-11-710281-4
  • Maser, Chris. 1994. Sustainable Forestry: Philosophy, Science, and Economics. DelRay Beach: St. Lucie Press.
  • Miller, G. Tyler. 1990. Resource Conservation and Management. Belmont: Wadsworth Publishing.
  • Oosthoek, K. Jan/ Richard Hölzl (eds.) 2019. Managing Northern Europe's Forests. Histories from the Age of Improvement to the Age of Ecology. New York/Oxford: Berghahn Publ.
  • Radkau, Joachim Wood: A History, ISBN 978-0-7456-4688-6, November 2011, Polity
  • Stoddard, Charles H. 1978. Essentials of Forestry. New York: Ronald Press.
  • [1]. Vira, B. et al. 2015. Forests and Food: Addressing Hunger and Nutrition Across Sustainable Landscapes. Cambridge: Open Book Publishers.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Forestry at Wikimedia Commons
  •   Works related to Forestry at Wikisource
  • Forestry at Curlie

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This article is about the scientific field of forestry For the American racehorse see Forestry horse This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Forestry news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message Forestry is the science and craft of creating managing planting using conserving and repairing forests and woodlands for associated resources for human and environmental benefits 1 Forestry is practiced in plantations and natural stands 2 The science of forestry has elements that belong to the biological physical social political and managerial sciences 3 Forest management plays an essential role in the creation and modification of habitats and affects ecosystem services provisioning 4 A Timberjack wheeled harvester stacking cut timber in FinlandModern forestry generally embraces a broad range of concerns in what is known as multiple use management including the provision of timber fuel wood wildlife habitat natural water quality management recreation landscape and community protection employment aesthetically appealing landscapes biodiversity management watershed management erosion control and preserving forests as sinks for atmospheric carbon dioxide Forest ecosystems have come to be seen as the most important component of the biosphere 5 and forestry has emerged as a vital applied science craft and technology A practitioner of forestry is known as a forester Another common term is silviculturist Silviculture is narrower than forestry being concerned only with forest plants but is often used synonymously with forestry All people depend upon forests and their biodiversity some more than others 6 Forestry is an important economic segment in various industrial countries 7 as forests provide more than 86 million green jobs and support the livelihoods of many more people 6 For example in Germany forests cover nearly a third of the land area 8 wood is the most important renewable resource and forestry supports more than a million jobs and about 181 billion of value to the German economy each year 9 Worldwide an estimated 880 million people spend part of their time collecting fuelwood or producing charcoal many of them women 6 quantify Human populations tend to be low in areas of low income countries with high forest cover and high forest biodiversity but poverty rates in these areas tend to be high 6 Some 252 million people living in forests and savannahs have incomes of less than US 1 25 per day 6 Contents 1 Forestry in the 21st century 2 Foresters 3 Forestry plans 4 Forestry as a science 5 Genetic diversity in forestry 6 History and background 6 1 Early modern forestry development 6 2 Forest conservation and early globalization 6 3 Forest and landscape restoration 6 4 Mechanization 6 5 Early journals which are still present 7 Education 7 1 History of forestry education 7 2 Forestry education today 7 3 Continuing education 7 4 Miscellaneous about forestry research and education 8 See also 9 Sources 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksForestry in the 21st century editToday a strong body of research exists regarding the management of forest ecosystems and the genetic improvement of tree species and varieties Forestry studies also include the development of better methods for the planting protecting thinning controlled burning felling extracting and processing of timber One of the applications of modern forestry is reforestation in which trees are planted and tended in a given area nbsp A deciduous beech forest in Slovenia nbsp A modern sawmill nbsp A comparison of employment In agriculture forestry and fishing by regionTrees provide numerous environmental social and economic benefits for people 10 In many regions the forest industry is of major ecological economic and social importance with the United States producing more timber than any other country in the world 11 Third party certification systems that provide independent verification of sound forest stewardship and sustainable forestry have become commonplace in many areas since the 1990s These certification systems developed as a response to criticism of some forestry practices particularly deforestation in less developed regions along with concerns over resource management in the developed world Sustainable forestry operations must also adhere to the International Labour Organization s 18 criteria on human and social rights Gender equality health and well being and community consultation are examples of mentioned rights 12 13 In topographically severe forested terrain proper forestry is important for the prevention or minimization of serious soil erosion or even landslides In areas with a high potential for landslides forests can stabilize soils and prevent property damage or loss human injury or loss of life Foresters editMain article Forester nbsp Foresters of the Austral University of Chile in the Valdivian forests of San Pablo de Tregua ChileForesters work for the timber industry government agencies conservation groups local authorities urban parks boards citizens associations and private landowners The forestry profession includes a wide diversity of jobs with educational requirements ranging from college bachelor s degrees to PhDs for highly specialized work Industrial foresters plan forest regeneration starting with careful harvesting Urban foresters manage trees in urban green spaces Foresters work in tree nurseries growing seedlings for woodland creation or regeneration projects Foresters improve tree genetics Forest engineers develop new building systems Professional foresters measure and model the growth of forests with tools like geographic information systems Foresters may combat insect infestation disease forest and grassland wildfire but increasingly allow these natural aspects of forest ecosystems to run their course when the likelihood of epidemics or risk of life or property are low Increasingly foresters participate in wildlife conservation planning and watershed protection Foresters have been mainly concerned with timber management especially reforestation forests at prime conditions and fire control 14 Forestry plans editForesters develop and implement forest management plans relying on mapped resources inventories showing an area s topographical features as well as its distribution of trees by species and other plant covers Plans also include landowner objectives roads culverts proximity to human habitation water features and hydrological conditions and soil information Forest management plans typically include recommended silvicultural treatments and a timetable for their implementation Application of digital maps in Geographic Information systems GIS that extracts and integrates different information about forest terrains soil type and tree covers etc using e g laser scanning enhances forest management plans in modern systems 15 Forest management plans include recommendations to achieve the landowner s objectives and desired future conditions for the property subject to ecological financial logistical e g access to resources and other constraints On some properties plans focus on producing quality wood products for processing or sale Hence tree species quantity and form all central to the value of harvested products quality and quantity tend to be important components of silvicultural plans Good management plans include consideration of future conditions of the stand after any recommended harvests treatments including future treatments particularly in intermediate stand treatments and plans for natural or artificial regeneration after final harvests The objectives of landowners and leaseholders influence plans for harvest and subsequent site treatment In Britain plans featuring good forestry practice must always consider the needs of other stakeholders such as nearby communities or rural residents living within or adjacent to woodland areas Foresters consider tree felling and environmental legislation when developing plans Plans instruct the sustainable harvesting and replacement of trees 16 They indicate whether road building or other forest engineering operations are required Agriculture and forest leaders are also trying to understand how the climate change legislation will affect what they do The information gathered will provide the data that will determine the role of agriculture and forestry in a new climate change regulatory system 14 Forestry as a science editOver the past centuries forestry was regarded as a separate science With the rise of ecology and environmental science there has been a reordering in the applied sciences In line with this view forestry is a primary land use science comparable with agriculture 17 Under these headings the fundamentals behind the management of natural forests comes by way of natural ecology Forests or tree plantations those whose primary purpose is the extraction of forest products are planned and managed to utilize a mix of ecological and agroecological principles 18 In many regions of the world there is considerable conflict between forest practices and other societal priorities such as water quality watershed preservation sustainable fishing conservation and species preservation 19 Genetic diversity in forestry editThe provenance of forest reproductive material used to plant forests has a great influence on how the trees develop hence why it is important to use forest reproductive material of good quality and of high genetic diversity 20 More generally all forest management practices including in natural regeneration systems may impact the genetic diversity of trees The term genetic diversity describes the differences in DNA sequence between individuals as distinct from variation caused by environmental influences The unique genetic composition of an individual its genotype will determine its performance its phenotype at a particular site 21 Genetic diversity is needed to maintain the vitality of forests and to provide resilience to pests and diseases Genetic diversity also ensures that forest trees can survive adapt and evolve under changing environmental conditions Furthermore genetic diversity is the foundation of biological diversity at species and ecosystem levels Forest genetic resources are therefore important to consider in forest management 20 Genetic diversity in forests is threatened by forest fires pests and diseases habitat fragmentation poor silvicultural practices and inappropriate use of forest reproductive material About 98 million hectares of forest were affected by fire in 2015 this was mainly in the tropical domain where fire burned about 4 percent of the total forest area in that year More than two thirds of the total forest area affected was in Africa and South America Insects diseases and severe weather events damaged about 40 million hectares of forests in 2015 mainly in the temperate and boreal domains 22 Furthermore the marginal populations of many tree species are facing new threats due to the effects of climate change 20 Most countries in Europe have recommendations or guidelines for selecting species and provenances that can be used in a given site or zone 21 History and background editThe preindustrial age has been dubbed by Werner Sombart and others as the wooden age as timber and firewood were the basic resources for energy construction and housing The development of modern forestry is closely connected with the rise of capitalism the economy as a science and varying notions of land use and property 23 Roman Latifundiae large agricultural estates were quite successful in maintaining the large supply of wood that was necessary for the Roman Empire 24 Large deforestations came with the decline of the Romans 24 However already in the 5th century monks in the then Byzantine Romagna on the Adriatic coast were able to establish stone pine plantations to provide fuelwood and food 25 This was the beginning of the massive forest mentioned by Dante Alighieri in his 1308 poem Divine Comedy 25 Similar sustainable formal forestry practices were developed by the Visigoths in the 7th century when faced with the ever increasing shortage of wood they instituted a code concerned with the preservation of oak and pine forests 25 The use and management of many forest resources has a long history in China as well dating back to the Han dynasty and taking place under the landowning gentry A similar approach was used in Japan It was also later written about by the Ming dynasty Chinese scholar Xu Guangqi 1562 1633 In Europe land usage rights in medieval and early modern times allowed different users to access forests and pastures Plant litter and resin extraction were important as pitch resin was essential for the caulking of ships falking and hunting rights firewood and building timber gathering in wood pastures and grazing animals in forests The notion of commons German Allmende refers to the underlying traditional legal term of common land The idea of enclosed private property came about during modern times However most hunting rights were retained by members of the nobility which preserved the right of the nobility to access and use common land for recreation like fox hunting Early modern forestry development edit nbsp Forestry work in Austria nbsp Exploitation of brushwood at the Golden Steinrueck Vogelsberg nbsp Hans Carl von Carlowitz German minerSystematic management of forests for a sustainable yield of timber began in Portugal in the 13th century when King Afonso III planted the Pinhal do Rei King s Pine Forest near Leiria to prevent coastal erosion and soil degradation and as a sustainable source for timber used in naval construction 26 His successor King Denis of Portugal continued the practice and the forest exists still today 27 Forest management also flourished in the German states in the 14th century e g in Nuremberg 28 and in 16th century Japan 29 Typically a forest was divided into specific sections and mapped the harvest of timber was planned with an eye to regeneration As timber rafting allowed for connecting large continental forests as in south western Germany via Main Neckar Danube and Rhine with the coastal cities and states early modern forestry and remote trading were closely connected Large firs in the black forest were called Hollander as they were traded to the Dutch ship yards Large timber rafts on the Rhine were 200 to 400m in length 40m in width and consisted of several thousand logs The crew consisted of 400 to 500 men including shelter bakeries ovens and livestock stables 30 Timber rafting infrastructure allowed for large interconnected networks all over continental Europe and is still of importance in Finland Starting with the 16th century enhanced world maritime trade a boom in housing construction in Europe and the success and further Berggeschrey rushes of the mining industry increased timber consumption sharply The notion of Nachhaltigkeit sustainability in forestry is closely connected to the work of Hans Carl von Carlowitz 1645 1714 a mining administrator in Saxony His book Sylvicultura oeconomica oder hausswirthliche Nachricht und Naturmassige Anweisung zur wilden Baum Zucht 1713 was the first comprehensive treatise about sustainable yield forestry 31 In the UK and to an extent in continental Europe the enclosure movement and the Clearances favored strictly enclosed private property 32 The Agrarian reformers early economic writers and scientists tried to get rid of the traditional commons 33 At the time an alleged tragedy of the commons together with fears of a Holznot an imminent wood shortage played a watershed role in the controversies about cooperative land use patterns 34 The practice of establishing tree plantations in the British Isles was promoted by John Evelyn though it had already acquired some popularity Louis XIV s minister Jean Baptiste Colbert s oak Forest of Troncais planted for the future use of the French Navy matured as expected in the mid 19th century Colbert had thought of everything except the steamship Fernand Braudel observed 35 Colbert s vision of forestry management was encoded in the French forestry Ordinance of 1669 which proved to be an influential management system throughout Europe 36 In parallel schools of forestry were established beginning in the late 18th century in Hesse Russia Austria Hungary Sweden France and elsewhere in Europe Forest conservation and early globalization edit Further information forest conservation Starting from the 1750s modern scientific forestry was developed in France and the German speaking countries in the context of natural history scholarship and state administration inspired by physiocracy and cameralism 37 Its main traits were centralized management by professional foresters the adherence to sustainable yield concepts with a bias towards fuelwood and timber production artificial afforestation and a critical view of pastoral and agricultural uses of forests 38 During the late 19th and early 20th centuries forest preservation programs were established in British India the United States and Europe Many foresters were either from continental Europe like Sir Dietrich Brandis or educated there like Gifford Pinchot Sir Dietrich Brandis is considered the father of tropical forestry European concepts and practices had to be adapted in tropical and semi arid climate zones The development of plantation forestry was one of the controversial answers to the specific challenges in the tropical colonies The enactment and evolution of forest laws and binding regulations occurred in most Western nations in the 20th century in response to growing conservation concerns and the increasing technological capacity of logging companies Tropical forestry is a separate branch of forestry which deals mainly with equatorial forests that yield woods such as teak and mahogany Forest and landscape restoration edit Further information Forest restoration Forest and landscape restoration FLR is defined as a process that aims to regain ecological functionality and enhance human well being in deforested or degraded landscapes 39 FLR has been developed as a response to the growing degradation and loss of forest and land which resulted in declined biodiversity and ecosystem services 39 Effective FLR will support the achievement of the Sustainable Development Goals 39 The United Nations Decade on Ecosystem Restoration 2021 2030 provides the opportunity to restore hundreds of millions of hectares of degraded forests and other ecosystems 39 Mechanization edit Forestry mechanization was always in close connection to metal working and the development of mechanical tools to cut and transport timber to its destination 40 Rafting belongs to the earliest means of transport Steel saws came up in the 15th century The 19th century widely increased the availability of steel for whipsaws and introduced forest railways and railways in general for transport and as forestry customer Further human induced changes however came since World War II respectively in line with the 1950s syndrome 41 The first portable chainsaw was invented in 1918 in Canada but large impact of mechanization in forestry started after World War II 42 Forestry harvesters are among the most recent developments Although drones planes laser scanning satellites and robots also play a part in forestry Early journals which are still present edit Sylwan first published in 1820 43 Schweizerische Zeitschrift fur Forstwesen first published in 1850 43 44 Erdeszeti Lapok first published in 1862 Hungary 1862 present 45 The Indian Forester first published in 1875 43 46 Sumarski list Forestry Review Croatia was published in 1877 by Croatian Forestry Society 43 47 Montes Forestry Spain first published in 1877 43 48 Revista pădurilor Journal of Forests Romania 1881 1882 1886 present the oldest extant magazine in Romania 43 49 Forestry Quarterly first published in 1902 by the New York State College of Forestry Sumarstvo 50 Forestry Serbia first published in 1948 by the Ministry of Forestry of Democratic Federal Yugoslavia and since 1951 by Organ of Society of Forestry Engineers and Technicians of the Republic of Serbia succeeding the former Sumarski glasnik published from 1907 to 1921 51 Education editHistory of forestry education edit See also List of historic schools of forestry The first dedicated forestry school was established by Georg Ludwig Hartig at Hungen in the Wetterau Hesse in 1787 though forestry had been taught earlier in central Europe including at the University of Giessen in Hesse Darmstadt In Spain the first forestry school was the Forest Engineering School of Madrid Escuela Tecnica Superior de Ingenieros de Montes founded in 1844 The first in North America the Biltmore Forest School was established near Asheville North Carolina by Carl A Schenck on September 1 1898 on the grounds of George W Vanderbilt s Biltmore Estate Another early school was the New York State College of Forestry established at Cornell University just a few weeks later in September 1898 Early 19th century North American foresters went to Germany to study forestry Some early German foresters also emigrated to North America In South America the first forestry school was established in Brazil in Vicosa Minas Gerais in 1962 and moved the next year to become a faculty at the Federal University of Parana in Curitiba 52 Forestry education today edit See also List of forestry universities and colleges and List of forestry technical schools nbsp Prescribed burning is used by foresters to reduce fuel loads Today forestry education typically includes training in general biology ecology botany genetics soil science climatology hydrology economics and forest management Education in the basics of sociology and political science is often considered an advantage Professional skills in conflict resolution and communication are also important in training programs 53 In India forestry education is imparted in the agricultural universities and in Forest Research Institutes deemed universities Four year degree programmes are conducted in these universities at the undergraduate level Masters and Doctorate degrees are also available in these universities In the United States postsecondary forestry education leading to a Bachelor s degree or Master s degree is accredited by the Society of American Foresters 54 In Canada the Canadian Institute of Forestry awards silver rings to graduates from accredited university BSc programs as well as college and technical programs 55 In many European countries training in forestry is made in accordance with requirements of the Bologna Process and the European Higher Education Area The International Union of Forest Research Organizations is the only international organization that coordinates forest science efforts worldwide 56 Continuing education edit In order to keep up with changing demands and environmental factors forestry education does not stop at graduation Increasingly forestry professionals engage in regular training to maintain and improve on their management practices An increasingly popular tool are marteloscopes one hectare large rectangular forest sites where all trees are numbered mapped and recorded These sites can be used to do virtual thinnings and test one s wood quality and volume estimations as well as tree microhabitats This system is mainly suitable to regions with small scale multi functional forest management systems Miscellaneous about forestry research and education edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to wbr Forestry and wbr Forestry schools List of forest research institutes List of forestry technical schools List of forestry universities and colleges List of historic journals of forestry Imperial Forestry Institute disambiguation See also edit nbsp Trees portalMain article Outline of forestry Afforestation Agroforestry Arboriculture Close to nature forestry Community forestry Deforestation Deforestation and climate change Dendrology Forest dynamics Forest farming Forest informatics Forestry literature History of the forest in Central Europe International Year of Forests List of forest research institutes List of forestry journals Lumberjack Miyawaki method Nonindustrial private forests Sustainable forest management Silviculture SilvologySources edit nbsp This article incorporates text from a free content work Licensed under CC BY SA 3 0 license statement permission Text taken from Global Forest Resources Assessment 2020 Key findings FAO FAO nbsp This article incorporates text from a free content work Licensed under CC BY SA 3 0 IGO license statement permission Text taken from The State of the World s Forests 2020 Forests biodiversity and people In brief FAO amp UNEP FAO amp UNEP References edit SAFnet Dictionary Definition For forestry Dictionaryofforestry org 2008 10 22 Archived from the original on 2013 10 19 Retrieved 2014 03 15 Seed Origin pinga Forestry Focus Forestry Focus Retrieved April 5 2018 Young Raymond A 1982 Introduction to Forest Science John Wiley amp Sons p ix ISBN 978 0 471 06438 1 Frouz Jan Frouzova Jaroslava 2022 Applied Ecology doi 10 1007 978 3 030 83225 4 ISBN 978 3 030 83224 7 S2CID 245009867 ecosystem part of biosphere Tutorvista com Archived from the original on 2013 11 11 Retrieved 2014 03 15 a b c d e The State of the World s Forests 2020 Forests biodiversity and people In brief Rome FAO amp UNEP 2020 doi 10 4060 ca8985en ISBN 978 92 5 132707 4 S2CID 241416114 How does the forest industry contribute to the economy www nrcan gc ca 26 August 2014 Retrieved April 5 2018 Bundeswaldinventur 2002 Archived 2014 10 06 at the Wayback Machine Bundesministerium fur Ernahrung Landwirtschaft und Verbraucherschutz BMELV retrieved 17 January 2010 Unternehmen Wald forests as an enterprise German private forestry association website Archived 2016 09 18 at the Wayback Machine Department of environmental conservation New York State Department Archived from the original on 2015 02 21 Retrieved 2014 11 29 Casanova Vanessa Hamilton James 2019 04 03 Non Timber Forest Products in the Southeastern United States Implications for Worker Safety and Health Journal of Agromedicine 24 2 121 124 doi 10 1080 1059924X 2019 1578141 ISSN 1059 924X PMID 30712502 S2CID 73422895 What is sustainable forest management www pefc org Retrieved 2023 01 30 Bank European Investment 2022 12 08 Forests at the heart of sustainable development Investing in forests to meet biodiversity and climate goals European Investment Bank ISBN 978 92 861 5403 4 a b PowerSearch Logout Find galegroup com Archived from the original on 2013 05 10 Retrieved 2014 03 15 eugene 2022 09 20 What is Geographic Information System Analysis In Forestry Tall Pines Forest Management Retrieved 2023 01 23 Garcia Grant Ian Dec 20 2021 Planning For Long Term Forest Management Tall Pines Forest Management Archived from the original on Dec 2 2022 Retrieved Jan 23 2023 Wojtkowski Paul A 2002 Agroecological Perspectives in Agronomy Forestry and Agroforestry Science Publishers Inc Enfield NH 356p Wojtkowski Paul A 2006 Undoing the Damage Silviculture for Ecologists and Environmental Scientists Science Publishers Inc Enfield NH 313p Fishes and forestry worldwide watershed interactions and management Northcote T G Hartman G F Oxford UK Blackwell Science 2004 ISBN 978 0 470 99524 2 OCLC 184983506 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link a b c de Vries S M G Alan M Bozzano M Burianek V Collin E Cottrell J Ivankovic M Kelleher C T Koskela J Rotach P Vietto L and Yrjana L 2015 Pan European strategy for genetic conservation of forest trees and establishment of a core network of dynamic conservation units PDF European Forest Genetic Resources Programme Bioversity International Rome Italy xii 40 p Archived from the original PDF on 2017 01 31 Retrieved 2017 01 20 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b Konnert M Fady B Gomory D A Hara S Wolter F Ducci F Koskela J Bozzano M Maaten T and Kowalczyk J 2015 Use and transfer of forest reproductive material in Europe in the context of climate change PDF European Forest Genetic Resources Programme Bioversity International Rome Italy xvi and 75 p Archived from the original PDF on 2017 08 04 Retrieved 2017 01 20 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Global Forest Resources Assessment 2020 Key findings Rome FAO 2020 doi 10 4060 ca8753en ISBN 978 92 5 132581 0 S2CID 130116768 compare Joachim Radkau Wood A History 2011 a b The Nature of Mediterranean Europe An Ecological History by Alfred Thomas Grove Oliver Rackham Yale University Press 2003 review at Yale university press Archived 2014 10 06 at the Wayback Machine Nature of Mediterranean Europe An Ecological History review Brian M Fagan Journal of Interdisciplinary History Volume 32 Number 3 Winter 2002 pp 454 455 Archived 2014 10 06 at the Wayback Machine a b c T Mirov Nicholas Hasbrouck Jean 1976 6 The story of pines Bloomington and London Indiana University Press p 111 ISBN 978 0 253 35462 4 H V Livermore 2004 Portugal A Traveller s History Boydell Press p 15 ISBN 978 1 84383 063 4 Archived from the original on 2017 12 11 PGF Mata Nacional de Leiria ICNF www icnf pt Archived from the original on 2019 12 10 Retrieved 2017 10 17 Buttinger Sabine 2013 Idee der Nachhaltigkeit The Idea of Sustainability Damals in German 45 4 8 Forestry in Yashino City of Nara Nara Archived from the original on 2011 06 28 Retrieved 2010 10 12 Beschreibung eines grossen Rheinflosses Archived 2014 11 29 at the Wayback Machine Dangel Ulrich 2016 12 05 Turning Point in Timber Construction A New Economy Birkhauser ISBN 978 3 0356 0863 2 Radkau Joachim Nature and Power A Global History of the Environment Cambridge University Press 2008 Nature and Power A Global History of the Environment by Joachim Radkau 2008 p 72 The end of the commons as a watershed The Age of Ecology Joachim Radkau John Wiley amp Sons 03 04 2014 clarification needed p 15 ff Braudel Fernand 1979 The Wheels of Commerce Civilization and Capitalism 15th 18th Century Volume II University of California Press p 240 ISBN 978 0 520 08115 4 Kohler Yann amp Tissot Wilfried 2013 Integration of Nature Protection in Forest Policy in France INTEGRATE Country Report Oosthoek K Jan Holzl Richard 2018 02 19 Managing Northern Europe s Forests Histories from the Age of Improvement to the Age of Ecology Berghahn Books ISBN 978 1 78533 601 0 Holzl Richard 2010 12 01 Historicizing Sustainability German Scientific Forestry in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries Science as Culture 19 4 431 460 doi 10 1080 09505431 2010 519866 ISSN 0950 5431 S2CID 143441568 a b c d Restoring the Earth The next decade Unasylva FAO 71 2020 1 252 2020 doi 10 4060 cb1600en ISBN 978 92 5 133506 2 S2CID 241374524 Sundberg B Silversides C R 1988 04 30 Operational Efficiency in Forestry Vol 1 Analysis Springer Science amp Business Media ISBN 978 90 247 3683 6 Christian Pfister Hrsg Das 1950er Syndrom Der Weg in die Konsumgesellschaft Bern 1995 Silversides C R 1984 08 01 Mechanized Forestry World War II to the Present The Forestry Chronicle 60 4 231 235 doi 10 5558 tfc60231 4 ISSN 0015 7546 a b c d e f Petru Ioan Becheru Aug 2012 Revista pădurilor online Rev pădur in Romanian 127 4 46 53 ISSN 1583 7890 16819 Retrieved 2012 10 21 permanent dead link webpage has a translation button Swiss Forestry Society www szf jfs org Hungarian Forestry Society www oee hu indianforester org indianforester org Archived from the original on 2013 05 17 Retrieved 2014 03 15 Sumarski list Forestry Review with full digital archive since 1877 Revista Montes with 12 944 free downloadable digital files from 1868 Revistamontes net Archived from the original on 2013 11 27 Retrieved 2014 03 15 Victor Giurgiu Nov 2011 Revista pădurilor Journal of forests 125 years of existence Rev pădur 126 6 3 7 ISSN 1583 7890 Archived from the original on 2016 05 17 Retrieved 2012 04 06 webpage has a translation button Casopis SCIndeks Archived from the original on 2013 12 12 Retrieved 2014 03 15 Udruzenje sumarskih inzenjera i tehnicara Srbije Istorijat Srpskosumarskoudruzenje org rs Archived from the original on 2013 12 12 Retrieved 2014 03 15 News of the world Unasylva FAO 23 3 1969 Archived from the original on 2010 04 27 Retrieved 2010 10 12 Sample V A Bixler R P McDonough M H Bullard S H Snieckus M M July 16 2015 The Promise and Performance of Forestry Education in the United States Results of a Survey of Forestry Employers Graduates and Educators Journal of Forestry 113 6 528 537 doi 10 5849 jof 14 122 SAF Accredited and Candidate Forestry Degree Programs PDF Press release Society of American Foresters 2008 05 19 Archived from the original PDF on 2009 02 26 The Society of American Foresters grants accreditation only to specific educational curricula that lead to a first professional degree in forestry at the bachelor s or master s level Canadian Institute of Forestry Silver Ring Program Cif ifc org Archived from the original on 2014 02 01 Retrieved 2014 03 15 Discover IUFRO The Organization IUFRO Archived from the original on 2010 07 08 Retrieved 2010 10 12 Further reading editEyle Alexandra 1992 Charles Lathrop Pack Timberman Forest Conservationist and Pioneer in Forest Education Syracuse NY ESF College Foundation and College of Environmental Science and Forestry Distributed by Syracuse University Press Available Internet Archive Hammond Herbert 1991 Seeing the Forest Among the Trees Winlaw Vancouver Polestar Press 1991 Hart C 1994 Practical Forestry for the Agent and Surveyor Stroud Sutton Publishing ISBN 0 86299 962 6 Hibberd B G Ed 1991 Forestry Practice Forestry Commission Handbook 6 London HMSO ISBN 0 11 710281 4 Maser Chris 1994 Sustainable Forestry Philosophy Science and Economics DelRay Beach St Lucie Press Miller G Tyler 1990 Resource Conservation and Management Belmont Wadsworth Publishing Oosthoek K Jan Richard Holzl eds 2019 Managing Northern Europe s Forests Histories from the Age of Improvement to the Age of Ecology New York Oxford Berghahn Publ Radkau Joachim Wood A History ISBN 978 0 7456 4688 6 November 2011 Polity Stoddard Charles H 1978 Essentials of Forestry New York Ronald Press 1 Vira B et al 2015 Forests and Food Addressing Hunger and Nutrition Across Sustainable Landscapes Cambridge Open Book Publishers External links edit nbsp Media related to Forestry at Wikimedia Commons nbsp Works related to Forestry at Wikisource Forestry at Curlie Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Forestry amp oldid 1189873577, wikipedia, wiki, 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