Standardsignatur
Titel
An Overview of Oak Silviculture in the United States/ The Past, Present, and Future
Verfasser
Erscheinungsjahr
1993
Seiten
S. 535-542
Illustrationen
36 Lit. Ang.
Material
Unselbständiges Werk
Datensatznummer
200041753
Quelle
Abstract
Oaks (Quercus) are important components of forest systems throughout the United States. This overview describes past, present, and future silvicultural practices within the oak-hickory ecosystem of the United States. Past land-use activites favored oak development, but wildfire and livestock grazing controls have caused severe oak regeneration problems that were not recognized until recently. Prescriptions for weedings, cleanings and the use of stocking charts to control intermediate thinnings were early silvicultural developments. More recently, growth and yield models for managed stands were developed to predict current and future timber volumes. Currently, silvicuturists are developing solutions to natural and artificial regeneration problems. Research results indicate that, other factors being equal, regeneration success is favored by simultaneously reducing over and understory densities and that oak seedling survival and developments is enhanced in large seedlings that have high root to shoot ratios. Future silvicultural practices will have an ecosystems focus.