No. 11 Getting back to basals
NEW ZEALAND FARM FORESTRY ASSOCIATION INFORMATION LEAFLET
There are numerous measures and numbers associated with forestry, some
more familiar to farm foresters than others. We hear a fair bit about
site index (height at 20 years) that is often used perhaps rather
courageously as a proxy for productivity. Likewise, total standing
volume and/or recoverable volume are other common measures. While total
volume is productivity, it is not necessarily profitability. Along with
these height and volume figures we have mean annual increments (MAI),
the total volume or whatever divided by age, and current annual
increment (CAI), the current year to year increment.
The figure I would like to see acknowledged and used more widely is
basal area.
In simple terms it is the total cross-sectional area of
tree trunks measured in square metres per hectare. To be more precise,
it is the under bark crosssectional area at a height of 1.4m, the dbh
height. It may not be quite as simple as height and volume but it does
tell you about the potential yields of pruned butt logs and so has
quite a lot to say about potential profitability.
The basal area (B.A.) and B.A. increment that a plantation can achieve
is a variable and depends on numerous factors:
- Age – simple enough, it takes time to grow.
- Stocking rate – to a certain extent. Higher stocking rates
will
achieve higher B.A.s and B.A. increments earlier, but final B.A.s are
less affected.
- Species – different species have very different B.A.
potential. For
example, eucalypts are generally much lower than radiata pine,
cypresses are rather higher, and redwoods much higher.
- Fertility – for any individual species, B.A. probably
reflects site
fertility more directly than any other measure. The more fertile the
site, the larger the B.A. and B.A. increment at any specified age and
stocking.
- Forest health – tree death seriously undermines the quest
for high
B.A.s so the lower altitude, higher temperature, drought-stressed or
higher humidity and more sheltered sites often lose out on this one.
What is a good B.A.?
Crown: stem ratio
What is a good
B.A.?
Generally, for radiata pine, B.A.s increase quite rapidly to about
45m2/ha, when canopy closure starts to slow the
trend. But what sort of
final B.A.s should we expect for radiata pine at 25 to 30 years?
I had always been led to believe that they would be in the range 60 to
100m2/ ha, perhaps less on the poorer sites,
more on the highest. In
fact, the evidence suggest that this is a bit optimistic. At Tikitere,
generally regarded as a good site, the 400sph plots had only achieved
70 to 80m2/ha at 25 years, and
they would not have touched 100m2/ha till about
40 years, if they could
have achieved it at all.
Similarly, a quick flick through the permanent sample plots by Mark
Dean could not find any other plots above 70m2/ha
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| Redwood supports a higher basal area than radiata pine–
200m2/ha at 90 years. |
at 20 to 25 years,
though he did find a redwood plot at 200m2/ha at
90 years. If 70m2/ha
is a good B.A. for a farm plantation at 25 to 30 years, then this tells
us a bit about appropriate stocking rates.
At 300sph, a B.A. of 70m2/ha means an average
dbh of around 55cm. While
some might regard this as adequate in a pruned stand, it probably means
a good number of pruned logs with
small end diameters (SED) below the 40cm minimum for the premium P1
grade.
Still, mathematics being the just slightly perverse subject that it is,
even if the average SED is 40cm, a majority of the volume will be in
the bigger, more valuable logs.
In an over-stocked stand, smaller diameter trees overall is one
possibility, but often dominant trees will continue to grow while
subdominants head off to become (pruned?) huhu tucker.
This seems to be the situation in the 400sph Tikitere stands.
On poorer sites, such as many of the sand dune sites, the message is
that limited B.A. capacity will severely limit optimum stocking rates
and/or diameters.
There are plenty of low fertility, 40 to 50m2/ha
B.A. sites and here
you won’t get 60cm diameter trees unless the stocking rate is
significantly below 200sph.
Crown: stem ratio
Basal area also lends itself to another common rule of thumb – the
crown: stem ratio. This is the ratio between average tree separation
and final stem diameter. It is quoted typically, as about 12:1 for
radiata pine, and 15 or 16:1 for eucalypts. In fact these correspond to
B.A.s of about 55m2/ha and 30 to 35m2/
ha respectively and are probably
rather conservative for better sites. For radiata, 10:1 might be better
for good sites, out to 12 to 13:1 on poorer sites.
As already discussed, B.A.s are good indicators of potential yields of
pruned butt logs, but other factors do help, including a high site
index. Taller trees will have less taper along with better top logs, of
course, but B.A. and B.A. increment is the big factor in yield of
pruned logs. With a B.A.
increment of 2m2/ha/year (quite feasible, and
indeed routine) and a
high yield of P1 logs, you can be looking at around 12m3/ha/year
of top
grade wood. At present net values of around $130/m3,
this is
approximately $1500/ha/year net value increment for the pruned
component alone. It compares pretty well with most other land uses I
know of. Blessed be the basal area.
(top)
This article and photograph by Denis Hocking appeared in
the February
2000 issue of the New
Zealand
Tree Grower.
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