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Planowanie pozyskania drewna×Krzywa wskaźnika siedliskowego×Wskaźnik zagęszczenia drzewostanu×
DziedzinaLeśnictwoLeśnictwoLeśnictwo
RodzinaProcess / pipelineProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Rok powstania197719541933
TwórcaK. Norman JohnsonJoseph WestveldLouis Reineke
Typoptimization algorithmproductivity indexdensity measurement
Źródło pierwotneJohnson, K. N., & Scheurman, H. L. (1977). Techniques for prescribing optimal timber harvest and investment under different objectives. Forest Science Monograph 18. link ↗Clutter, J. L., Fortson, J. C., Pienaar, L. V., Brister, G. H., & Bailey, R. L. (1983). Timber Management: A Quantitative Approach. John Wiley & Sons. link ↗Reineke, L. H. (1933). Perfecting a stand-density index for even-aged forests. Journal of Agricultural Research, 46(7), 627–638. link ↗
Inne nazwyharvest scheduling, timber rotation, forest planningsite productivity, growth interceptSDI, Reineke density index
Pokrewne212
PodsumowanieTimber harvest scheduling is an optimization method that determines which forest stands should be harvested and when, to achieve management objectives (economic return, sustained yield, biodiversity, wildlife habitat) while respecting constraints (minimum harvest age, ending inventory level, adjacent-stand restrictions). It integrates growth models, economic data, and spatial forest inventory to generate long-term management plans spanning decades. Harvest scheduling is essential for operational forest management and landscape-level planning.A site index curve is a family of curves relating tree height to stand age, used to quantify the productivity of a forest site. Site index is conventionally defined as the height of dominant trees at a reference age (typically 50 years in temperate forests). These curves enable foresters to classify sites by productivity class and to predict growth rates for planning timber harvests and silvicultural treatments. Site index curves are among the most fundamental tools in forest growth and yield modeling.The Stand Density Index (SDI), introduced by Reineke in 1933, is a dimensionless measure of forest density that accounts for both tree number and size. It expresses the number of trees per hectare in a stand, adjusted to a reference quadratic mean diameter (QMD) of 25 cm, providing a standardized metric for comparing tree density across different forest types and sizes. SDI is widely used in forest management to assess stocking levels and to guide thinning decisions.
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ScholarGatePorównaj metody: Timber Harvest Scheduling · Site Index Curve · Stand Density Index. Pobrano 2026-06-20 z https://scholargate.app/pl/compare