Dictionary Definition
forestry n : the science of planting and caring
for forests and the management of growing timber
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- The science of planting and growing trees in forests.
- The art and practice of planting and growing trees in forests.
- The art and practice of cultivating, exploiting and renewing forests for commercial purposes.
- The science of cultivating, exploiting and renewing forests for commercial purposes.
- Commercial tree farming.
Synonyms
Translations
science of planting and growing trees
- Finnish: metsätiede
art and practice of planting and growing trees
- Finnish: metsänhoito
art of cultivating, exploiting and renewing
forests for commercial purposes
- Finnish: metsätalous
- German: Forstwirtschaft
science of cultivating, exploiting and renewing
forests for commercial purposes
- Finnish: metsätaloustiede
tree farming
- Finnish: puunviljely
Extensive Definition
Forestry , science, and practice of studying and
managing forests and
tree plantations, and related
natural
resources. Silviculture,
a related science, involves the growing and tending of trees and
forests. Modern forestry generally concerns itself with: assisting
forests to provide timber
as raw material for wood
products; wildlife
habitat; natural water
quality regulation; recreation; landscape and
community protection; employment; aesthetically appealing landscapes; biodiversity management;
watershed
management; and a 'sink'
for atmospheric
carbon
dioxide. A practitioner of forestry is known as a forester.
Forest ecosystems have come to be seen as one of
the most important components of the biosphere, and forestry has
emerged as a vital field of science, applied art, and
technology.
Activities
Foresters may be employed by industry, government agencies, conservation groups, urban parks boards, citizens' associations, or private landowners. Industrial foresters are predominantly involved in planning the timber harvests and forest regeneration. Other foresters have the specific jobs which include a broad array of responsibilities. For example, urban foresters work within city environments to enhance urban trees with their unique needs. Some foresters work in tree nurseries growing seedlings for regeneration projects. Others are involved with tree genetics or developing new building systems as forest engineers. The profession has expanded to include a wide diversity of jobs, typically requiring a college bachelor's degree up to the PhD level for highly specialized areas of work.Traditionally, professional foresters develop and
implement "forest management plans". These plans rely on tree
inventories showing an area's topographical features as
well as its distribution of trees (by species) and other plant cover.
They also include roads, culverts, proximity to human
habitation, hydrological conditions, and
soil reports ecological sensitive areas. Finally, forest management
plans include the projected use of the land and a timetable for
that use.
Plans for harvest and subsequent site
treatment are influenced by the objectives of the land's owner or
leaseholder (for instance, a timber company that holds cutting
rights to a given tract of land, or the government in the case of
state-owned forests). There is an increasing trend to consider the
needs of other stakeholders (e.g., nearby communities or
neighborhoods, or rural residents living within or adjacent to the
forest tract). Plans are developed with the prevailing forest
harvest laws and regulations in mind. They ultimately result in a
prescription for the harvest of trees, and indicate whether road
building or other forest engineering operations are required.
Traditional forest management plans are chiefly
aimed at providing logs as raw material for timber, veneer, plywood, paper, wood fuel or
other industries. Hence, considerations of product quality and
quantity, employment, and profit have been of central, though not
always exclusive, importance.
Foresters also frequently develop post-harvest
site plans. These may call for reforestation (tree
planting by species),
weed
control, fertilization, or the
spacing of young trees (thinning of trees that are crowding one
another).
While other duties of foresters may include
preventing and combatting insect infestation, disease, forest and
grassland fires, there is an increasing movement towards allowing
these natural aspects of forest ecosystems to run their course,
where possible, usually excepting epidemics or risk of life or
property. Foresters are specialists in measuring and modelling the
growth of forests (forest mensuration). Increasingly, foresters may
be involved in wildlife conservation planning
and watershed protection.
History
The use and management of forest resources has a
long history in China, dating from the Han Dynasty
and taking place under the landowning gentry. It was also later written
of by the Ming Dynasty
Chinese scholar Xu Guangqi
(1562-1633). In the Western world, formal forestry practices
developed during the Middle Ages,
when land was largely under the control of kings and barons. Control of the land
included hunting rights, and though peasants in many places were
permitted to gather firewood and building timber and to graze
animals, hunting rights were retained by the members of the
nobility. Systematic management of forests for a sustainable yield
of timber is said to have begun in about in the 16th century in
both the German states and
Japan
Typically, a forest was divided into specific sections and mapped;
the harvest of timber was planned with an eye to
regeneration.
The practice of establishing tree plantations was
promoted by John Evelyn;
it had already acquired some popularity in the British Isles.
Schools of forestry were established after 1825; most of these
schools were in Germany and
France.
During the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, forest
preservation programs were established in the United
States, Europe, and British
India. Many foresters were either from continental Europe (like
Sir
Dietrich Brandis), or educated there (like Gifford
Pinchot).
The enactment and evolution of forestry 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. Sir Dietrich
Brandis is considered the father of tropical forestry.
Today
Today a strong body of research exists regarding the management of forest ecosystems, selection of species and varieties, and tree breeding. Forestry also includes 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.In many regions the forest industry is of major
ecological, economic, and social importance. 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 were 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. Some certification systems are criticised for
primarily acting as marketing tools and lacking in their claimed
independence.
In topographically severe forested terrain,
proper forestry is important for the prevention or minimization of
serious soil erosion or
even landsliding. In
areas with a high potential for landsliding, good forestry can act
to prevent property damage or loss, human injury, or loss of
life.
Public perception of forest management has become
controversial, with growing public concern over perceived
mismanagement of the forest and increasing demands that forest land
be managed for uses other than pure timber production, for example,
indigenous rights, recreation, watershed protection and
preservation of wilderness and wildlife habitat. Sharp
disagreements over the role of forest fires, logging, motorized
recreation and others drives debate while the public demand for
wood products continues to increase.
Education
The first dedicated forestry school was established by Georg Hartig at Dillenburg in Germany in 1787, though forestry had been taught much earlier in central Europe. The first in North America was established near Asheville, North Carolina, by George Vanderbilt after he saw the devastation logging had caused in the area. The grounds of his Biltmore Estate are almost entirely managed forest, which has grown from bare ground to mature trees since 1895. Another early school was the New York State College of Forestry at Cornell established in 1898. Early North American foresters went to Germany from the nineteenth century to study forestry. Some early German foresters also emigrated to North America.In South
America the first two forestry schools were established in
Brazil,
specifically in Viçosa,
Minas
Gerais, and in Curitiba, Paraná.
Today, an acceptably trained forester must be
educated in general biology, botany, genetics, soil
science, climatology, hydrology, economics and forest
management. Education in the basics of sociology and political
science is often considered an advantage.
An interesting scope of work opens up for
foresters interested in international politics. Organizations such
as the Forest Policy
Education Network (FPEN) are dedicated to facilitate the way
into forest politics and to exchange information on the
subject.
In India the Forestry Education is imparted in
the Agricultural Universities and In Forest Research Institute
(Deemed University), Dehradun.Dr.Y.S.Parmar University of
Horticulture and Forestry, Solan (HP) is dedicated for imparting
the Forestry education and is the only University of its kind in
Asia. Four year Degree programme is conducted in these universities
at Undergraduate level. Post Graduation and Doctorate degree
facility is also available in these universities
Tropic Ventures
Rainforest Enrichment and Sustainable Forestry Project is
registered under the Auxiliary Forest Program of Puerto Rico, and
is a demonstration project for students and foresters interested in
the sustainable management and preservation of tropical rainforest
land.
References
- Charles H. Stoddard Essentials of Forestry. New York: Ronald Press, 1978.
- G. Tyler Miller. Resource Conservation and Management. Belmont: Wadsworth Publishing, 1990.
- Chris Maser. Sustainable Forestry: Philosophy, Science, and Economics. DelRay Beach: St. Lucie Press, 1994.
- Hammish Kimmins. Balancing Act: Environmental Issues in Forestry. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press, 1992.
- Hart, C. 1994. Practical Forestry for the Agent and Surveyor. Stroud. Sutton Publishing. ISBN 0-86299-962-6
- Herb Hammond. Seeing the Forest Among the Trees. Winlaw/Vancouver: Polestar Press, 1991.
- Hibberd, B.G. (Ed). 1991. Forestry Practice. Forestry Commission Handbook 6. London. HMSO. ISBN 0-11-710281-4
- "Forestry" in the Encyclopaedia Brtitannica 16th edition. New York: E.B., 1990.
External links
- indianforestry.com - An website covers all the aspects of indian forestry and provide better communication between users
- An online bookstore of free Canadian Forestry publications
- EU forestry strategy.
- EU forestry strategy - links to stakeholder positions.(EurActiv)
- UBC Forestry
- International Union of Forest Research Organizations
- FAO forestry education institutions database
- International Society for Tropical Foresters
- Commonwealth Forestry Association
- The Forestry Commission
- The Forestry Guild
- USDA Forest Service
- Society of American Foresters
- European research group on forest modelling
- Forestry Images
- The Canadian Institute of Forestry
- The Canadian Forest Service
- International Wood Collectors Society
- Xiloteca Manuel Soler (One of the largest private collection of wood samples)
- Forestry Horizons An independent forestry policy think-tank aiming to make woodlands more valuable.
- Forestry Code in Russia: to rent but not to own
- Forestry Research Institute, India
- Rainforest Alliance
- UNU Open Educational Resource on Forestry, Forest Economics and Forest Policy
- Forestry Commission GB
See also
- Aldo Leopold
- Botany
- Climax vegetation
- Clearcutting
- Coarse woody debris
- Conservation biology
- Cultigen
- Deforestation
- Dendrology
- Ecological succession
- Forest farming
- Forest fires
- Forest management
- Forest Research Institute Malaysia
- Gifford Pinchot
- Hardwood Timber Production
- Károly Bund
- Logging
- Old Growth Forest
- Paper
- Park
- Plantation
- Plants
- Pruning
- Richard St. Barbe Baker
- Salvage logging
- Secondary forest
- Selection cutting
- Silviculture
- Social Forestry
- Sustainable forest management
- Sustainable forestry
- Thinning
- Timber
- Tropical forestry
- Urban Forestry
- Variable retention
- Wood
- Wood drying
- Woodland management
forestry in Bulgarian: горско стопанство
(икономика)
forestry in Czech: Lesnictví
forestry in Danish: Skovbrug
forestry in German: Forstwirtschaft
forestry in Estonian: Metsandus
forestry in Spanish: Ingeniería de montes
forestry in French: Foresterie
forestry in Korean: 임업
forestry in Croatian: Šumarstvo
forestry in Indonesian: Kehutanan
forestry in Italian: Silvicoltura
forestry in Hebrew: יערנות
forestry in Dutch: Bosbouw
forestry in Japanese: 林業
forestry in Norwegian: Skogbruk
forestry in Norwegian Nynorsk: Skogbruk
forestry in Polish: Leśnictwo (nauka)
forestry in Portuguese: Engenharia
florestal
forestry in Romanian: Silvicultură
forestry in Russian: Лесоводство
forestry in Simple English: Forestry
forestry in Serbo-Croatian: Šumarstvo
forestry in Finnish: Metsätalous
forestry in Swedish: Skogsbruk
forestry in Telugu: వన్య శాస్త్రము
forestry in Thai: การป่าไม้
forestry in Vietnamese: Lâm nghiệp
forestry in Turkish: silvikültür
forestry in Chinese: 林业
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Christmas tree farming, afforestation, arboretum, arboriculture, boondocks, bush, bushveld, chase, climax forest, cloud
forest, dendrology,
forest, forest land,
forest management, forest preserve, forestation, fringing
forest, gallery forest, greenwood, hanger, index forest, jungle, jungles, logging, lumbering, national forest,
palmetto barrens, park,
park forest, pine barrens, primeval forest, protection forest, rain
forest, reforestation, scrub, scrubland, selection forest,
shrubland, silviculture, sprout
forest, stand of timber, state forest, timber, timberland, tree farming,
tree veld, virgin forest, wildwood, wood, woodcraft, woodland, woods