Outline of forestry


The following outline is provided as an overview of and guide to forestry:
Below is a structured list of topics in forestry.

Focus of forestry

  • Tree - organism, whose species, age, vitality, growth, health, and size, are considered individually or more often, as part of a whole;

    Branches of forestry

  • Agroforestry – integration of forests into agricultural systems in order to optimize the production and positive effects within the system and minimize negative side effects of farming
  • Boreal forestry – analyzes the particular challenges of forestry in the world's boreal regions
  • Close to nature forestry - theory and practice that takes the forest as an ecosystem and manages it as such. It is based on reduced human intervention, that should be directed to accelerate the processes that nature would do by itself more slowly.
  • Dendrology – involves the study and identification of economically useful tree species
  • Forest ecology – studies the patterns and processes of a forest ecosystem
  • Forest hydrology – embodies the effects of changes in forest land use on the movement, distribution, and quality of water in the ecosystem
  • Forest pathology – study of diseases of woody plants, and of the interactions between trees and pathogens, pests, and other stressors that affect their health and function.
  • Silviculture – is the art and science of controlling the establishment, growth, composition, health, and quality of forests to meet specific objectives
  • Social forestry – addresses human-forest interactions, and the importance of community-based natural resource management
  • Sustainable forestry – providing for the needs of society in the form of forest products while maintaining the health of forests and their mitigation of climate change and biodiversity loss through forestry practices that mimic natural patterns of disturbance and regeneration, such as balancing the numbers of trees by age, to provide a layered canopy and sustainable yield as an alternative to clear cutting. Sustaining natural forest habitats also involves preserving their water quality, and protecting them from wildfire, pests, and diseases.
  • Tropical forestry – is particularly concerned with management and conservation of forests in the tropics
  • Urban forestry – entails the care and management of urban tree populations for the purpose of improving the urban environment

    Forest management

- comprises the overall administrative, economic, legal, and social aspects of forest regulation


Image:Vegetation-no-legend.PNG|thumb|center|800px|
This map shows the locations of forest biomes in relation to the other biomes of the world.
  • List of life zones by region

    Occupations in forestry

  • Arborist - professional responsible for the maintenance of individual trees in an urban forest also called a tree surgeon.
  • Donkey puncher was the operator of a small steam donkey, a machine used in logging in the 19th and 20th centuries.
  • Fire lookout - person assigned to spot for fires/smoke atop a fire lookout tower
  • Forest ecologist - studies patterns, processes, flora and fauna in forest ecosystems
  • Forest economist - model and analyze economic aspects of forest growth, utilization, and conservation
  • Forest engineer - civil engineer specializing in all aspects of timber and forest operations, including road-building, railways, log transport, etc.
  • Forest ranger - responsible for managing and policing human use of the forest; sometimes also acts as educator and interpreter
  • Forest sociologist - applied social scientist working with a wide variety of stakeholders interested in forests
  • Forest technician - individual primarily responsible for the marking of timber sales and on-ground land management, often requires a two-year Associate of Science degree
  • Forester - professional chiefly responsible for the management of forests, requires a Bachelor of Science degree in most countries
  • * Master forester - forestry expert responsible for forest management and training
  • Hotshot crew/Handcrew - a group of wildland firefighters specialized in fire suppression tactics
  • Lumberjack - the typical feller of trees and harvester of the lumber, duties can also include:
  • Resin extractor - laborer who extracts resin from pine trees
  • Rubber tapper - laborer who extracts natural rubber from tropical rubber trees
  • Smokejumper - firefighters who parachute into remote areas to fight wildland fires
  • Timber cruiser - responsible for assessing forest growth, health, and valuation
  • Tree planters - help reestablish forests after logging, fires, and other events and circumstances

    Silvicultural methods

- practice of controlling the establishment, growth, composition, health, and quality of forests to meet diverse needs and values. Silviculture also focuses on making sure that the treatment of forest stands are used to preserve and to better their productivity.
Site preparation
  • Controlled burn - use of fire in order to eliminate weeds, brush, or slash, or to release on-site seeds of fire-dependent species
  • Stump harvesting - removal of tree stumps either for biomass or to free up space in the soil
  • Drum chopping - knocking down small trees and brush to clear the ground for planting
Planting
  • Broadcast seeding - scattering of seed either by hand or mechanically over a relatively large area
  • Aerial seeding - dispersing of seed from an aircraft, used especially in mountainous areas
  • Treeplanting - transplanting of juvenile seedlings into the ground at a predetermined spacing
Intermediate treatments
  • Weeding - removal or reduction of herbaceous or woody species around seedlings
  • Cleaning - removal of competing saplings of similar age in order to favor saplings of desirable growth characteristics
  • Liberation cutting - removal of older and established overtopping trees from desirable saplings
  • Thinning - removal of trees to favor the growth of select trees in order to maximize timber production
  • Ecological thinning - removal of trees to favor the growth of select trees in order to favor the development of wildlife habitat
  • Pruning - removal of the lateral branches on the trees in order to improve wood quality
  • Pollarding - annual removal of lateral branches or main stem in order to encourage growth of branches to provide for firewood, or fruit production
Harvest rotations
  • Even-aged timber management
  • Uneven-aged timber management
  • Other