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A forest is a community of trees, shrubs, herbs, microorganisms, and
animals, the trees being the most obvious living structures. Trees can
survive under a wide range of climatic conditions, but forests generally
occupy the moister, less frigid parts of the terrestrial biosphere. To
different human cultures at different times, forests have been regarded
as places of danger, security, economic opportunity, recreation, and
aesthetic pleasure. They take part in natural processes of nutrient
cycling and water purification, and otherwise help maintain a clean
environment. Forests are important sources of many products. Forestry is
the science, art, and technology of managing these forest resources.
FORESTS
The large size and slow growth of trees make forests appear stable and
permanent, but in fact they are dynamic sites of ongoing processes such
as tree growth and death and soil formation. The tree species in a
particular area are also constantly changing as species migrate and new
trees invade disturbed areas. Climates themselves change, but this
generally occurs so slowlyÑover tens or hundreds of yearsÑthat a given
forest area appears to contain a constant group of species.
Ecology
The inhabitants of forest communities interact in complex ways. Trees
compete with each other for sunlight, moisture, and mineral nutrients.
These materials are necessary for photosynthesis, the process by which
green plants produce organic compounds for energy to live and grow. As
trees photosynthesize, they absorb carbon dioxide from the air and
extract moisture from the soil. Trees help to retain water; heavy rains
do not run rapidly off forest land. Natural or human activities that
destroy forests result in increased runoff and in temporarily higher
levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. After this the growing
forest increases the oxygen content of the atmosphere. A mature forest
adds less oxygen to the atmosphere. A global research project designed
to measure the overall influence of forests on the atmosphere of the
Earth is in progress.
Trees also serve as temporary repositories for mineral nutrients in
ecosystems; these nutrients accumulate in tree roots and thus are not
easily washed away. Natural or human destruction of forests alters the
nutrient cycles, especially in the case of the nitrogen cycle, where
plants play a substantial role. Regrowth of young forests may increase
the nitrogen added to the ecosystem. Trees take up the nutrients they
need from the soil and from dead organic matter with the assistance of
mycorrhizae (fungi that grow symbiotically on tree roots, obtaining food
from the tree).
The process of soil development, aided by soil organisms, occurs in all
forests. Microorganisms break down minerals in the soil and create
passages for air and water movement, decomposing the remains of plants
and animals and extracting and releasing nutrients. Depending on the
climate, decomposition occurs at different rates. In cool or dry
climates, organic matter will decompose slowly and a thick layer will
develop, whereas in warm, moist climates, organic matter will decompose
rapidly, releasing minerals that are quickly absorbed by plant roots.
Little organic matter will accumulate.
After all or part of a forest is destroyed by a disturbance, such as
fire or wind or avalanche, trees and other plants reinvade the area,
halting erosion and nutrient loss and maintaining water quality. This
series of changes in vegetation structure, known as ecological
succession, will make the forest more suitable for some animals and
plants and less suitable for others.
Depending on environmental conditions, different tree species will be
dominant at different successional stages. The characteristic group of
tree species in a given area is referred to as a forest type. Within
each type, certain species may be found most commonly under specific
soil and climate conditions and at certain times after a disturbance;
these species are best evolved physiologically to compete under these
conditions. In areas of recurrent fire, for example, fire-resistant
trees will likely predominate.
Types of Forests
Tree species can be divided into six groups based on their evolutionary
origins: Holarctic (originating in the Northern Hemisphere), Neotropic
(originating in Central and South America), Paleotropic (originating in
Africa and tropical Asia), Capensis (originating in southern Africa),
Australian, and Antarctic. A species is found naturally only where it
first developed or where it migrated thereafter. Pines are found
naturally in the Northern Hemisphere and thus belong to the Holarctic
group. Many species, however, have been deliberately introduced into
other areas with similar climates; for example, pines are planted in
many parts of the Southern Hemisphere, and eucalyptus, a tree genus
native to Australia, is planted in other places.
Forest communities with different genetic backgrounds that grow under
similar soil and climate conditions in different parts of the world have
many of the same structural characteristics. Thus forests can be
classified as major parts of many biomes. Taiga and boreal forests are
coniferous forests with few species in areas of cool climates. Temperate
deciduous forests are predominantly broadleaf forests in areas of
moderate temperature and rainfall with cold winters. Subtropical
evergreen forests are a combination of broadleaf and conifer forests in
areas of sufficient rainfall and mild winters. Tropical rain forests are
lush forests of complex structure with many species in warm, moist
regions. Chaparral or sclerophyllous forests are thicketlike forests of
shrubs and small trees in areas with mild winters and warm, dry summers.
Tropical grasslands and savannas are grasslands with scattered trees
that occur in warm regions with seasonal drought.
FORESTRY
Forestry involves the use and management of forest resources. Forest
uses can be divided into two categories: nonconsumptive and consumptive.
Nonconsumptive uses, which remove little from the forest, include
watershed protection, wildlife and fish habitat, recreation, and
aesthetic uses. These specific uses require that the forests be
maintained in particular conditions with which some other nonconsumptive
and consumptive uses are sometimes incompatible. Consumptive uses, by
definition, involve the extraction of products from forests; this often
requires the harvesting of trees. Forest resources are renewable, since
new trees can grow after the old ones are cut.
Products
The use of forests to obtain wood, chemicals, and other products is
consumptive. About half of the wood harvested in the world is used
directly for fuel. Wood is the primary fuel source in developing
countries; its use fluctuates with the cost of alternative energy
sources. Wood has been used for lumber for construction purposes for
thousands of years. Today, wood for structures primarily comes from
straight, strong, conifer trees. Paper was first made from wood about
150 years ago, and it is still made primarily from wood. The cellulose
fibers in wood can also be used to make rayon, photographic film,
artificial sponges, synthetic lacquers, and other plastics. Wood might
be more widely used in industry to produce plastics, except that
petroleum, an alternative raw material, is cheaper than wood is.
Various chemicals are made from by-products of pulp and paper
manufacture and from the independent distillation of wood; these include
charcoal, acetic acid, methanol, various oils, and medicinal chemicals.
Turpentine and tar may be obtained from destructive distillation or by
scarring and scraping the wound of living pine trees. Maple sugar is
obtained by taking the sap from the interior of living maple trees, and
various trees provide other products.
Management
Forests are managed for a variety of objectives, ranging from carefully
tended plantations to relatively natural areas of no cutting and minimal
protection from disturbance. The intensity of management depends on the
growth potential of the forest and various economic and political
objectives. Even the most carefully tended forest plantations are not
managed as intensively as most agricultural crops. Unlike agricultural
crops, forest crops take many years to grow, even on the most productive
soils. Often the products in demand change before the forest is suitable
for a specific use; forest management needs to be flexible.
The ultimate unit of forest management is the "stand." A stand is a
group of trees of uniform age, species, structure, and growth
conditions. Stands vary in size from 0.4 to more than 40 ha (1 to 100
acres). The technology of manipulating stands is known as silviculture.
Many silvicultural techniques mimic disturbances of some kind, often to
remove existing trees or other vegetation in order to allow desired
trees to become established and grow.
Four methods are used to remove trees from forest stands. The most
radical is clearcutting, or the cutting of all the trees at one time,
thus creating an even-age stand by planting or natural regeneration. The
other methods are seed tree cutting, or the cutting of all the trees
except for a few trees for reseeding, creating an even-age stand except
for the seed trees; shelterwood cutting, or the removal of an old stand
of trees in a series of cuttings extended over several years, which also
creates an even-age stand; and selection cutting, or the removal of a
few mature trees, usually repeatedly, over relatively short intervals,
which creates an uneven-age stand.
Each system has its advantages and disadvantages; the proper method must
be chosen on the basis of management goals and conditions at the stand
in question. The system of logging the stand by clearcutting is
appropriate where trees can become established and grow without shade.
Where the clearcut area will be exposed to public view or to extreme
temperatures, the conditions for forest regeneration are poor and the
site can be aesthetically displeasing until the trees grow. Seed tree
cutting is used in reforestation (discussed below). The shelterwood
system is desired where extreme temperatures will inhibit growth of a
new forest, and the selection system may be chosen where uneven-age
stands are desired for some use and the regenerating species can grow in
partial shade.
Inappropriate selection cutting of mixed-species forests in many parts
of the world has left stands of diseased trees of little value that
prevent vigorous trees from growing. The proper logging method should be
chosen for a particular stand, or the stand may lose its usefulness or
even become an erosion or fire hazard.
Silvicultural techniques constantly change with technological advances.
They involve the use of fire, machinery, and chemicals for preparing
stands for regeneration and for removing competing plants; nurseries for
growing seedlings; genetic improvements resulting in more efficiently
growing trees; fertilizers for increasing growth; and remote-control
machines for pruning unwanted limbs.
It might seem odd to mention fire as one means of forest management,
because the enormous destructiveness of great forest firesÑsuch as the
one that swept Yellowstone National Park in 1988Ñis well known.
Controlled fires, however, are useful in preparing ground for planting
and in clearing the ground of weeds or fungal diseases that would harm
seedlings. Controlled fires may also be used in attempting to block the
course of great disaster fires. The majority of forest fires are caused
by human carelessness, although many of the largest that sweep vast
remote areas are produced by lightning. However damaging such natural
fires are to human interests, they play a contributing role in forest
evolution.
Conservation
Conservation is the planned management of natural resources to prevent
their neglect, exploitation, and destruction. Forests provide each of
the uses described earlier, but only under certain conditions. Forests
have changed and will continue to change as trees grow and die, species
migrate, and climates change. Often a forest is stressed by these
changes, and the trees can become weakened and infected by insects or
diseases, resulting in their death. Air pollution and water pollution
created by human or natural activity can further damage trees. In
northern Europe, many hectares of forests have been affected by acid
rain.
One objective of conservation is the prevention of unintentional
destruction of forests by disease, insects, and other agents. The other
objective is the determination of management goals for each area of
forest. Once the objectives of each stand are determined, the actual
management requires the understanding of the natural sciences, long-term
processes and history, and modern technologies. Deciding what values to
conserve is a scientific, technological, and political subject. The
decision requires the understanding of what natural and human activities
will most readily destroy the stand and the knowledge of the most
realistic uses, which entail both the private rights of the individual
landowner and the public.
The objectives of conservation have changed along with changes in such
related areas as the understanding of forest process, human values
themselves, demands on the forest, availabilities of various resources,
and technologies. Early forest conservation in North America was aimed
at protecting forested areas from clearing for agricultural lands. Pine
trees were conserved and harvested for making sailing ships. In the late
1800s and early 1900s forests were protected from fire, overharvesting,
and overgrazing by the establishment of grazing laws, fire control
practices, and harvesting regulations. Aesthetically unique areas and
high-quality watersheds were set aside as national parks and forests. In
the mid-20th century, unproductive farmland was converted to forests
through the subsidizing of reforestation, thus halting erosion and
providing for future forests. In the 1930s, southern U.S. forest
industries began to grow seedlings on a large scale in forest tree
nurseries and to replant large deforested areas.
In the past few decades, increases in mobility, leisure time, and
disposable income have led to more interest in conserving forests for
nonconsumptive purposes. In the United States, management objectives for
national forests have shifted from timber production to multiple uses.
Although this has become a source of controversy, more areas of public
lands are mandated for nonconsumptive uses such as watershed and
wildlife management and recreation. Various U.S. states have established
or revised Forest Practices Acts to ensure that some uses of privately
held lands are conserved.
Forests have been used for consumptive purposes throughout the world; in
tropical regions, where forest soils grow rapidly, forest harvesting is
occurring at a rapid rate. In parts of Africa, where the soils are
easily eroded and the climate is unpredictable, forests and woodlands
are being diminished. Agricultural practices may lead to deforestation
under pressures of increasing population.
Three solutions to the deforestation problem have met with some success:
the first involves the use of local people in forest management; the
second involves "agroforestry," or the planting of trees in croplands
and pastures; and the third involves the use of the financial resources
of developed countries. The Food and Agriculture Organization of the
United Nations has gained support for the protection of the world s
forests and their role in rural development.
In the United States less than 5 percent of the virgin forests that used
to blanket the country remain. In the face of population increases and
continued industrialization, environmental activists in the United
States have undertaken a constant watch to ensure that the remaining
forests are conserved as humans increasingly alter the environment. As
scientific knowledge of forest growth expands and a better understanding
of detrimental effects of human activity develops, conservation efforts
are working to turn the tide and prevent the demise of forests as
sources of consumptive products, clean water, wildlife and fish
habitats, and recreational areas. These efforts are being applied
globally to prevent the neglect, exploitation, and destruction of
forests. Nevertheless, the total amount of forest per 1,000 people
declined from 11.4 Ü (4.4 æ) in 1970 to 7.3 Ü (2.8 æ) in 1998.
Chadwick D. Oliver
Bibliography: Attiwell, P. M., and Leeper, G. W., Forest Soils and
Nutrient Cycles (1987); Bormann, F. H., and Likens, G. E., Pattern and
Process in a Forested Ecosystem (1996); Drengson, A., Eco-Forestry: The
Art and Science of Sustainable Forest Use (1997); Hutchinson, B. A., and
Hicks, B. B., eds., The Forest-Atmosphere Interaction (1985); Jordan, C.
F., Nutrient Cycling in Tropical Forest Ecosystems (1985); Mater, J.,
Reinventing the Forest Industry (1997); Nyland, R. D., Silviculture
(1996); Oliver, C., and Larson, B. C., Forest Stand Dynamics (1996);
Puri, G. S., et al., Forest Ecology, 2 vols. (1985ÃÂ88); Sharpe, G. W.,
Introduction to Forestry and Renewable Resources, 6th ed. (1995); Smith,
W. H., Air Pollution and Forests, 2d ed. (1989).
See also: fire prevention and control; hydrologic cycle.
Copyright (c) 2001 Grolier Interactive Inc.
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