Tree Yield Per Acre: Difference between revisions

From Open Source Ecology
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Updated the page to the more recent formatting style)
(Added a Category to the Page)
 
Line 19: Line 19:
=External Links=
=External Links=
*[https://www.fs.fed.us/ne/newtown_square/publications/research_papers/pdfs/scanned/OCR/ne_rp466.pdf A PDF on Thinning in Forestry, and potential yields]
*[https://www.fs.fed.us/ne/newtown_square/publications/research_papers/pdfs/scanned/OCR/ne_rp466.pdf A PDF on Thinning in Forestry, and potential yields]
[[Category: Forestry]]

Latest revision as of 23:55, 29 December 2021

Basics

  • This page goes over how much wood can be sustainably harvested from a (natural? ie not tree farm and/or edible forest etc?) forest

Naturally Fallen Biomass

  • With trees like live oak etc many branches can fall after storms etc
  • Perhaps use these as biomass?

Thinning

  • Thinning (Forestry)
  • Essentially removal of some trees to allow for extra "growing room", see also Controlled Burn (Forestry)  ?
  • Easter USA forest - 30 dry tons for 40% thinning. For 25% charcoal yield, that is 7 tons per acre. 7 tons is 5 tons GGE. 3 kg diesel per gallon. 5 tons is thus 1500 gallons. Or about 40k miles - enough for 2 average Americans.


60 wet and 30 dry tons per acre from 35-40% thinning based on Basal Area.

Internal Links

External Links