SlideShare une entreprise Scribd logo
1  sur  66
Recognizing the Importance of Forests Microsoft.com
What is a forest? a. A forest is a living, complexly interrelated community of trees and associated plants and animals.  Timberland is forest land capable of producing wood in excess of 20 cubic feet per acre per year and not restricted from being harvested.
What is the importance of forests? Trees provide food, medicines, fuel, shelter, protection, shade, tools and other needs. Wood is the raw material from which forest industries manufacture countless products for home, factory and office. The United States has 540 million acres of timberland and is only producing about half of their biological potential.  The United States is dependent on wood imports.
What is the importance of forests? The social values of forests are the benefits they provide for outdoor recreation activities such as: hunting, fishing, bird watching, nature study, camping, picnicking, hiking and scenic or aesthetic value.
What are the types of forests land? Total forest land is the sum of timberland, reserved forest land, and other forest land.  Through improvement of forest management practices by timberland owners, the United States can become less dependent on other nations for its wood sources. Reserved forest land is defined as forest land restricted from harvesting. Other forest land has trees but does not meet the minimal required stocking level of timberland.
What are the beneficial influences of trees? II. Besides the direct benefits forests provide in the way of products, other values are derived from trees. Microsoft.com
What are the beneficial influences of trees? Over an extended area, forests do not affect climate. However, in a localized area, they do have an effect on climate conditions. Forests influence temperature, humidity, and wind velocity. The forest canopy is a barrier to direct sunlight and shades the forest floor, influencing the air temperature, soil temperature and soil moisture. The leaves and branches of trees break the impact of rain, causing it to drip rather than to reach the earth with force.  Upon reaching the forest floor, rain is absorbed by the ground litter and humus, reducing surface runoff.
What are the beneficial influences of trees? The leaf litter and humus keep the soil mellow, porous and permeable, which allows seepage of water into the substratum, where it is stored. Microsoft.com
What are the beneficial influences of trees? The forest soil tends to not freeze as deep, as it absorbs more water from melting snow.  In forested watersheds, where management is carefully practiced, extremes of water flow in winter and summer are avoided, aiding in flood control. By delaying the melting of the snow and by the absorption of snow water into the soil, forests prolong the period of runoff, which helps to reduce flooding and to equalize stream flow in the streams and rivers.
What are the beneficial influences of trees? Forest vegetation shades water courses from the full heat of the sun preventing excessive stream temperatures and producing clear streams that are ideal for fish life. Forest streams usually have a minimum amount of sediment, even during periods of high stream flow.
What are the beneficial influences of trees? Forests help to reduce wind erosion. The harmful effects of the wind drying out and blowing the soil, protection against drifting snows and shelter crops, livestock, homes and barns from hot or cold winds. Many kinds of wildlife are found in the forest, where they obtain food and shelter.
What is the economic importance of forests? Timber, grazing, recreation, water, minerals, fish, and wildlife are all examples of income-producing values of forests. The greatest economic contribution of forests is the products derived from trees. Ours is a wood-oriented society; wood is a important part of houses, apartment buildings, many commercial and industrial structures, newspapers, cereal boxes, furniture and sports equipment.
What is the economic importance of forests? 1. Trees from forests are made into lumber, pulpwood, veneer, poles, railroad ties, and piling. a. Lumber is further used to produce furniture and other manufactured items.
What is the economic importance of forests? b. Pulpwood is wood cut or prepared for manufacture into pulp, which can be made into paper products. c. Veneer is a thin sheet of wood. d. Piling is a round timber driven into the ground to support other structures.
What is the economic importance of forests? The same income producing resources have certain social values that may not be income producing but still have worth in terms of public good or interest. Social values are generally values related to aesthetic considerations, such as scenic qualities of a forest area.
What is the economic importance of forests? Other social values are concerned with biological aspects, such as the uniqueness of the plants and animals found in the forest. Forests with high social values are being reserved for future public and private parks and monuments.
What is the economic importance of forests? Some of these areas may have other concurrent uses, such as recreation or establishment of biological preserves. Conflict of interests often arise between economic and social uses of forest land.  An example involves areas that are flooded for water reservoirs or set aside in preserve and can no longer supply timber for wood-using industries.
What are the major parts of a tree and their functions? A tree is a woody plant having one well-defined stem and a formed crown.  There are three major parts to a tree. They are the roots, the trunk, and the crown.
Roots The roots are the part of the tree typically found below the soil surface. The root system serves to anchor and support the tree.  Roots take water and nutrients from the soil for plant growth.
Roots Roots also act as a storehouse for manufactured food for the plant.  There are two basic types of tree roots.  They are tap and fibrous. A tap root system has one large root with a number of small roots. A fibrous root system has many roots that spread and branch in the soil.
Trunk The trunk of the tree serves to conduct nutrients and water from the roots to the manufacturing portion of the tree, represented by the crown.
Trunk The trunk also produces the bulk of the useful wood in a tree. The trunk is comprised of a series of rings.  Under normal conditions, one ring is produced each year.
Trunk  Each section of the ring has a specific purpose in the life of the tree. In large trees, the center portion of the trunk is darker-colored and is known as heartwood. Here the cells have ceased to function.
Trunk  In other words, the wood in this portion of the tree is dead. The heartwood provides strength to the tree and keeps it upright.
Trunk  Outward from the heartwood is the lighter colored wood known as sapwood, or xylem. This is the living portion of the tree. It is the means by which raw nutrients and water are carried from the roots to the crown. The sapwood also serves as the storage area for some of the food made in the leaves.
Trunk  Outside the sapwood is the cambium. This active layer of cells is responsible for the growth of the tree. Each year the cambium forms a new annual ring. This is how trees grow in diameter.
Trunk  Immediately outward from the cambium are the living cells called the inner bark or the phloem. The tissue carries food made in the leaves down to the branches, trunk, and roots. The phloem is protected by dead, nonfunctioning outer bark.
Trunk  The bark, which protects the trunk of the tree, is formed by the cork cambium, a thin layer of cells between the phloem and the bark itself.
Crown The crown of the top part of the tree that includes branches, twigs, buds, and leaves.  A major role of the crown is to hold leaves to collect sunlight so photosynthesis can occur. It is also in this section of the tree that seeds, fruits, nuts, and berries are produced.  The crown can also served as a nesting site for wildlife such as squirrels and birds.
What Are Some Of The Most Important Chemical Processes That Take Place Within a Tree? Like any other type of plant, trees require several chemical processes to occur within the plant for survival. These reactions allow the plant to produce food, expel waste, and regulate plant temperature.  Three of the most important reactions that occur within a tree are photosynthesis, respiration, and transpiration.
Photosynthesis Photosynthesis is a series of complex chemical reactions in which carbon dioxide from the air and water from the soil are converted into carbohydrates (starches and sugars), with oxygen as a by-product. Nutrients and water from the roots are carried to the leaves by the xylem.
Photosynthesis The carbohydrates manufactured by the leaves are transported and used throughout the tree as the food materials for life support, growth, and reproduction.
Respiration The process of consuming carbohydrates and oxygen to obtain energy for the biological processes of life support, growth and reproduction is called respiration. Although a growing tree uses oxygen in respiration, the amount of oxygen consumed is much less than the amount of oxygen produced in the separate process of photosynthesis.
Transpiration The loss of water vapor in plants is called transpiration. This occurs as a product of the process of respiration. Most of the water vapor escapes through structures in the leaf called stomata, which are located on the underside of the leaf. The primary function of the stomata is to regulate the exchange of carbon dioxide and water vapor with the atmosphere.
How Do Trees Reproduce? There are two methods by which trees reproduce: seed reproduction and vegetative reproduction (sprouting, suckering, and layering). Most trees reproduce by seed, but many can also reproduce vegetatively. Broad-leaved trees will usually sprout from cut stems, but most needle-leaved trees, or conifers, will not sprout.
Reproduction Suckering is the sending up of shoots from underground roots. Layering occurs when the lower branches of a tree touch the ground and the branch tips become covered by plant and leaf litter. A branch tip then develops roots extending into the soil and eventually a new tree grows from the branch tip.
Seed Reproduction Seed reproduction is the most common method of reproduction utilized by trees. There is a series of stages that the tree goes through in the development of seeds. In broadleaved trees, seeds are produced when then fertilized ovules, which are found in the ovaries of the flower, ripen. In most instances, the fruit of broad-leaved trees matures one year from the time it was fertilized.
Seed Reproduction Seed production occurs differently in conifers. In these needle-leaved trees, the ovules are born naked on cone scales and are not enclosed in an ovary. At pollination time the female cone (containing the ovules) scales spread apart for a short period of time. At this same time, male cones produce pollen.
Seed Reproduction It is hoped that when the scales of the female cone is spread apart that some of the pollen will fertilize the ovule. Upon ripening, the cone dries out, the scales come apart, and the winged seeds are dispersed by wind.
Common Tree Seeds Naturalist.com
What are the national policies that impact wildlife conservation? National Park Service Enacted in 1916. Federal agency responsible for the care of the national parks.
What is the history of wildlife conservation? Yellowstone National Park  First national park in the world. Its purpose was to preserve the natural resources of the area. 1872 Located in Idaho,  Montana & Wyoming 3,472 sq. miles 2,221,773 sq. acres
Historical People in Wildlife Conservation John Muir (1838–1914) Partly responsible for the development of Yellowstone and Sequoia National Parks. Encouraged President Roosevelt to establish these parks. Started the Sierra Club. California forest named after him.
Historical People in Wildlife Conservation Theodore Roosevelt (1858–1919) Known as the “Father of the Conservation Movement”. Passed legislations to help protect natural resource.
Historical People in Wildlife Conservation Gifford Pinchot (1865–1946) One of the first leaders of what is now known as the U.S. Forest Service. Wrote a book called The Fight for Conservation. His efforts focused on the conservation of forests.
National Forest Service I. There are 191 million acres within the nation forests of the United States which are under the control of the United States Department of Agriculture Forest Service.  II. The Forest Service manages public lands, known collectively as the National Forest System, located in 44 States, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands.
National Forest Service The lands comprise 8.5 percent of the total land area in the United States.  The natural resources on these lands are some of the Nation’s greatest assets and have major economic, environmental, and social significance for all Americans.  Forest Service manages the forest in a way that allows people to share and enjoy the forest, while conserving the environment for generations to come.
The Forest Service accomplishes this task through five main activities: 1. Protection and management of natural resources on National Forest System lands. 2. Research on all aspects of forestry, rangeland management, and forest resource utilization. 3. Community assistance and cooperation with State and local governments, forest industries, and private landowners to help protect and manage non-Federal forest and associated range and watershed lands to improve conditions in rural areas.
The Forest Service accomplishes this task through five main activities: 4. Achieving and supporting an effective workforce that reflects the full range of diversity of the American people. 5. International assistance in formulating policy and coordinating U.S. support for the protection and sound management of the world’s forest resources.
The Forest Service uses prescribed fire to manage forests A prescribed fire is a managed, intentional fire set by humans for a specific purpose.  A prescribed fire is usually controlled and contained within a specific area. A properly controlled prescribed fire produces several benefits for the forest, wildlife, and people.
Some of the benefits are: 1. Reducing the hazard of wildfire by removing fuel from the forest floor.  A wildfire is a fire that endangers people or property, which is not within an area designated to be managed by the use of fire, or that, in conjunction with weather or other conditions, may threaten to expand, thus endangering people, property, or non fire-management areas.
Benefits of a Prescribed Fire 2. Preparing sites for seedlings and planting.  A prescribed burn can remove other plants that will act as competition for nutrients and water to the new trees. 3. Removing undesirable trees and brush cluttering the forest understory.
Benefits of a Prescribed Fire 4. Assist in controlling forest diseases. 5. Improves the quality of grass for grazing by removing brush and dried weeds.
DifferentTypes of Forest Fires II. The USDA Forest Service categorizes forest fires into three general types: surface, ground, and crown fires.  More than one of these types of fires may occur within the same forest fire.
Sources of Forest Fires Forest fires can be natural, often by lightning strikes.  However, people cause the majority of forest fires.  Some of the major sources of forest wildfires are: Incendiary – purposefully set (Arson) Debris Burning – gets out of control causing damage Smokers – dropping a still burning match or cigarette Lightning – Electrical storms w/o rain produce 9% of forest fires

Contenu connexe

Tendances (20)

Teaching Forest Stand Dynamics
Teaching Forest Stand DynamicsTeaching Forest Stand Dynamics
Teaching Forest Stand Dynamics
 
The importance of forest to mankind
The importance of forest to mankindThe importance of forest to mankind
The importance of forest to mankind
 
Ecology & environmental degradation final
Ecology & environmental degradation finalEcology & environmental degradation final
Ecology & environmental degradation final
 
Deforestation presentation
Deforestation presentation  Deforestation presentation
Deforestation presentation
 
Forest ecology
Forest ecologyForest ecology
Forest ecology
 
Importance of forest
Importance of forestImportance of forest
Importance of forest
 
Tropical savanna
Tropical savannaTropical savanna
Tropical savanna
 
Forest classification
Forest classificationForest classification
Forest classification
 
Forest resources of india
Forest resources of indiaForest resources of india
Forest resources of india
 
Forest management
Forest management Forest management
Forest management
 
Types of forest in India
Types of forest in IndiaTypes of forest in India
Types of forest in India
 
Forestry
ForestryForestry
Forestry
 
montane forests class 9 geo
 montane forests class 9 geo montane forests class 9 geo
montane forests class 9 geo
 
Deforestation
DeforestationDeforestation
Deforestation
 
Desertification
DesertificationDesertification
Desertification
 
Forestry
ForestryForestry
Forestry
 
Forest Management & Why It's Important
Forest Management & Why It's ImportantForest Management & Why It's Important
Forest Management & Why It's Important
 
Forestry, importance of forestry, Benefits of forestry
Forestry, importance of forestry, Benefits of forestryForestry, importance of forestry, Benefits of forestry
Forestry, importance of forestry, Benefits of forestry
 
Grasslands (teach)
Grasslands (teach)Grasslands (teach)
Grasslands (teach)
 
Joint forest management
Joint forest managementJoint forest management
Joint forest management
 

En vedette

Importance of Forests, Functions of Forests, Deforestation, Sustainable Fores...
Importance of Forests, Functions of Forests, Deforestation, Sustainable Fores...Importance of Forests, Functions of Forests, Deforestation, Sustainable Fores...
Importance of Forests, Functions of Forests, Deforestation, Sustainable Fores...Fatima Laraib
 

En vedette (6)

Forest fire
Forest fireForest fire
Forest fire
 
FOREST FIRE
FOREST FIREFOREST FIRE
FOREST FIRE
 
Introduction to forestry
Introduction to forestryIntroduction to forestry
Introduction to forestry
 
Importance of Forests, Functions of Forests, Deforestation, Sustainable Fores...
Importance of Forests, Functions of Forests, Deforestation, Sustainable Fores...Importance of Forests, Functions of Forests, Deforestation, Sustainable Fores...
Importance of Forests, Functions of Forests, Deforestation, Sustainable Fores...
 
Forest resource
Forest resourceForest resource
Forest resource
 
Important of forests
Important of forestsImportant of forests
Important of forests
 

Similaire à Introduction to Froestry

Advance Presentation On Forest Our Life Line
Advance Presentation On Forest Our Life LineAdvance Presentation On Forest Our Life Line
Advance Presentation On Forest Our Life LineRaj
 
The importance of tee's and plants
The importance of tee's and plantsThe importance of tee's and plants
The importance of tee's and plantsDaniel Walter
 
Forest : Our Lifeline
Forest : Our LifelineForest : Our Lifeline
Forest : Our LifelineDiyaTMintoxon
 
Plant adaptationsteach
Plant adaptationsteach   Plant adaptationsteach
Plant adaptationsteach Ghassan Hadi
 
Final Project(BCA)- Estela Ria B. Espanilla BF
Final Project(BCA)- Estela Ria B. Espanilla BFFinal Project(BCA)- Estela Ria B. Espanilla BF
Final Project(BCA)- Estela Ria B. Espanilla BFairmour
 
Plant Adaptations
Plant AdaptationsPlant Adaptations
Plant Adaptationslirolu2
 
Muthu's Project-1.pdf
Muthu's Project-1.pdfMuthu's Project-1.pdf
Muthu's Project-1.pdfMANOJR340129
 
Tropical forest ecosystem
Tropical forest ecosystemTropical forest ecosystem
Tropical forest ecosystemCharu Jaiswal
 
The living world revision guide
The living world revision guideThe living world revision guide
The living world revision guidevwrightryedale
 
9th forestry and natural resources
9th forestry and natural resources9th forestry and natural resources
9th forestry and natural resourcespravindarade50
 
The Earth's natural vegetation
The Earth's natural vegetationThe Earth's natural vegetation
The Earth's natural vegetationZeeta
 
Deserts, Prairies, and Forests
Deserts, Prairies, and ForestsDeserts, Prairies, and Forests
Deserts, Prairies, and ForestsMark McGinley
 

Similaire à Introduction to Froestry (20)

Advance Presentation On Forest Our Life Line
Advance Presentation On Forest Our Life LineAdvance Presentation On Forest Our Life Line
Advance Presentation On Forest Our Life Line
 
The importance of tee's and plants
The importance of tee's and plantsThe importance of tee's and plants
The importance of tee's and plants
 
Forest : Our Lifeline
Forest : Our LifelineForest : Our Lifeline
Forest : Our Lifeline
 
Plant adaptationsteach
Plant adaptationsteach   Plant adaptationsteach
Plant adaptationsteach
 
PDC+++ Module 3 Class 9 Trees I
PDC+++ Module 3 Class 9 Trees IPDC+++ Module 3 Class 9 Trees I
PDC+++ Module 3 Class 9 Trees I
 
Final Project(BCA)- Estela Ria B. Espanilla BF
Final Project(BCA)- Estela Ria B. Espanilla BFFinal Project(BCA)- Estela Ria B. Espanilla BF
Final Project(BCA)- Estela Ria B. Espanilla BF
 
Plant adaptations
Plant adaptationsPlant adaptations
Plant adaptations
 
Plant adaptations (teach)
Plant adaptations (teach)Plant adaptations (teach)
Plant adaptations (teach)
 
Plant Adaptations
Plant AdaptationsPlant Adaptations
Plant Adaptations
 
Deciduous forest biotic and abiotic
Deciduous forest biotic and abioticDeciduous forest biotic and abiotic
Deciduous forest biotic and abiotic
 
Muthu's Project-1.pdf
Muthu's Project-1.pdfMuthu's Project-1.pdf
Muthu's Project-1.pdf
 
Forests_.pdf
Forests_.pdfForests_.pdf
Forests_.pdf
 
Deciduous biome
Deciduous biomeDeciduous biome
Deciduous biome
 
Tree is life
Tree is lifeTree is life
Tree is life
 
Tropical forest ecosystem
Tropical forest ecosystemTropical forest ecosystem
Tropical forest ecosystem
 
The living world revision guide
The living world revision guideThe living world revision guide
The living world revision guide
 
9th forestry and natural resources
9th forestry and natural resources9th forestry and natural resources
9th forestry and natural resources
 
The Earth's natural vegetation
The Earth's natural vegetationThe Earth's natural vegetation
The Earth's natural vegetation
 
TREES!!
TREES!!TREES!!
TREES!!
 
Deserts, Prairies, and Forests
Deserts, Prairies, and ForestsDeserts, Prairies, and Forests
Deserts, Prairies, and Forests
 

Plus de parrc

Anatomy quiz
Anatomy quizAnatomy quiz
Anatomy quizparrc
 
Poultry reproduction
Poultry reproductionPoultry reproduction
Poultry reproductionparrc
 
Reproductive technology
Reproductive technologyReproductive technology
Reproductive technologyparrc
 
Pregnancy and parturition
Pregnancy and parturitionPregnancy and parturition
Pregnancy and parturitionparrc
 
Animal Reproductive Cycles
Animal Reproductive CyclesAnimal Reproductive Cycles
Animal Reproductive Cyclesparrc
 
Animal Reproductive Tracts
Animal Reproductive TractsAnimal Reproductive Tracts
Animal Reproductive Tractsparrc
 
Energy
EnergyEnergy
Energyparrc
 
Digestion
DigestionDigestion
Digestionparrc
 
Livestock
LivestockLivestock
Livestockparrc
 
Why can’t i remember
Why can’t i rememberWhy can’t i remember
Why can’t i rememberparrc
 
Weather Part 2
Weather Part 2Weather Part 2
Weather Part 2parrc
 
Weather Part 1
Weather Part 1Weather Part 1
Weather Part 1parrc
 
Animal organ systems
Animal organ systemsAnimal organ systems
Animal organ systemsparrc
 
Specialtycrops
SpecialtycropsSpecialtycrops
Specialtycropsparrc
 
Water testing
Water testingWater testing
Water testingparrc
 
Asexual reproduction
Asexual reproductionAsexual reproduction
Asexual reproductionparrc
 
Plant reproduction
Plant reproductionPlant reproduction
Plant reproductionparrc
 
Root anatomy
Root anatomyRoot anatomy
Root anatomyparrc
 
Water
WaterWater
Waterparrc
 

Plus de parrc (20)

Anatomy quiz
Anatomy quizAnatomy quiz
Anatomy quiz
 
Poultry reproduction
Poultry reproductionPoultry reproduction
Poultry reproduction
 
Reproductive technology
Reproductive technologyReproductive technology
Reproductive technology
 
Pregnancy and parturition
Pregnancy and parturitionPregnancy and parturition
Pregnancy and parturition
 
Animal Reproductive Cycles
Animal Reproductive CyclesAnimal Reproductive Cycles
Animal Reproductive Cycles
 
Animal Reproductive Tracts
Animal Reproductive TractsAnimal Reproductive Tracts
Animal Reproductive Tracts
 
Energy
EnergyEnergy
Energy
 
Air
AirAir
Air
 
Digestion
DigestionDigestion
Digestion
 
Livestock
LivestockLivestock
Livestock
 
Why can’t i remember
Why can’t i rememberWhy can’t i remember
Why can’t i remember
 
Weather Part 2
Weather Part 2Weather Part 2
Weather Part 2
 
Weather Part 1
Weather Part 1Weather Part 1
Weather Part 1
 
Animal organ systems
Animal organ systemsAnimal organ systems
Animal organ systems
 
Specialtycrops
SpecialtycropsSpecialtycrops
Specialtycrops
 
Water testing
Water testingWater testing
Water testing
 
Asexual reproduction
Asexual reproductionAsexual reproduction
Asexual reproduction
 
Plant reproduction
Plant reproductionPlant reproduction
Plant reproduction
 
Root anatomy
Root anatomyRoot anatomy
Root anatomy
 
Water
WaterWater
Water
 

Dernier

Histor y of HAM Radio presentation slide
Histor y of HAM Radio presentation slideHistor y of HAM Radio presentation slide
Histor y of HAM Radio presentation slidevu2urc
 
GenCyber Cyber Security Day Presentation
GenCyber Cyber Security Day PresentationGenCyber Cyber Security Day Presentation
GenCyber Cyber Security Day PresentationMichael W. Hawkins
 
How to convert PDF to text with Nanonets
How to convert PDF to text with NanonetsHow to convert PDF to text with Nanonets
How to convert PDF to text with Nanonetsnaman860154
 
2024: Domino Containers - The Next Step. News from the Domino Container commu...
2024: Domino Containers - The Next Step. News from the Domino Container commu...2024: Domino Containers - The Next Step. News from the Domino Container commu...
2024: Domino Containers - The Next Step. News from the Domino Container commu...Martijn de Jong
 
08448380779 Call Girls In Civil Lines Women Seeking Men
08448380779 Call Girls In Civil Lines Women Seeking Men08448380779 Call Girls In Civil Lines Women Seeking Men
08448380779 Call Girls In Civil Lines Women Seeking MenDelhi Call girls
 
The Codex of Business Writing Software for Real-World Solutions 2.pptx
The Codex of Business Writing Software for Real-World Solutions 2.pptxThe Codex of Business Writing Software for Real-World Solutions 2.pptx
The Codex of Business Writing Software for Real-World Solutions 2.pptxMalak Abu Hammad
 
Kalyanpur ) Call Girls in Lucknow Finest Escorts Service 🍸 8923113531 🎰 Avail...
Kalyanpur ) Call Girls in Lucknow Finest Escorts Service 🍸 8923113531 🎰 Avail...Kalyanpur ) Call Girls in Lucknow Finest Escorts Service 🍸 8923113531 🎰 Avail...
Kalyanpur ) Call Girls in Lucknow Finest Escorts Service 🍸 8923113531 🎰 Avail...gurkirankumar98700
 
[2024]Digital Global Overview Report 2024 Meltwater.pdf
[2024]Digital Global Overview Report 2024 Meltwater.pdf[2024]Digital Global Overview Report 2024 Meltwater.pdf
[2024]Digital Global Overview Report 2024 Meltwater.pdfhans926745
 
Injustice - Developers Among Us (SciFiDevCon 2024)
Injustice - Developers Among Us (SciFiDevCon 2024)Injustice - Developers Among Us (SciFiDevCon 2024)
Injustice - Developers Among Us (SciFiDevCon 2024)Allon Mureinik
 
A Call to Action for Generative AI in 2024
A Call to Action for Generative AI in 2024A Call to Action for Generative AI in 2024
A Call to Action for Generative AI in 2024Results
 
Top 5 Benefits OF Using Muvi Live Paywall For Live Streams
Top 5 Benefits OF Using Muvi Live Paywall For Live StreamsTop 5 Benefits OF Using Muvi Live Paywall For Live Streams
Top 5 Benefits OF Using Muvi Live Paywall For Live StreamsRoshan Dwivedi
 
Salesforce Community Group Quito, Salesforce 101
Salesforce Community Group Quito, Salesforce 101Salesforce Community Group Quito, Salesforce 101
Salesforce Community Group Quito, Salesforce 101Paola De la Torre
 
Strategies for Unlocking Knowledge Management in Microsoft 365 in the Copilot...
Strategies for Unlocking Knowledge Management in Microsoft 365 in the Copilot...Strategies for Unlocking Knowledge Management in Microsoft 365 in the Copilot...
Strategies for Unlocking Knowledge Management in Microsoft 365 in the Copilot...Drew Madelung
 
Unblocking The Main Thread Solving ANRs and Frozen Frames
Unblocking The Main Thread Solving ANRs and Frozen FramesUnblocking The Main Thread Solving ANRs and Frozen Frames
Unblocking The Main Thread Solving ANRs and Frozen FramesSinan KOZAK
 
08448380779 Call Girls In Friends Colony Women Seeking Men
08448380779 Call Girls In Friends Colony Women Seeking Men08448380779 Call Girls In Friends Colony Women Seeking Men
08448380779 Call Girls In Friends Colony Women Seeking MenDelhi Call girls
 
Scaling API-first – The story of a global engineering organization
Scaling API-first – The story of a global engineering organizationScaling API-first – The story of a global engineering organization
Scaling API-first – The story of a global engineering organizationRadu Cotescu
 
WhatsApp 9892124323 ✓Call Girls In Kalyan ( Mumbai ) secure service
WhatsApp 9892124323 ✓Call Girls In Kalyan ( Mumbai ) secure serviceWhatsApp 9892124323 ✓Call Girls In Kalyan ( Mumbai ) secure service
WhatsApp 9892124323 ✓Call Girls In Kalyan ( Mumbai ) secure servicePooja Nehwal
 
Slack Application Development 101 Slides
Slack Application Development 101 SlidesSlack Application Development 101 Slides
Slack Application Development 101 Slidespraypatel2
 
Raspberry Pi 5: Challenges and Solutions in Bringing up an OpenGL/Vulkan Driv...
Raspberry Pi 5: Challenges and Solutions in Bringing up an OpenGL/Vulkan Driv...Raspberry Pi 5: Challenges and Solutions in Bringing up an OpenGL/Vulkan Driv...
Raspberry Pi 5: Challenges and Solutions in Bringing up an OpenGL/Vulkan Driv...Igalia
 
IAC 2024 - IA Fast Track to Search Focused AI Solutions
IAC 2024 - IA Fast Track to Search Focused AI SolutionsIAC 2024 - IA Fast Track to Search Focused AI Solutions
IAC 2024 - IA Fast Track to Search Focused AI SolutionsEnterprise Knowledge
 

Dernier (20)

Histor y of HAM Radio presentation slide
Histor y of HAM Radio presentation slideHistor y of HAM Radio presentation slide
Histor y of HAM Radio presentation slide
 
GenCyber Cyber Security Day Presentation
GenCyber Cyber Security Day PresentationGenCyber Cyber Security Day Presentation
GenCyber Cyber Security Day Presentation
 
How to convert PDF to text with Nanonets
How to convert PDF to text with NanonetsHow to convert PDF to text with Nanonets
How to convert PDF to text with Nanonets
 
2024: Domino Containers - The Next Step. News from the Domino Container commu...
2024: Domino Containers - The Next Step. News from the Domino Container commu...2024: Domino Containers - The Next Step. News from the Domino Container commu...
2024: Domino Containers - The Next Step. News from the Domino Container commu...
 
08448380779 Call Girls In Civil Lines Women Seeking Men
08448380779 Call Girls In Civil Lines Women Seeking Men08448380779 Call Girls In Civil Lines Women Seeking Men
08448380779 Call Girls In Civil Lines Women Seeking Men
 
The Codex of Business Writing Software for Real-World Solutions 2.pptx
The Codex of Business Writing Software for Real-World Solutions 2.pptxThe Codex of Business Writing Software for Real-World Solutions 2.pptx
The Codex of Business Writing Software for Real-World Solutions 2.pptx
 
Kalyanpur ) Call Girls in Lucknow Finest Escorts Service 🍸 8923113531 🎰 Avail...
Kalyanpur ) Call Girls in Lucknow Finest Escorts Service 🍸 8923113531 🎰 Avail...Kalyanpur ) Call Girls in Lucknow Finest Escorts Service 🍸 8923113531 🎰 Avail...
Kalyanpur ) Call Girls in Lucknow Finest Escorts Service 🍸 8923113531 🎰 Avail...
 
[2024]Digital Global Overview Report 2024 Meltwater.pdf
[2024]Digital Global Overview Report 2024 Meltwater.pdf[2024]Digital Global Overview Report 2024 Meltwater.pdf
[2024]Digital Global Overview Report 2024 Meltwater.pdf
 
Injustice - Developers Among Us (SciFiDevCon 2024)
Injustice - Developers Among Us (SciFiDevCon 2024)Injustice - Developers Among Us (SciFiDevCon 2024)
Injustice - Developers Among Us (SciFiDevCon 2024)
 
A Call to Action for Generative AI in 2024
A Call to Action for Generative AI in 2024A Call to Action for Generative AI in 2024
A Call to Action for Generative AI in 2024
 
Top 5 Benefits OF Using Muvi Live Paywall For Live Streams
Top 5 Benefits OF Using Muvi Live Paywall For Live StreamsTop 5 Benefits OF Using Muvi Live Paywall For Live Streams
Top 5 Benefits OF Using Muvi Live Paywall For Live Streams
 
Salesforce Community Group Quito, Salesforce 101
Salesforce Community Group Quito, Salesforce 101Salesforce Community Group Quito, Salesforce 101
Salesforce Community Group Quito, Salesforce 101
 
Strategies for Unlocking Knowledge Management in Microsoft 365 in the Copilot...
Strategies for Unlocking Knowledge Management in Microsoft 365 in the Copilot...Strategies for Unlocking Knowledge Management in Microsoft 365 in the Copilot...
Strategies for Unlocking Knowledge Management in Microsoft 365 in the Copilot...
 
Unblocking The Main Thread Solving ANRs and Frozen Frames
Unblocking The Main Thread Solving ANRs and Frozen FramesUnblocking The Main Thread Solving ANRs and Frozen Frames
Unblocking The Main Thread Solving ANRs and Frozen Frames
 
08448380779 Call Girls In Friends Colony Women Seeking Men
08448380779 Call Girls In Friends Colony Women Seeking Men08448380779 Call Girls In Friends Colony Women Seeking Men
08448380779 Call Girls In Friends Colony Women Seeking Men
 
Scaling API-first – The story of a global engineering organization
Scaling API-first – The story of a global engineering organizationScaling API-first – The story of a global engineering organization
Scaling API-first – The story of a global engineering organization
 
WhatsApp 9892124323 ✓Call Girls In Kalyan ( Mumbai ) secure service
WhatsApp 9892124323 ✓Call Girls In Kalyan ( Mumbai ) secure serviceWhatsApp 9892124323 ✓Call Girls In Kalyan ( Mumbai ) secure service
WhatsApp 9892124323 ✓Call Girls In Kalyan ( Mumbai ) secure service
 
Slack Application Development 101 Slides
Slack Application Development 101 SlidesSlack Application Development 101 Slides
Slack Application Development 101 Slides
 
Raspberry Pi 5: Challenges and Solutions in Bringing up an OpenGL/Vulkan Driv...
Raspberry Pi 5: Challenges and Solutions in Bringing up an OpenGL/Vulkan Driv...Raspberry Pi 5: Challenges and Solutions in Bringing up an OpenGL/Vulkan Driv...
Raspberry Pi 5: Challenges and Solutions in Bringing up an OpenGL/Vulkan Driv...
 
IAC 2024 - IA Fast Track to Search Focused AI Solutions
IAC 2024 - IA Fast Track to Search Focused AI SolutionsIAC 2024 - IA Fast Track to Search Focused AI Solutions
IAC 2024 - IA Fast Track to Search Focused AI Solutions
 

Introduction to Froestry

  • 1. Recognizing the Importance of Forests Microsoft.com
  • 2. What is a forest? a. A forest is a living, complexly interrelated community of trees and associated plants and animals. Timberland is forest land capable of producing wood in excess of 20 cubic feet per acre per year and not restricted from being harvested.
  • 3. What is the importance of forests? Trees provide food, medicines, fuel, shelter, protection, shade, tools and other needs. Wood is the raw material from which forest industries manufacture countless products for home, factory and office. The United States has 540 million acres of timberland and is only producing about half of their biological potential. The United States is dependent on wood imports.
  • 4. What is the importance of forests? The social values of forests are the benefits they provide for outdoor recreation activities such as: hunting, fishing, bird watching, nature study, camping, picnicking, hiking and scenic or aesthetic value.
  • 5. What are the types of forests land? Total forest land is the sum of timberland, reserved forest land, and other forest land. Through improvement of forest management practices by timberland owners, the United States can become less dependent on other nations for its wood sources. Reserved forest land is defined as forest land restricted from harvesting. Other forest land has trees but does not meet the minimal required stocking level of timberland.
  • 6.
  • 7. What are the beneficial influences of trees? II. Besides the direct benefits forests provide in the way of products, other values are derived from trees. Microsoft.com
  • 8. What are the beneficial influences of trees? Over an extended area, forests do not affect climate. However, in a localized area, they do have an effect on climate conditions. Forests influence temperature, humidity, and wind velocity. The forest canopy is a barrier to direct sunlight and shades the forest floor, influencing the air temperature, soil temperature and soil moisture. The leaves and branches of trees break the impact of rain, causing it to drip rather than to reach the earth with force. Upon reaching the forest floor, rain is absorbed by the ground litter and humus, reducing surface runoff.
  • 9. What are the beneficial influences of trees? The leaf litter and humus keep the soil mellow, porous and permeable, which allows seepage of water into the substratum, where it is stored. Microsoft.com
  • 10. What are the beneficial influences of trees? The forest soil tends to not freeze as deep, as it absorbs more water from melting snow. In forested watersheds, where management is carefully practiced, extremes of water flow in winter and summer are avoided, aiding in flood control. By delaying the melting of the snow and by the absorption of snow water into the soil, forests prolong the period of runoff, which helps to reduce flooding and to equalize stream flow in the streams and rivers.
  • 11. What are the beneficial influences of trees? Forest vegetation shades water courses from the full heat of the sun preventing excessive stream temperatures and producing clear streams that are ideal for fish life. Forest streams usually have a minimum amount of sediment, even during periods of high stream flow.
  • 12. What are the beneficial influences of trees? Forests help to reduce wind erosion. The harmful effects of the wind drying out and blowing the soil, protection against drifting snows and shelter crops, livestock, homes and barns from hot or cold winds. Many kinds of wildlife are found in the forest, where they obtain food and shelter.
  • 13. What is the economic importance of forests? Timber, grazing, recreation, water, minerals, fish, and wildlife are all examples of income-producing values of forests. The greatest economic contribution of forests is the products derived from trees. Ours is a wood-oriented society; wood is a important part of houses, apartment buildings, many commercial and industrial structures, newspapers, cereal boxes, furniture and sports equipment.
  • 14. What is the economic importance of forests? 1. Trees from forests are made into lumber, pulpwood, veneer, poles, railroad ties, and piling. a. Lumber is further used to produce furniture and other manufactured items.
  • 15. What is the economic importance of forests? b. Pulpwood is wood cut or prepared for manufacture into pulp, which can be made into paper products. c. Veneer is a thin sheet of wood. d. Piling is a round timber driven into the ground to support other structures.
  • 16. What is the economic importance of forests? The same income producing resources have certain social values that may not be income producing but still have worth in terms of public good or interest. Social values are generally values related to aesthetic considerations, such as scenic qualities of a forest area.
  • 17. What is the economic importance of forests? Other social values are concerned with biological aspects, such as the uniqueness of the plants and animals found in the forest. Forests with high social values are being reserved for future public and private parks and monuments.
  • 18. What is the economic importance of forests? Some of these areas may have other concurrent uses, such as recreation or establishment of biological preserves. Conflict of interests often arise between economic and social uses of forest land. An example involves areas that are flooded for water reservoirs or set aside in preserve and can no longer supply timber for wood-using industries.
  • 19. What are the major parts of a tree and their functions? A tree is a woody plant having one well-defined stem and a formed crown. There are three major parts to a tree. They are the roots, the trunk, and the crown.
  • 20. Roots The roots are the part of the tree typically found below the soil surface. The root system serves to anchor and support the tree. Roots take water and nutrients from the soil for plant growth.
  • 21. Roots Roots also act as a storehouse for manufactured food for the plant. There are two basic types of tree roots. They are tap and fibrous. A tap root system has one large root with a number of small roots. A fibrous root system has many roots that spread and branch in the soil.
  • 22.
  • 23. Trunk The trunk of the tree serves to conduct nutrients and water from the roots to the manufacturing portion of the tree, represented by the crown.
  • 24. Trunk The trunk also produces the bulk of the useful wood in a tree. The trunk is comprised of a series of rings. Under normal conditions, one ring is produced each year.
  • 25. Trunk Each section of the ring has a specific purpose in the life of the tree. In large trees, the center portion of the trunk is darker-colored and is known as heartwood. Here the cells have ceased to function.
  • 26. Trunk In other words, the wood in this portion of the tree is dead. The heartwood provides strength to the tree and keeps it upright.
  • 27. Trunk Outward from the heartwood is the lighter colored wood known as sapwood, or xylem. This is the living portion of the tree. It is the means by which raw nutrients and water are carried from the roots to the crown. The sapwood also serves as the storage area for some of the food made in the leaves.
  • 28. Trunk Outside the sapwood is the cambium. This active layer of cells is responsible for the growth of the tree. Each year the cambium forms a new annual ring. This is how trees grow in diameter.
  • 29. Trunk Immediately outward from the cambium are the living cells called the inner bark or the phloem. The tissue carries food made in the leaves down to the branches, trunk, and roots. The phloem is protected by dead, nonfunctioning outer bark.
  • 30. Trunk The bark, which protects the trunk of the tree, is formed by the cork cambium, a thin layer of cells between the phloem and the bark itself.
  • 31.
  • 32. Crown The crown of the top part of the tree that includes branches, twigs, buds, and leaves. A major role of the crown is to hold leaves to collect sunlight so photosynthesis can occur. It is also in this section of the tree that seeds, fruits, nuts, and berries are produced. The crown can also served as a nesting site for wildlife such as squirrels and birds.
  • 33.
  • 34.
  • 35. What Are Some Of The Most Important Chemical Processes That Take Place Within a Tree? Like any other type of plant, trees require several chemical processes to occur within the plant for survival. These reactions allow the plant to produce food, expel waste, and regulate plant temperature. Three of the most important reactions that occur within a tree are photosynthesis, respiration, and transpiration.
  • 36. Photosynthesis Photosynthesis is a series of complex chemical reactions in which carbon dioxide from the air and water from the soil are converted into carbohydrates (starches and sugars), with oxygen as a by-product. Nutrients and water from the roots are carried to the leaves by the xylem.
  • 37. Photosynthesis The carbohydrates manufactured by the leaves are transported and used throughout the tree as the food materials for life support, growth, and reproduction.
  • 38.
  • 39. Respiration The process of consuming carbohydrates and oxygen to obtain energy for the biological processes of life support, growth and reproduction is called respiration. Although a growing tree uses oxygen in respiration, the amount of oxygen consumed is much less than the amount of oxygen produced in the separate process of photosynthesis.
  • 40. Transpiration The loss of water vapor in plants is called transpiration. This occurs as a product of the process of respiration. Most of the water vapor escapes through structures in the leaf called stomata, which are located on the underside of the leaf. The primary function of the stomata is to regulate the exchange of carbon dioxide and water vapor with the atmosphere.
  • 41.
  • 42.
  • 43.
  • 44.
  • 45. How Do Trees Reproduce? There are two methods by which trees reproduce: seed reproduction and vegetative reproduction (sprouting, suckering, and layering). Most trees reproduce by seed, but many can also reproduce vegetatively. Broad-leaved trees will usually sprout from cut stems, but most needle-leaved trees, or conifers, will not sprout.
  • 46. Reproduction Suckering is the sending up of shoots from underground roots. Layering occurs when the lower branches of a tree touch the ground and the branch tips become covered by plant and leaf litter. A branch tip then develops roots extending into the soil and eventually a new tree grows from the branch tip.
  • 47. Seed Reproduction Seed reproduction is the most common method of reproduction utilized by trees. There is a series of stages that the tree goes through in the development of seeds. In broadleaved trees, seeds are produced when then fertilized ovules, which are found in the ovaries of the flower, ripen. In most instances, the fruit of broad-leaved trees matures one year from the time it was fertilized.
  • 48. Seed Reproduction Seed production occurs differently in conifers. In these needle-leaved trees, the ovules are born naked on cone scales and are not enclosed in an ovary. At pollination time the female cone (containing the ovules) scales spread apart for a short period of time. At this same time, male cones produce pollen.
  • 49. Seed Reproduction It is hoped that when the scales of the female cone is spread apart that some of the pollen will fertilize the ovule. Upon ripening, the cone dries out, the scales come apart, and the winged seeds are dispersed by wind.
  • 50. Common Tree Seeds Naturalist.com
  • 51. What are the national policies that impact wildlife conservation? National Park Service Enacted in 1916. Federal agency responsible for the care of the national parks.
  • 52. What is the history of wildlife conservation? Yellowstone National Park First national park in the world. Its purpose was to preserve the natural resources of the area. 1872 Located in Idaho, Montana & Wyoming 3,472 sq. miles 2,221,773 sq. acres
  • 53. Historical People in Wildlife Conservation John Muir (1838–1914) Partly responsible for the development of Yellowstone and Sequoia National Parks. Encouraged President Roosevelt to establish these parks. Started the Sierra Club. California forest named after him.
  • 54. Historical People in Wildlife Conservation Theodore Roosevelt (1858–1919) Known as the “Father of the Conservation Movement”. Passed legislations to help protect natural resource.
  • 55. Historical People in Wildlife Conservation Gifford Pinchot (1865–1946) One of the first leaders of what is now known as the U.S. Forest Service. Wrote a book called The Fight for Conservation. His efforts focused on the conservation of forests.
  • 56. National Forest Service I. There are 191 million acres within the nation forests of the United States which are under the control of the United States Department of Agriculture Forest Service. II. The Forest Service manages public lands, known collectively as the National Forest System, located in 44 States, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands.
  • 57. National Forest Service The lands comprise 8.5 percent of the total land area in the United States. The natural resources on these lands are some of the Nation’s greatest assets and have major economic, environmental, and social significance for all Americans. Forest Service manages the forest in a way that allows people to share and enjoy the forest, while conserving the environment for generations to come.
  • 58. The Forest Service accomplishes this task through five main activities: 1. Protection and management of natural resources on National Forest System lands. 2. Research on all aspects of forestry, rangeland management, and forest resource utilization. 3. Community assistance and cooperation with State and local governments, forest industries, and private landowners to help protect and manage non-Federal forest and associated range and watershed lands to improve conditions in rural areas.
  • 59. The Forest Service accomplishes this task through five main activities: 4. Achieving and supporting an effective workforce that reflects the full range of diversity of the American people. 5. International assistance in formulating policy and coordinating U.S. support for the protection and sound management of the world’s forest resources.
  • 60. The Forest Service uses prescribed fire to manage forests A prescribed fire is a managed, intentional fire set by humans for a specific purpose. A prescribed fire is usually controlled and contained within a specific area. A properly controlled prescribed fire produces several benefits for the forest, wildlife, and people.
  • 61. Some of the benefits are: 1. Reducing the hazard of wildfire by removing fuel from the forest floor. A wildfire is a fire that endangers people or property, which is not within an area designated to be managed by the use of fire, or that, in conjunction with weather or other conditions, may threaten to expand, thus endangering people, property, or non fire-management areas.
  • 62. Benefits of a Prescribed Fire 2. Preparing sites for seedlings and planting. A prescribed burn can remove other plants that will act as competition for nutrients and water to the new trees. 3. Removing undesirable trees and brush cluttering the forest understory.
  • 63. Benefits of a Prescribed Fire 4. Assist in controlling forest diseases. 5. Improves the quality of grass for grazing by removing brush and dried weeds.
  • 64. DifferentTypes of Forest Fires II. The USDA Forest Service categorizes forest fires into three general types: surface, ground, and crown fires. More than one of these types of fires may occur within the same forest fire.
  • 65.
  • 66. Sources of Forest Fires Forest fires can be natural, often by lightning strikes. However, people cause the majority of forest fires. Some of the major sources of forest wildfires are: Incendiary – purposefully set (Arson) Debris Burning – gets out of control causing damage Smokers – dropping a still burning match or cigarette Lightning – Electrical storms w/o rain produce 9% of forest fires