تحقیقات جنگل و صنوبر ایران (May 2013)

Effect of thinning operations on maple (Acer velutinum) plantations (Case study: Mazandaran Wood and Paper Company's Forest Management Project)

  • Ali Reza Eslami,
  • Mohammad Reza Jahanaray,
  • Ghasem Habibi Bibalani,
  • Majid Hasani

DOI
https://doi.org/10.22092/ijfpr.2013.3754
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21, no. 1
pp. 76 – 85

Abstract

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Maple (A. velutinum) is a native species in Iran, used mostly in monoculture or mixed forest plantations. Silvicultural operations in such stands, particularly thinning might strengthen their wood production and improve their quantitative and qualitative characteristics. For this reason, two maple stands were selected which were planted during 1991 by Mazandaran Wood and Paper Company at Sari area of Caspian Forests. One of the stands (Berenjestanak District) was thinned and the other one (Chaibagh District) was unthinned (control). The systematic and random sampling method with circular plots (100m2) was implemented and 39 and 33 plots were allocated in the thinned and control stands, respectively. The measured characteristics of the species consisted of stem diameter, total height, density, stem quality, crown diameter and form factor. Results showed that there were significant differences between the two stands in respect to the measured characteristics (ρ

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