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Why should forests be managed? When the colonists came example, perhaps you would like to build a hunting cabin
to this continent, didn’t they discover some of the most back in the woods. Not only might a timber sale help pay for
magnificent forests that ever existed? And if those forests building materials, but the increased sunlight reaching the
developed so well with so little human intervention, why forest floor may improve visibility and favor the growth of
can’t our present forests be left to grow in the same small forage plants that attract wildlife.
manner?
Most forest landowners have at least one objective for own-
ing their property. It may be to maximize timber production,
Harvest Systems
create wildlife habitat, protect a watershed, or improve their Because the number of trees removed and the way in which
land’s aesthetic or recreational value. Achieving these goals they are transported from a stand, determines what kind of
usually requires that the owners manipulate the forest new stand grows, the cutting method used might aptly be
vegetation. If they waited for nature to take its course, the called a “harvest-regeneration system.” However, for the
changes would most likely occur too slowly, with the out- sake of brevity, we will use a simpler term—harvest system.
come not necessarily being what the owners wanted.
Foresters do not arbitrarily choose a stand’s harvest system.
To hasten and direct the process of change in the forest, Instead, they base the choice on an understanding of the
landowners and foresters practice what is called forest fundamental biological requirements of the species they
management. Management practices that manipulate went to regenerate, and stand characteristics such as soil
vegetation are pretty much limited to planting trees or cut- type, water availability, topography, aspect and past activity.
ting them down. When owners cut immature trees, the
activity is called intermediate cutting or thinning; when they Of the four systems—clearcutting, seed-tree, shelterwood
cut mature trees it is harvest cutting. The focus in this and selection—only the selection system produces an
publication is on harvest cuts; intermediate cuts are uneven-aged stand. In an even-aged stand, less than 20
explained in Extension Bulletin G3398, Wisconsin Wood- years separates the oldest and youngest trees. In uneven-
lands Intermediate Cuttings in Forest Management. aged stands, on the other hand, the oldest and youngest
trees differ by more than 20 years. As a result, they usually
Objectives of Harvest Cuts contain a wide range of sizes from seedlings to mature
trees.
The objectives of harvest cutting are to remove mature trees
and to begin regenerating a new stand of trees. Let’s take a closer look at each harvest system, determine
its characteristics, and see how it results in its unique stand
Harvest cuts are important elements of sound forest structure.
management. By exposing mineral soil when logs are
skidded (dragged) out of the woods, the cuts provide condi- Clearcutting System
tions favorable for regeneration and seedling development.
Seeds of most species germinate and survive best if their In this harvest system, virtually all trees in a stand—large or
roots have immediate contact with mineral soil. Landowners small—are cut during one harvesting operation (Figure 1).
sometimes complete harvest cute on diseased or damaged Although sometimes called “unnatural,” this criticism is
trees, thus realizing some income from a stand that other- unwarranted. Wildfires and high winds “clearcut” large
wise would be a total loss. (A stand is a community of trees tracts of timber each year, but the trees always grow back
distinguishable by age, species composition, or some other eventually. Either the burned trees’ root systems resprout
feature, large enough to be a manageable unit.) new stems, or else seeds from adjacent stands blow into the
area and quickly germinate.
Many landowners don’t consider profit-making to be the
most important reason for owning timberland. However, the Because small woody plants proliferate rapidly after a clear-
income generated from selling forest products can help cut, many wildlife species are attracted to this easily acces-
finance improvements they may want for other goals. For sible food source. Populations of insects, mice, rabbits,
grouse, deer, moose and their predators increase dramati-
tally until trees once again dominate the clearing, shading
out the food supply.
When regenerating species that require full sunlight—such
as aspen, cottonwood, jack and red pine, paper birch, black
cherry, and in some cases, red oak—you will most likely
need to clearcut the mature stand. Clearcutting is also
useful if the mature trees will not increase in value with
additional growth, should not or cannot be used as a seed
source or are not needed to protect the new trees. Aspen
perhaps best illustrates this point. Most aspen stands live
no longer than 40 to 60 years. Hence, they are clearcut to
obtain the greatest volume of wood before they succumb to
natural causes, and to provide the full sunlight required for
successful regeneration.
After a clearcut, the next generation of trees may come from
a variety of sources. Seed may blow into the opening from
the adjacent forest, or seedlings and saplings present
before the cut may take over after being released. Sprouts
(also called suckers) may arise from the stumps and roots of
the cut trees. Alternatively, you can either manually spread
seed over the harvested area, or plant seedlings that were
produced in a nursery. This latter method is quite popular
because you can control the type and spacing of trees.
Compared to other harvest systems, clearcutting is easy to
apply. You don’t need to mark individual trees or worry
about damaging residual trees. It is often possible to use
large, efficient logging equipment when clearcutting an
entire stand. Because there are no residual trees to be
avoided, Ioggers sometimes find it advantageous to skid
long logs or “tree-lengths” out of a stand.
Seed-Tree System
This system is similar to clearcutting except that certain
trees, called seed trees, are left standing to furnish seed for
natural restocking (Figure 2). After the new crop becomes
established, the seed trees are usually removed. The seed-
tree method is used primarily in the South and Northwest,
but seldom in the lake States. Consequently, we won’t
discuss it in detail here.
The seed-tree method has one advantage over clearcutting
in that there is no need to wait for a good seed year before
executing the main harvest.
Shelterwood System
Here, you gradually remove the entire stand in a series of
partial cuttings that extend over a short part of the rotation.
(The rotation is the number of years between a stand’s
inception and its final harvest.) This method is essentially a
clearcut because the parent trees are cut long before the
new stand is mature.
Figure 1. Clearcutting removes all trees from part The shelterwood system normally requires a minimum of
of a mature stand. A new stand grows from root or two cuttings—the least desirable trees in the two lower
stump sprouts, or from the seeds of surrounding (intermediate and overtopped) crown classes being cut first
trees. Later, after the new stand is well along, you (Figure 3). The older stand, which protects the seedlings
can cut neighboring stands of mature trees. Clear- when they are most vulnerable, is cut when the new stand
cutting favors trees that don’t tolerate shade.
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Figure 2. The seed-tree harvest system removes Figure 3. The shelterwood harvest system initially
nearly all mature trees, but leaves enough seed partly logs a mature stand, leaving some of the
trees to reseed the area. Later these seed-trees better trees to grow, cast seed and provide shelter
are logged. for the new stand. The shelter trees are harvested
after seedlings become established.
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requires full sunlight and growing space. White oak, nor- rapidly and develop better form than undamaged seedlings.
thern red oak, yellow birch, basswood and white pine are Thus, normal logging operations may, in fact, improve the
frequently regenerated by the shelterwood method. new regeneration.
The harvest operations are usually applied in the following The system may present foresters with problems when they
order: Preparatory cuts are made to reduce the competi- attempt to regenerate moderately shade-intolerant species,
tion faced by prospective seed bearers. The cuts may such as red oak. Unless enough of the canopy is removed,
expand the crop trees’ crowns, improve their wind firmness the remainder will retard the growth of new trees and
and help decompose dead leaves and branches on the for- regeneration may fail altogether. One way to resolve this
est floor. Most of the trees cut at this stage come from the dilemma is to plant additional oak seedlings in the stand,
overtopped and intermediate crown classes in order to and then reduce the surrounding competition as they grow.
reduce root competition between established trees and
Another cause for concern is the possible damage to the
seedlings. Openings in the canopy (the layer of leaves and
mature residual trees during the felling and skidding opera-
branches formed by the trees’ crowns) should be only as
tions of the preparatory and seed cuts. As a result, loggers
large as necessary to help the seed bearers develop.
must exercise more care while administering shelterwood
One problem with the preparatory cut is that the harvested cuts than with a clearcut. Instead of skidding full-length
trees, because they are small, may be difficult to sell. Few trees, loggers should buck them to either log or pulpstick
mills may be interested in them. Also, the trees removed are lengths before moving them to the landing. These lengths
often undesirable species from both a silvicultural and end- allow machines to make sharper turns, and lessens the risk
product viewpoint. As a result, you will be faced with several of scraping bark off residual trees.
options: choose another harvest system to perpetuate your
stand; cut and leave the small trees, understanding that you Selection System
are making an investment with no immediate return; cut the
The selection system creates and maintains uneven-aged
trees and sell them as firewood; or, include some mature,
stands by removing mature timber either as single, scat-
merchantable trees to make the operation more attractive to
tered trees, or in small groups (Figure 4). Regeneration and
a buyer. Before conducting the operation, be sure you are
intermediate cuttings may extend throughout the entire rota-
aware of its economic consequences.
tion. The delicate seedlings of sugar maple, balsam fir and
The seed cut, if needed, may occur five to 10 years after white ash are best nurtured under the selection system.
the preparatory cut. It removes the least desirable trees
Uneven-aged stands are generally more resistant to insect
remaining in the stand, and creates enough vacant growing
and disease attacks because most pests prefer one age
space to allow seedlings to become established. In addition
class of a tree species. However, if all the age classes are
to cutting the remaining intermediate and suppressed trees,
susceptible, an uneven-aged stand can also perpetuate the
you may cut a few codominant trees.
pest’s existence.
If many seedlings begin growing soon after the preparatory
Ideally, an uneven-aged stand should contain trees of every
cut, the seed cut will probably be unnecessary, and the
age class from one-year-old seedlings to mature timber, with
stand will be ready for the removal cut within three to 10
each age class occupying an equal area. However, such a
years after the preparatory cut. If new trees are slow in
balance is very rare. Even virgin stands have irregular
appearing, you may be forced to wait for several years after
distributions in which some classes have too many or too
the seed cut. The removal cut uncovers the new crop of
few trees.
seedlings by removing the rest of the mature overstory
trees. Theoretically, the oldest age (or largest diameter) class in a
balanced, all-aged stand should be cut each year; by the
The shelterwood method has several advantages over clear- time every age class has been harvested, the seedlings
cutting. First, because the canopy provides both a seed started on the area occupied by the age class that was first
source and protection from soil erosion and other damage, cut will have matured. In practice, however, stands are com-
natural reproduction under a shelterwood system is often monly harvested at approximately 10-year intervals to mini-
more dependable and complete than with either the clear- mize harvest costs and residual stand damage. Also,
cut or seed-tree methods. Second, the rotation may be because stands are unbalanced, foresters usually recom-
shortened because the second crop starts growing before mend cutting in those classes with too many trees, if it is
you harvest the first. Last, since the new trees are typically economically feasible, to adjust the distribution closer to the
10 to 15 feet tall before the last mature trees are cut, the vis- recommended guidelines.
ual impact of the cutting operation may be less severe than
in the other even-aged systems. Because of the care loggers must take to avoid damaging
the growing stock and adjacent crop trees, and the exten-
Because the shelterwood method means that loggers will sive area they must cover during the harvest to obtain suffi-
drag large logs over the young reproduction, you may be cient product volumes, selection logging is typically more
concerned that this will damage the small seedlings. How- difficult and expensive than the other methods.
ever, researchers have found that if you do knock over
young trees of most northern hardwood species, those trees To minimize damage to the stand, it’s desirable to harvest
will resprout to produce trees that frequently grow more with smaller machines. Cut and delimb the trees with a
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chainsaw and buck them to shorter lengths before skidding
them to the landing. Skidding entire trees is usually not
recommended.
There are modifications of the selection system, each with
its own applications, and advantages or disadvantages. The
most common modification is single-tree selection. With
single-tree selection, each little even-aged component of the
uneven-aged stand occupies the space created by removing
one mature individual or a very small clump of less mature
trees. Because reproduction develops on small, scattered
openings, regenerating anything except shade-tolerant
species may be difficult. The number of trees occupying the
site gradually diminishes, either by thinning or natural mor-
tality, until only one tree is left at the rotation’s end for each
one initially cut.
Regeneration
Try to view harvest and regeneration as one integrated proc-
ess. Although we are treating them separately here, always
consider how each affects the other.
Seeds or seedlings of many different species are usually
present in the forest floor, ready to begin growing into any
openings in the crown cover. But, if there are too few seed-
lings of the desired species to maintain dominance in the
stand, you may need to plant more seedlings of that
species. Consider the potential for natural regeneration or
the possible need for planting before harvesting the original
stand.
Figure 4. The single-tree selection system relies Your management objectives, economics and the biological
on frequent cuts and favors shade-tolerant requirements of the species desired should dictate which
species. During each cut, foresters remove regeneration technique you choose.
undesirable trees, thin overly dense areas and
harvest mature trees. This system produces stands
with trees of many ages and has the least dramatic
effects on the stand’s appearance.
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Natural Regeneration After two years, when most of the suckering has occurred,
the stand should contain a minimum of 4,000 to 5,000 stems
Vegetative reproduction is one method to restock some per acre. You need not thin these aspen stands if you intend
cut-over stands. Many species, the oaks, aspen and bass- to produce pulpwood. However, if sawtimber is your goal,
wood in particular, sprout from either the roots of cut stumps you may need one thinning to relieve competition around
(root suckers), or from dormant buds located on the root col- the crop trees.
Iar just below the ground (stump sprouts). Compared with
seedlings, these sprouts usually grow faster because of Natural seeding is another important regeneration method.
their established root systems. Harvesting during late fall or Its success depends on the existence of vigorous seed-
winter, when the trees are dormant, usually causes more bearing trees and adequate seed dispersal, few seed
vigorous sprouting. predators, good germinating conditions and sufficient grow-
ing space.
The quality of stump sprouts depends almost entirely on the
height and age of the parent stump. The number and vigor Most researchers recommend that, for wind-disseminated
of viable sprouts generally decrease with increased parent- seed, openings created during the harvest be downwind
tree age. In addition, sprouts that originate from the root col- from, and no wider than five times the height of adjacent
lar or below the ground are the most vigorous and rot- seed bearers, so that seed can cover the entire opening.
resistant. Researchers usually recommend that you thin all Seed that is not wind-disseminated, such as that of oak,
clumps of hardwood stump sprouts, except aspen, to no hickory and walnut, is dispersed by gravity, water, birds, or
more than two of the most dominant sprouts when they are squirrels and other rodents.
10 to 15 years old.
Aspen stands should be treated differently. According to the Artificial Regeneration
Manager’s Handbook for Aspen in the North Central States, Although natural regeneration is used widely, there are
cut all trees 2 inches DBH or larger during harvest to allow instances in which Iandowners may need to step in and
as much sunlight as possible to reach the forest floor. Any speed up or change the outcome. Artificial regeneration is
remaining overstory vegetation may substantially reduce popular because a forester or landowner can maximize
sucker growth. Full-tree or tree-length harvesting usually product volume by closely controlling the stand’s species
mixes the soil and uproots enough competing vegetation composition, the number of trees per acre and spacing.
during felling and skidding that further site preparation is
unnecessary.
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Artificial regeneration also has disadvantages; cost is the Herbicides are popular for site preparation and vegetation
most prominent. Planting or direct seeding may be the most control. They are probably used more than either prescribed
expensive activity you undertake during the life of your burning or scarification because they are less expensive
stand. The primary considerations when planting include and easier to apply. Many are selective in their activity—for
matching the correct species to the site’s characteristics, example, killing hardwood brush but leaving conifers
and deciding on the stock size, spacing and planting time. untouched. You can apply some herbicides in a variety of
Obtain the advice of a consulting or service forester for this ways, including injection, aerial and hand spraying, and fog-
operation. ging. In most cases, only licensed individuals may apply
them.
Site Preparation
For a new stand to grow quickly, you must sometimes Conclusion
modify a harvested site. This modification is called site
preparation. Site preparation may include disposing of In this publication, we have introduced and described
harvest residue, exposing mineral soil and controlling com- several harvest systems and other forest management prac-
peting vegetation with prescribed burning, herbicides or tices. However, commercial logging operations can seldom
mechanical treatment. be defined as one particular harvest system. Also, many
stands will never lend themselves to a single management
The objective of site preparation is to create growing spaces
prescription. Consequently, view the narrowly defined
that are more favorable to the desired species than to any
systems we’ve described as an introduction to the more
other. A light vegetation cover or well-scattered logging slash
complex realities of forest management.
(debris) over bare mineral soil is good for seedling germina-
tion and establishment. Such conditions allow seeds to con- When outlining management goals, consider their economic
tact mineral soil while being shielded from direct sunlight, and biological feasibility. A professional forester can
thereby reducing heat injury and direct evaporation losses evaluate your property, help decide if your goals are feasible
from the soil. and describe how you can reach them. This publication pro-
vides only general recommendations. To properly evaluate
Looging generally leaves considerable slash on a site. If the your stand’s unique characteristics and to fill in the details,
slash is too heavily concentrated, the piles may cast dense
you will need the expertise of a service or consulting
shade, preventing seedlings from becoming established.
forester.
That is why the slash disposal method you use can deter-
mine the species composition of a stand if left to regenerate
naturally. For example, burning the slash and site will favor
shade-intolerant trees. However, if you leave the slash where
it fell during logging, the more shade-tolerant species pres-
ent before the operation will have the growing advantage.
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Author: Michael Huebschmann is a research specialist and A. Jeff Martin is a professor of forestry with the College of
Agricultural and Life Sciences, University of Wisconsin–Madison. Martin is also a professor of forestry with the University of
Wisconsin-Extension, Cooperative Extension.
Issued in furtherance of Cooperative Extension work, Acts of May 8 and June 30,1914, in cooperation with the U.S.
Department of Agriculture, University of Wisconsin–Extension, CooperativeExtension. University of Wisconsin-Extension
provides equal opportunities in employment and programming, including Title IX and ADA requirements. If you need this
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(608)262-2655.
This publication is available from your Wisconsin county Extension office or from Extension Publications, Rm. 245,
30 N. Murray St., Madison, WI 53715, (608)262-3346.