How Is This Possible?
#1
Nontypical Buck
Thread Starter
Join Date: Apr 2008
Posts: 3,879
How Is This Possible?
If our forests have been over browsed since 1928 ,resulting in inadequate regeneration, how can PA be the leading producer of quality hardwoods.
As usual with most of your spin topics with no credibility- they go nowherebut "Insults"
Pennsylvania Forest Products Association
No matter where you live in Pennsylvania, you aren't far from a beautiful forest. Our forests provide a multitude of products that we use in everyday life, an essential economic benefit to the Commonwealth, recreational and tourism opportunities, as well as providing habitat for wildlife.
Pennsylvania is the largest producer of hardwoods in the country, accounting for 10% of the total hardwood output in the US.
Revenues from Pennsylvania's forest products industry exceed $5.5 billion annually.
Approximately 90,000 Pennsylvanians make a livelihood on the industry. Over 10% of the state's manufacturing workforce is involved in the forest products industry.
There are over 3,000 separate businesses involved in the forest products industry, with a presence in every county of the Commonwealth.
Every dollar paid to a timber owner for trees ultimately generates, through manufacturing, more than $17 worth of economic growth.
More than half of Pennsylvania - about 17 million acres - is forest.
Our forests are increasing in size. The Federal Forest Inventory shows 20% growth in the last decade.
The majority of Pennsylvania's forests, about 70%, are privately owned, including 5% held by forest products companies. Approximately 30% of the forests are government owned.
No matter where you live in Pennsylvania, you aren't far from a beautiful forest. Our forests provide a multitude of products that we use in everyday life, an essential economic benefit to the Commonwealth, recreational and tourism opportunities, as well as providing habitat for wildlife.
Pennsylvania is the largest producer of hardwoods in the country, accounting for 10% of the total hardwood output in the US.
Revenues from Pennsylvania's forest products industry exceed $5.5 billion annually.
Approximately 90,000 Pennsylvanians make a livelihood on the industry. Over 10% of the state's manufacturing workforce is involved in the forest products industry.
There are over 3,000 separate businesses involved in the forest products industry, with a presence in every county of the Commonwealth.
Every dollar paid to a timber owner for trees ultimately generates, through manufacturing, more than $17 worth of economic growth.
More than half of Pennsylvania - about 17 million acres - is forest.
Our forests are increasing in size. The Federal Forest Inventory shows 20% growth in the last decade.
The majority of Pennsylvania's forests, about 70%, are privately owned, including 5% held by forest products companies. Approximately 30% of the forests are government owned.
#6
Typical Buck
Join Date: Jul 2006
Posts: 584
RE: How Is This Possible?
ORIGINAL: bluebird2
If our forests have been over browsed since 1928 ,resulting in inadequate regeneration, how can PA be the leading producer of quality hardwoods.
If our forests have been over browsed since 1928 ,resulting in inadequate regeneration, how can PA be the leading producer of quality hardwoods.
Pennsylvania Forest Products Association
No matter where you live in Pennsylvania, you aren't far from a beautiful forest. Our forests provide a multitude of products that we use in everyday life, an essential economic benefit to the Commonwealth, recreational and tourism opportunities, as well as providing habitat for wildlife.
Pennsylvania is the largest producer of hardwoods in the country, accounting for 10% of the total hardwood output in the US.
Revenues from Pennsylvania's forest products industry exceed $5.5 billion annually.
Approximately 90,000 Pennsylvanians make a livelihood on the industry. Over 10% of the state's manufacturing workforce is involved in the forest products industry.
There are over 3,000 separate businesses involved in the forest products industry, with a presence in every county of the Commonwealth.
Every dollar paid to a timber owner for trees ultimately generates, through manufacturing, more than $17 worth of economic growth.
More than half of Pennsylvania - about 17 million acres - is forest.
Our forests are increasing in size. The Federal Forest Inventory shows 20% growth in the last decade.
The majority of Pennsylvania's forests, about 70%, are privately owned, including 5% held by forest products companies. Approximately 30% of the forests are government owned.
No matter where you live in Pennsylvania, you aren't far from a beautiful forest. Our forests provide a multitude of products that we use in everyday life, an essential economic benefit to the Commonwealth, recreational and tourism opportunities, as well as providing habitat for wildlife.
Pennsylvania is the largest producer of hardwoods in the country, accounting for 10% of the total hardwood output in the US.
Revenues from Pennsylvania's forest products industry exceed $5.5 billion annually.
Approximately 90,000 Pennsylvanians make a livelihood on the industry. Over 10% of the state's manufacturing workforce is involved in the forest products industry.
There are over 3,000 separate businesses involved in the forest products industry, with a presence in every county of the Commonwealth.
Every dollar paid to a timber owner for trees ultimately generates, through manufacturing, more than $17 worth of economic growth.
More than half of Pennsylvania - about 17 million acres - is forest.
Our forests are increasing in size. The Federal Forest Inventory shows 20% growth in the last decade.
The majority of Pennsylvania's forests, about 70%, are privately owned, including 5% held by forest products companies. Approximately 30% of the forests are government owned.
Because the mature forests of today got there start back in the late 1800’s and early 1900’s after the deer had been nearly extirpated from the state.
Pennsylvania had to stock deer after the forests were nearly all clear-cut. But, the forests were well on their way to regenerating to lush new growth because there were no deer to affect the new forests until after 1906 when the first fifty deer were stocked in the state, (Elk and Cameron Counties I believe).
Over the next nineteen years a total of 1,192 were stocked across the northern tier and south central mountains of the state in order to once again have established deer populations.
1906 - Deer first stocked (50 from Michigan). A total 1,192 were purchased and released by the agency from 1906 to 1925.
http://www.pgc.state.pa.us/pgc/cwp/view.asp?a=460&Q=174562&
Therefore, the forests that are providing today’s forest resources got established before there were high deer populations or in many cases even low deer populations that could prevent them from regenerating.
That is today’s forest/wildlife history lesson.
R.S. Bodenhorn
#7
Nontypical Buck
Thread Starter
Join Date: Apr 2008
Posts: 3,879
RE: How Is This Possible?
Therefore, the forests that are providing today’s forest resources got established before there were high deer populations or in many cases even low deer populations that could prevent them from regenerating.
That is today’s forest/wildlife history lesson.
That is today’s forest/wildlife history lesson.
According to DCNR a mature northern hardwood is 80-100 years old ,which is why they harvest 1%/yr. That means the 100 yr/ old oak that is cut today was a seedling in 1928 ,when there was so many deer the PGC closed buck season and only allowed the harvest of antlerless deer.
#9
Nontypical Buck
Thread Starter
Join Date: Apr 2008
Posts: 3,879
RE: How Is This Possible?
ORIGINAL: SteveBNy
So that makes the rankings even less relevant in discussing forest health.
So that makes the rankings even less relevant in discussing forest health.
#10
Typical Buck
Join Date: Jul 2006
Posts: 584
RE: How Is This Possible?
ORIGINAL: bluebird2
You must be confused , because that was actually the joke of the day, not a history lesson.
According to DCNR a mature northern hardwood is 80-100 years old ,which is why they harvest 1%/yr. That means the 100 yr/ old oak that is cut today was a seedling in 1928 ,when there was so many deer the PGC closed buck season and only allowed the harvest of antlerless deer.
Therefore, the forests that are providing today’s forest resources got established before there were high deer populations or in many cases even low deer populations that could prevent them from regenerating.
That is today’s forest/wildlife history lesson.
That is today’s forest/wildlife history lesson.
According to DCNR a mature northern hardwood is 80-100 years old ,which is why they harvest 1%/yr. That means the 100 yr/ old oak that is cut today was a seedling in 1928 ,when there was so many deer the PGC closed buck season and only allowed the harvest of antlerless deer.
It isn’t me who is confused. What you are proving is that you either have no idea what you are talking about or are simply once again trying to mislead people not smart enough to know better. But, then that is your usual method of operation isn’t it?
Even though it takes 80-100 years to grow a mature forest that certainly doesn’t mean the mature trees all falls down at the end of that 100 years if they aren’t harvested. Our forests, in most of this state, are more then that 80-100 years old mark. The problem is that cutting all of the trees that are mature at one time would put us right back to the level of forest and wildlife management ignorance that occurred the last time they did. Another part of the problem has been, and still is in many areas, that when they do cut the present mature forest an over abundant deer herd hasn’t allowed new trees to regenerate to replace the past forest. That too is a stupid situation and only an equally stupid, or seriously misguided, person would what that to problem to continue into the future.
R.S. Bodenhorn