Nature provides in the forest merely those varieties that will survive. Man, by interfering in Nature's processes but obeying her laws, raises what he wants. Nature says: those trees that survive are fit and does not care whether the trees be straight or crooked, branched or clear. Man says: those trees shall survive which are fit for human uses. Man raises better grains and fruits and vegetables than Nature, unaided, can, and, in Europe, better trees for lumber. In America there has been such an abundance of trees good enough for our purposes that we have simply gone out and gathered them, just as a savage goes out to gather berries and nuts. Some day our descendants will smile at our treatment of forests much as we smile at root-digging savages, unless, indeed, we so far destroy the forests that they will be more angered than amused. In Europe and Japan, the original supply of trees having been exhausted, forests have been cultivated for centuries with the purpose of raising crops larger in quantity and better in quality.
There are various methods used in forest improvement. Improvement cuttings, as the name implies, are cuttings made to improve the quality of the forest, whether by thinning out poor species of trees, unsound trees, trees crowding more valuable ones, or trees called "wolves"; that is, trees unduly overshadowing others. Improvement cuttings are often necessary as a preliminary step before any silvicultural system can be applied. Indeed, many of the silvicultural systems involve steady improvement of the forest.
The pruning of branches is a method of improvement, carrying on the natural method by which trees in a forest clean themselves of their branches.
Seeds of valuable species are often sowed, when the conditions are proper, in order to introduce a valuable species, just as brooks and ponds are stocked with fine fish. In general it may be said that improvement methods are only in their infancy, especially in America.
[Footnote 1:] A concise and interesting statement of the relation of the forest to rain and floods is to be found in Pinchot: Primer of Forestry, Bulletin No. 24, Part II, Chap. III.
[Footnote 2:] For an interesting account of an application of this method, see Ward, p. 35.
[Footnote 3:] To encourage such forest extension, the Forest Service is doing much by the publication of bulletins recommending methods and trees suited to special regions, as, e.g., on Forest Planting in Illinois, in the Sand Hill Region of Nebraska, on Coal Lands in Western Pennsylvania, in Western Kansas, in Oklahoma and adjacent regions, etc.
THE USE OF THE FOREST.
- References:*
- I Utilization.
- Pinchot, Primer, II, pp. 14-18, 38-48.
- Bruncken, pp. 121-131, For. Bull. No. 61.
- (1) Protective.
- Pinchot, Primer, II, pp. 66-73.
- Craft, Agric. Yr. Bk., 1905, pp. 636-641, (Map. p. 639.)
- Toumey, Agric. Yr. Bk., 1903, p. 279.
- Bruncken, pp. 166-173.
- For. and Irrig., passim.
- Shaler, I, pp. 485-489.
- (2) Productive.
- Kellogg, For. Bull., No. 74,
- Fernow, For. Invest., p. 9.
- Roth, First Book, p. 133.
- Zon & Clark, Agric. Yr. Bk., 1907, p. 277.
- Boulger, pp. 60-76.
- Roth, Agric. Yr. Bk., 1896, p. 391.
- Fernow, Economics, pp. 23-33.
- (3) Esthetic.
- Roth, First Book, p. 180.
- Roth, First Book, p. 180.
- II Preservation.
- Pinchot, Primer, II, pp. 18-36.
- Bruncken, pp. 95, 190.
- Graves, For. Bull., No. 26, pp. 67-70.
- Roth, First Book, pp. 41-76, 193-194.
- Roth, For. Bull., No. 16, pp. 8, 9.
- Fernow, Economics, 165-196.
- Planting.
- Roth, First Book, pp. 76-94, 195-198.
- Hall, Agric. Yr. Bk., 1902, pp. 145-156.
- For. Circs., Nos. 37, 41, 45, 81.
- Bruncken, pp. 92, 133.
- Forestry Bulletins Nos. 18, 45, 52, 65.
- III Improvement.
- Bruncken, pp. 134-135, 152-160.
- Graves, For. Bull., No. 26, p. 39.
- Pinchot, Adirondack Spruce, p. 4.
- Harwood, pp. 143-181.
- I Utilization.