DID
YOU KNOW…?
Fun Facts about Vermont’s Forests
Highlights from
the Most
Recent
(from Frieswyk and Widman,
More than 97% of
Area of timberland has increased 770,000 acres between 1948 and 1997
inventories.
Sawtimber stands continue to dominate
with 61% of
timberland area or 2,742 thousand acres. This is a 10% increase over
the 1983
survey. The forest is continuing to mature.
85% of
Since 1966 most of the increase in the number of
trees
occurred in diameter classes above 8 inches. The number of trees
in the
6 inch diameter class decreased in the same period.
The average volume of trees per acre has increased steadily from
14.4 cords
per acre in 1966 to 26.1 cords per acre in 1997.
When ranked by volume, sugar maple is the leading species followed
by red
maple. Red maple ranked sixth in volume in 1948.
In
Major types of
Forest in
Vermont
Northern hardwoods with sugar maple, beech, and yellow birch the
main
species. This is the composition of the majority of our forests.
White pine/red pine
Spruce-fir
Aspen-birch
Oak-hickory
Elm-ash-red maple
Oak-pine
The first three types cover the greatest areas, and the first five
types
include most of the hardwood and softwood species as major components
of the
group.
Excerpts from
2002
(Vermont Department of Forests, Parks, and Recreation 2003)
Almost 205,000,000 board feet of sawlogs
and
veneer logs were harvested in 2002, of which hardwoods comprised 53%.
Log exports of 69 million board feet were balanced by log imports to
Pulpwood volume harvested was nearly 232,000 cords in 2002, a
reduction of
99,000 cords from the 1991 harvest.
There are 168 sawmills and veneer mills in
Eighty-five percent of the logs processed in
Last modified April 10 2005 06:41 PM