Implications of the selective management system on the management of the hill forests of Peninsular Malaysia.

The paper discusses the two requirements of the Selective Management System (SMS) as applied to the hill forests of Peninsular Malaysia : the need for economic cuts and the necessity of leaving sufficient advance regeneration in the residual stands to ensure adequate commercial timber volumes at su...

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Main Author: Universiti Putra Malaysia,
Other Authors: Hadi, Yusuf
Format: Conference or Workshop Item
Language:English
English
Published: Universiti Pertanian Malaysia 1987
Online Access:http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/17797/1/ID%2017797.pdf
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/17797/
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spelling my.upm.eprints.177972013-11-12T06:26:14Z http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/17797/ Implications of the selective management system on the management of the hill forests of Peninsular Malaysia. Universiti Putra Malaysia, The paper discusses the two requirements of the Selective Management System (SMS) as applied to the hill forests of Peninsular Malaysia : the need for economic cuts and the necessity of leaving sufficient advance regeneration in the residual stands to ensure adequate commercial timber volumes at subsequent harvests. Current guidelines expect a minimum harvest of 35 to 40 cubic m/ha every 25 to 30 years by specifying minimum cutting limits of 50 cm and 45 cm for diptrerocarp and non-dipterocarp species, respectively. The guidelines specify that the residual stands should contain a minimum of 32 sound stems of commercial species in the 30-45 cm dbh class or its equivalence in the whole range of tree sizes in the residual stands. A stem greater than 45 cm dbh is equivalent to 2 stems in the 30-45 cm dbh class, and a stem in the 15-30cm dbh class has an equivalent value of 1/3. The percentage of the number of dipterocarp stems greater than 30 cm dbh in the residual stands must be the same as or higher than that in the original stand. Implementation of the SMS is seen as balancing what is to be removed in the immediate harvest and what is to be left for future harvests. The implications on harvest volumes in the current and subsequent harvest and on the continued productivity of the forest are discussed. Universiti Pertanian Malaysia Hadi, Yusuf Muktar, Ashari Mohamed, Shukri Awang, Kamis 1987 Conference or Workshop Item NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/17797/1/ID%2017797.pdf Universiti Putra Malaysia, (1987) Implications of the selective management system on the management of the hill forests of Peninsular Malaysia. In: Workshop on impact of man's activities on tropical upland forest ecosystems, 3-6 february 1986, UPM,serdang selangor. (pp. 69-80). (Unpublished) English
institution Universiti Putra Malaysia
building UPM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Putra Malaysia
content_source UPM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://psasir.upm.edu.my/
language English
English
description The paper discusses the two requirements of the Selective Management System (SMS) as applied to the hill forests of Peninsular Malaysia : the need for economic cuts and the necessity of leaving sufficient advance regeneration in the residual stands to ensure adequate commercial timber volumes at subsequent harvests. Current guidelines expect a minimum harvest of 35 to 40 cubic m/ha every 25 to 30 years by specifying minimum cutting limits of 50 cm and 45 cm for diptrerocarp and non-dipterocarp species, respectively. The guidelines specify that the residual stands should contain a minimum of 32 sound stems of commercial species in the 30-45 cm dbh class or its equivalence in the whole range of tree sizes in the residual stands. A stem greater than 45 cm dbh is equivalent to 2 stems in the 30-45 cm dbh class, and a stem in the 15-30cm dbh class has an equivalent value of 1/3. The percentage of the number of dipterocarp stems greater than 30 cm dbh in the residual stands must be the same as or higher than that in the original stand. Implementation of the SMS is seen as balancing what is to be removed in the immediate harvest and what is to be left for future harvests. The implications on harvest volumes in the current and subsequent harvest and on the continued productivity of the forest are discussed.
author2 Hadi, Yusuf
author_facet Hadi, Yusuf
Universiti Putra Malaysia,
format Conference or Workshop Item
author Universiti Putra Malaysia,
spellingShingle Universiti Putra Malaysia,
Implications of the selective management system on the management of the hill forests of Peninsular Malaysia.
author_sort Universiti Putra Malaysia,
title Implications of the selective management system on the management of the hill forests of Peninsular Malaysia.
title_short Implications of the selective management system on the management of the hill forests of Peninsular Malaysia.
title_full Implications of the selective management system on the management of the hill forests of Peninsular Malaysia.
title_fullStr Implications of the selective management system on the management of the hill forests of Peninsular Malaysia.
title_full_unstemmed Implications of the selective management system on the management of the hill forests of Peninsular Malaysia.
title_sort implications of the selective management system on the management of the hill forests of peninsular malaysia.
publisher Universiti Pertanian Malaysia
publishDate 1987
url http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/17797/1/ID%2017797.pdf
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/17797/
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score 13.211869