history of
frequently
ions, wind-
ying pocket
y necessary
d survey is
er hectare).
the growth
(317/, miles
unts should
1anagement
the mana-
ind volume
are assem-
ese include
ach period
10ds and is
t should be
h age class
the various
erpretation
an impor-
nsideration
: be located
efficiently
; and on the
arcut areas,
MI of these
rial photo-
ie planning
costs here
e of aerial
yvement of
pecies must
artially cut
die before
t be plant-
hotographs
species can
often be determined by stereoscopic examination of the photographs, especially if
the desired crop is coniferous and the weed species are hardwoods. Crown size as
measured on the photographs may be used to determine the relative vigor of the
individual stems within a given age class, and thus to direct the forester to the
stands requiring the most immediate thinning. Areas requiring planting can be
located and mapped on the aerial photographs. The amount and kind of planting
stock needed can usually be calculated from the photographic information, supple-
mented by only a rapid field check.
Finally, no management plan is of value unless it is put into effect and revised
from time to time as needed. Aerial photographs play an important part in carry-
ing out the management plan and in the routine management of the forest. They
are of particular importance in normal aquisition and timber sale activities. Sup-
pose a land-owner comes to the forester and offers to sell an outlying tract of
timber. A quick look at the stereoscopic image of the tract will tell the forester
more about the land and the timber on it than a field trip requiring several hours
or even a full day. Again, take the case of the farmer or logger who wishes to pur-
chase a small amount of stumpage on land under the supervision of the forester.
If the area is one of extensive management and of low value, the arrangements for
the sale may be completed purely from study of the photographs, as the profit
from the sale might well be entirely consumed by the forester making a trip to the
area in question. Even where intensive management or high values requires careful
on-the-ground tree-marking and cutting supervision, much of the detail of the
sale can be worked out from the photographs.
The value of aerial photographs in maintaining records of the forest should not be
overlooked. Complete precision coverage of the area may be justified only once
every 10 years. In the intervening period, however, photography with a hand
camera from a light aircraft will serve to record fires, insect defoliation, logging
progress, and other changes in the vegetation of the tract. Such photographs can be
matched in to the earlier precise photographic coverage to produce reasonably
accurate maps. Timber-management concerns are increasingly finding that photo-
graphy provides a cheaper and more accurate means of maintaining records than
does ground survey. In many areas of relatively terrain, the photographs them-
selves are being used as the vehicle of record, without the preparation of maps.
Cutting areas, fires, road and trail development, and various management and
silvicultural activities are inked in directly on the contact prints or mosaics, and
these in turn are filed as permanent records.
[In conclusion, let us return to the economic aspects of using aerial photo-
graphs in forest management. As stated earlier, it seems probable that many forest
land owners in the United States and Canada would be willing to pay 25 cents
per acre for an accurate and detailed management plan. This sum presumes forest
land containing at least some merchantable timber and at least partially-stocked
with second-growth on favorable sites. Taking the Itasca forest management pro-
ject as example, the aerial photographs (autumn panchromatic, 1 : 12,000) cost 2
cents per acre. The photo-interpretation and the construction of the planimetric
and the forest stand map is estimated to cost about 4 cents per acre. Ground survey
to obtain volume, growth, and other forest information is planned for about 10
cents per acre. The total thus far is approximately 16 cents per acre. For the
remaining 9 cents per acre, it would be possible to pay a high-grade forester full
7