REPORT OF COMMISSION VII
G VI1-33
Photo interpretation does not furnish knowledge about the forests in France
—these have been known for a long time—but interpretation does present two
very appreciable advantages in intensive forestry. On one hand it permits sim
plifying and specifying the location of observations. On the other hand it per
mits generalizations to a certain degree. The organizations for Colonial Forces
working in black Africa have begun to use photo interpretation in prospecting
the Colonial forests.
Air photographic interpretation is being employed in forest inventories
throughout Canada to minimize the labor of field sampling.
Forest sites are also being interpreted and a system has been developed
whereby land form, land form position, and vegetation are employed to indi
cate soil moisture, parent soil material, and great soil group.
In Norway great studies have been made in use of aerial photos. Aerial pho
tos are used for preparing management plans, for analysis of soil, and analysis of
vegetation cover. Also special surveys in logging, reforestation, survey bound
aries, and land use surveys have been developed.
In 1955 the Airborne Mapping Ltd. of Sweden photographed about 2,000,000
hectares of forest. These photographs will be used for the plotting of special for
estry maps of the scale of 1:10,000 and 1:20,000.
New approaches are developed to inventorying timberlands with the aid of
vertical aerial photographs. New survey methods are applied in New York State
to a sample forest classification of northern hardwood type growing on land of
medium site quality. The importance of field reconnaissance is emphasized.
Procedures are presented for collecting and analyzing data from forest plots,
including the method of constructing tree volume tables based on crown sizes.
Three methods of estimating timber volumes were used: (1) plot cruise on
photos, (2) mean crown diameter, and (3) tree crown count. Photo volume tables
are developed for use in estimating timber volumes for twenty four forest type
and site classifications.
PHOTO INTERPRETATION IN LAND USE MOVES AHEAD
France has found that interpretation facilitates the identification of parcels
of land and the classification of soils in order to work them.
The Prairie Farm Rehabilitation Administration of the Department of
Agriculture, Canada, has found that, with a knowledge of geological processes
and soil peculiarities, soil conditions may be interpreted from air photographs,
and that preliminary irrigation and water development surveys can accordingly
be facilitated.
In the United States photo interpretation was used to obtain land use data by
selected soil groups for agricultural and urban land. These cover classes included
small grain, hay, pasture, etc. The soil-cover information was used for hydro-
logic analysis of the basin and for program planning. Photo interpretation was
used to obtain land use data by flood frequency zones on a large river flood plain,
for use in economic appraisal of the flood control program. Data were obtained
for natural conditions and the modified conditions prevailing after construction
of flood control dams. Information of flood plain land use is difficult to obtain
except by field mapping because most land use information is inventoried by
political subdivisions.
AERIAL PHOTOS EXPEDITE FOREST LOGGING OPERATIONS
Since 1949, the Swedish Pulp Company (Svenska Cellulosa AB) has been
using photographs instead of drawn forest maps for about 8,000 km. 2 It now