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(a) Homogenous forests : Such forests comprise only one
or a few species and pure stands are common. One or
two species constitute about 7 0% to 8 0% of Growing
Stock. Photo-interpretation of such forests is easier as
identification of species is not a major problem. Coni
ferous forests of Himalayas, Sal (Shorea robusta) forests
of Gangetic alluvial plain and Central India fall in this
group.
(b) Heterogenous forests : Such forests comprise many
species, the number may go upto 100 in tropical moist
deciduous type to nearly 6 00 in tropical wet evergreen
types. Not all the species are economically important
and only few species have been recognized on black and
white paper prints.
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This type could be further subdivided into two groups, namely
the Deciduous group and Evergreen group.
(i) Deciduous group : This type covers a major part of the
tropical forests and is more amenable to photo interpreta
tion. The important economic species is Teak which can
be separated from non-Teak species easily. Generally
the species classification is made into Teak and non-teak
type. Measurements of height, crown closure, crown
diameter, tree count is easier than in the Evergreen group
and forest type stratification on the above basis can be
done on medium scale photographs.
(ii) Evergreen group : It covers about 10% of the tropical
forest area and is less amenable to photo-interpretation.
The forests consist of much greater number of species and
are thick canopied and multi-storied. Identification of top
canopy species is too difficult and so also the measure
ment of other photoparameters. Stratification into broad
classes such as Evergreen, Semi-evergreen is done and
a large amount of information for forest inventory purposes
is collected on the ground. The general experience has
been that leaving aside about 10% of the forest area of
the country, photo stratification down to detailed level
could be done on panchromatic aerial photos for forest
inventory purposes.
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QUALITATIVE INVESTIGATIONS
The nature of the forest and the quality of the photographs
governed by suitable photographic specifications have been mainly inst
rumental in the extraction of qualitative information. Of the photogra
phic specifications, season of photography, quality of the camera and
lens and to some extent scale of photographs have been the chief limit
ing factors. Significant differences have been noticed in the amount of
qualitative information obtained with differences in the above specifica
tions .