What are the contents of yield tables in term of main crop:
A.Average diameter
B.Average height
C.Total basal area
D.Number of trees
E.All of the above
A.Average diameter
B.Average height
C.Total basal area
D.Number of trees
E.All of the above
A.Short billets pack better than long billets
B.Keep the conifer used separate from hardwood
C.Both (a) & (b)
D.None of these
A.Cut/felled material
B.Individual trees
C.Crop or stand
D.Standing tree
E.All of the above
A.Density
B.Moisture content
C.Bark and foreign material
D.All of the above
A.Xylometer method
B.Mathematical formulae
C.Both (a) & (b)
D.None of these
A.These are used for a variety of purposes
B.They are invaluable for determining the productive capacity of forest areas
C.For predicting the future yield of existing crops and as an aid to thinning
D.All of the above
A.Stem timber
B.Total stem timber and smallwood
C.Both (a) & (b)
D.None of these
A.The transit
B.The Abney Level
C.The Forest Service Hypsometer
D.The Christen Hypsometer
E.All of the above
A.Can hardly be over-emphasised and the fact is known to the foresters
B.That scientific management of any forest without yield and increment figure is not imaginable
C.Both (a) & (b)
D.None of these
A.Are available for a species
B.The point which is first to be decided is whether
C.Not these tables are directly applicable in a given locality or to a given coupe
D.All of the above