Basal area

Basal area is the cross-sectional area of trees at breast height (1.3m or 4.5 ft above ground). It is a common way to describe stand density. In forest management, basal area usually refers to merchantable timber and is given on a per hectare or per acre basis. If one cut down all the merchantable trees on an acre at 4.5 feet (1.4 m) off the ground and measured the square inches on the top of each stump (πr*r), added them all together and divided by square feet (144 sq inches per square foot), that would be the basal area on that acre. In forest ecology, basal area is used as a relatively easily-measured surrogate of total forest biomass and structural complexity,[1] and change in basal area over time is an important indicator of forest recovery during succession[2] .

  1. ^ McElhinny, Chris; Gibbons, Phillip; Brack, Cris; Bauhus, Juergen (2005). "Forest and woodland stand structural complexity: Its definition and measurement". Forest Ecology and Management. 218 (1–3): 1–24. Bibcode:2005ForEM.218....1M. doi:10.1016/j.foreco.2005.08.034. ISSN 0378-1127.
  2. ^ Gilman, Alex C.; Letcher, Susan G.; Fincher, Rita M.; Perez, Ashley I.; Madell, Tyler W.; Finkelstein, Alex L.; Corrales-Araya, Felix (2016). "Recovery of floristic diversity and basal area in natural forest regeneration and planted plots in a Costa Rican wet forest". Biotropica. 48 (6): 798–808. Bibcode:2016Biotr..48..798G. doi:10.1111/btp.12361. ISSN 0006-3606.

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