A. They are overstocked. This is found in forests where there is more area of forest under the older age classes
B. They are under stocked. This is due to larger proportion of area under immature crops
C. Both (a) & (b)
D. None of these
Forest Management
Forest Management
A. It ensures continuity of the forests indefinitely
B. It ensures steady income to owner
C. It helps better organization of works, and assures steady employment
D. All of the above
A. It is an operation comprising felling of trees, limbing, bucking and transportation of the resulting product out of forest to the point of its end use
B. It is process of watering the forest
C. Both (a) & (b)
D. None of these
A. A specific composition and structure or form of the forest, which is in harmony with the environment or the locality factors
B. Growing stock of the trees should be suitably of desired products
C. Both (a) & (b)
D. None of these
A. Average tree size in the remaining crop increases with increasing weight of thinning
B. Delay in thinning is not compensated for in terms of girth increment by removing larger volume, unless this volume represents a greater proportion of the growing stock than did the earlier thinning
C. Both (a) & (b)
D. None of these
A. Collection of data by survey, its assembly and analysis to know about the effects of past treatment
B. Based on the analysis and inferences of above to make a long-term prescription to meet the objectives of management
C. To make provisions for the implementation and control of the treatment prescribed
D. All of the above
A. Nurse
B. Main
C. Subsidiary
D. All of the above
A. Physical
B. Silvicultural
C. Technical
D. Rotation of the greatest volume production
E. All of the above
A. The long term estimate of total growth used in forecasting may turnout too higher or too low
B. There may be short-term fluctuations in increment because of climate or treatment effects
C. Both (a) & (b)
D. None of these
A. Stand
B. Forest crop
C. Site
D. Site quality
E. All of the above