Skip to main content

Full text of "Forest statistics for New Hampshire : 1983 and 1997"

See other formats


Historic, archived document 


Do not assume content reflects current 
scientific knowledge, policies, or practices. 


J 


USDA United States 
=S——_ Department of 
pee 2a] Agriculture 


A99.9 F7622UF 


Ai (YW, Resource Bulletin NE-146 


Forest Statistics 
for New Hampshire: 
1983 and 1997 


Thomas Frieswyk 
Richard Widmann 


Abstract 


A statistical report on the fifth forest inventory of New Hampshire conducted in 1996-98 by the 
Forest Inventory and Analysis Unit of the Northeastern Research Station. Statistics for forest area, 
numbers of trees, tree biomass, timber volume, growth, and change are displayed at the state and, 
where appropriate, the county level. The current inventory indicates that there are approximately 
9.0 billion cubic feet of growing-stock volume on 4.5 million acres of timberland in New Hampshire. 


Foreword 


The fifth inventory of New Hampshire was directed by John R. Peters, Project Leader of the Forest 
Inventory and Analysis Unit. David J. Alerich supervised the data collection phase of the inventory. 
He was assisted by Robert E. Ilgenfritz, Richard A. McCullough, and Lucretia B. Stewart, and 
Kathryn M. Tillman at unit headquarters in Radnor, PA; and by Edward A. Doane, Brian M. LaPoint, 
Jason W. Morrison, and Scott H. Tepke, who coordinated the activities of the following members of 
the data-collection field staff in New Hampshire: 


Michael A. Baer Robert Goodwin James Morin 
Joseph Barsky William Groth Seth Partridge 
Karl J. Benner Michael Haldeman Neil Pederson 


Gabriel Bolton 
Chris W. Brown 
Lynn D. Brown 
Erik Brischler 
Colin Burgess 
Allison M. Bush 
Elizabeth Burrill 
Thomas Byron 
Amy Calehuff 
Jason Carter 
Shane Carter 
Michael Effinger 
Gerald Farrell 
Matthew Gallucci 


Edward Harrigan 
Jeffery Harriman 
Mary Honer 
John Hoyt 

Keith G. Kanoti 
Patricia Kearnan 
Brian LaPoint 
Adrian Leighton 
Michael Lingley 
Kristen Lombard 
Jeffery Martin 
Victoria Mas 
Kristin McCarthy 
Gary Miner 


David Pierce 
Andrew Reed 
Steven Schacht 
Daniel Schultz 
Jerome Scott 
Leonard Simons 
Maylon Smith 
Mark Snodgrass 
Scott Stockhaus 
Glenn Tikkanen 
Jeffery Tilley 
Michael Ulsh 
Christine Ziegler 


Carol Alerich and Tom Frieswyk applied FINSYS (Forest Inventory SYStem), a generalized data 
processing system, ORACLE SQLPlus, and SAS to process and analyze the information provided 
by the field crews, and produced summary tables of estimates and errors for the state and counties. 
Doug Griffith, Richard Goren and Michael Kazimer assisted in data entry and data management. 


JB Cullen and Worthen Muzzey, along with other members of the New Hampshire Division of 
Forests and Lands, collected and compiled data on public ownership and assisted in reviewing this 
document for accuracy. Steve Mongan of LandVest Inc. also assisted in reviewing this document. 


Vickie M. Sharon was responsible for administrative and secretarial services. 


The Forest Inventory and Analysis Unit thanks the landowners of New Hampshire and the New 
Hampshire Division of Forests and Lands for their cooperation and assistance during this inventory. 


Forest Statistics for New Hampshire: 
1983 and 1997 


Thomas Frieswyk, Forester 
Richard Widmann, Forester 


Forest Inventory and Analysis Unit 
Northeastern Research Station 
USDA Forest Service 
Newtown Square, PA 


Visit our homepage at: http://www.fs.fed.us/ne 


Published by: For additional copies: 
USDA FOREST SERVICE USDA Forest Service 
11 CAMPUS BLVD SUITE 200 Publications Distribution 
NEWTOWN SQUARE PA 19073-3294 359 Main Road 

Delaware, OH 43015-8640 
September 2000 Fax: (740)368-0152 


Manuscript received for publication 10 April 2000 


pe 1? (a ee 


ag a te en © 

 pPeRaypaoi Po 
= ee : ar 

i 

: AD LieasA om sea satl seas 

a i om : - Melee WNmente (46 scotty! 7 


r. a = i he. j As oad 


= hese lip = si eins == 
re ae 
cs 15 nd) oN 
; acy ee ae 
4 Lad ikt Tate ® 


5 . i i \ se! ij \ 


Contents 


Fetal Sere cesses see cco canoe dsusbaseseutvetico cots tarnncerbettetces cue stemsasrerere cdeuaaaeaetvcveeboss 1 
UDIKOGUCTIOM recs sc see cae cents ue Meee 2 Sus cuedececcecodocasaasids sacte MEER aRN ORT Taner e one te tc teets csenaenceetes 3 
ReliabilityrolthhevEStimates mes cesstescenss isto locces conecccbs de cesaccaueeeceece neue eM A Ucecenmsstetenssueose 3 
ComMPpPanSOMmiBetwee%mslNVEM{OMSS i... 5.s05.0-c<ss00-4scsscdeslecseckec co eree eae nomeae Mee oe cece seecauatbaeess 4 
DSTIMIIOMSROfeA SNES eee sero ees sae ee acs ec acon ck ceca mec ccceeaReete ee teceeee Tir easter Maa aan anaes 6 
FRETETOIICOS preertee nace ieee eet Seat ico sc cocat acesuccuceicceteeenetets io ia eae a 12 
EST SPECIESTOMNE Wr AIMOSIUNC cc scscaecescceesees ceresacold\chocesatvexsoosdconsahacissuvonccrsdusuvscccsertarses 13 
SPCCIESIGTOUPSOMINGWHHAIMOSIMING  ieceseia a ctececes sass! vessesccstrsscawarss aay quadhoeseesasacasssactonveneestate 15 
MRCS = Grade GlaSSitiGatio len cco csacc ce ccoecae tect suee ee oeee chee tae eet Resa a Sec Tooke eae eeaudenereseenees 17 
BiciduelOuMataQualityestamGdandS) ccacccccstsse. creer ee tee nsec ocstecs cceecacetentteesccceteatel ce eseastretoiees 21 
MetniC IE GUIValle ints ote sen ik eve ee ooo ava center ea eee cance ceca cat aioe oes eatanucneeracalecuacssseisesteadee 23 
LUGE XGLOMI OIG ermeme se hacceeentn nee seis ara eels Sele neniues SAN Eee carl SB RU aah SNe a uae adil assatauesuaee races 

State males parece cai ccacnee cee as ee leet RTI US ATE ROR OR es a Ce 24 

NOMMeNmMO its blesose srarectarsccscccccvesrca teens socedeseeeee geeakseeeteuasbeseewteveee t oneuoseoebeeiauccuet ese 25 

Southrennallmiteliablesy sce: yet aes ae eer ee Te, Me eee ei ee te a EO ES, Sas 26 

(CHOTA “UE cL ES ec Me a ee ARO cll IR Joa ob ao ee a 27 


ReESOUTCe ables Reeser tater Rs ate eer Oe BLES ey AU eee een Rae. AL Wee eke 29 


i 


ad 
bat 


Highlights Volume 


The total volume of all live trees more than 5-inches 


Forest-Land Area in diameter increased by 2.1 percent. Growing-stock 
Se volume increased by 5.8 percent, decreasing by 0.7 
SSS cae a aaa acres aren as I of New percent in the Northern Unit and increasing by 12.6 
Hae aoe Ne : Is ie ae fae = ae percent in the Southern Unit. The portion of volume 
Se eS NS 8 Ale Sable A) suitable for sawlogs increased by 18.8 percent. 


area decreased by 290,700 acres and other forest 
land increased by 156,200 acres. Timberland area 
represents 93 percent of total forest-land area. 


Growing-stock volume 


Thousands of acres at each invento 


Northern unit f= 
Timberland 4,682.2 4, | 4,692.0] o| 4, | 4,799.3] 3|/ "a. | 4,508.6 6 


Other 
forest land 165.6 111.9 293.1 159.0 315.2 Southern unit bee 


4,847.8] 5,019.3) 4,985.1) 4,958.3] 4,823.8 


83. | 83.9% 87.0%| 86.2% | 86.4%) 4% | 84.0% 0% 
State 


* Estimates of the total land area have changed because of new OR 2453" 2a) OME GEO mon uIO 
measurement techniques and refinements in the classification of Billion cubic feet 
small bodies of water and streams. 


White pine continued to have the greatest volume. 
Growing-stock volume of white pine, red maple, and 
red oak increased by 10.0, 11.9, and 20.2 percent, 
respectively. Hemlock had the largest volume 
increase-- 230.3 million cubic feet or 38.2. percent. 
The volume of spruce and balsam fir decreased by 
18.2 and 20.4. percent, respectively. 


Sawtimber-size stands increased by 17 percent and 
now account for 52 percent of the timberland. 
Poletimber-size stands declined by 31 percent and 
now represent 39 percent of timberland. The area in 
sapling/seedling stands accounts for 9 percent of the 
timberland. Area in these conditions increased by 54 
percent since the previous inventory. 


Area of timberland by stand-size class Change in growing-stock volume, top five species 


3 
+10% 
25 White pine peepee gree 
o 2 
g Red maple 3 
§ Ls Be 
Evi | 1983 
Red oak ferme 
ORE i 1997 
0.5 
0 mae Hemlock 
Sawtimber Poletimber Sapling-Seedling 
Sugar maple me +15% 
0 0.5 1 1.5 2 2.5 


Billion cubic feet 


Growth and Removals 


On an annual basis, net growth of growing stock on 
New Hampshire’s timberland has averaged 169.1 
million cubic feet of wood and the average annual 
harvest plus other removals has been 133.6 million 
cubic feet. The ratio of net growth to removals has 
averaged about 1.3: 1 over the past inventory 
period. 


On an annual basis, mortality has averaged 50.1 
million cubic feet (0.6 percent) of the current 
inventory. 


Average annual net growth and removals of 
growing-stock, top five species 


White pine 


Red maple 


A oae _ Growth 


Red oak 
® Removals | 


Hemlock 


Sugar maple 


0 10 20 30 40 50 
Million cubic feet 


Introduction 


Under the authority of the McSweeney-McNary 
Forest Research Act of 1928 and subsequent 
acts, including the Renewable Resources 
Planning Act of 1974 and the Renewable 
Resources Research Act of 1978, the USDA 
Forest Service conducts periodic inventories of 
all states to provide up-to-date information on 
the forest resources of the Nation. The initial 
inventory of New Hampshire’s forest resources 
was conducted in 1948. Succeeding inventories 
were carried out in 1960, 1973, and 1983. This 
report presents forest-resource data from the 
fifth inventory, which was conducted in 1996-97. 
This inventory was a cooperative effort of the 
Northeastern Research Station, the New 


Hampshire Division of Forests and Lands, and_ 


the landowners of New Hampshire. 


The Forest Inventory and Analysis Unit (FIA) of 
the Northeastern Research Station conducted 
the inventory on all lands, developed the 
resource tables, and prepared this report. 


The sampling procedure used during the current 
inventory included the use of aerial photography, 
the remeasurement of a sample of ground plots 
established in earlier inventories, and the 
establishment of new ground plots. For New 
Hampshire, this procedure required’ the 
photointerpretation and classification of 21,306 
new photo points and 764 previously sampled 
ground plot locations into land-use and cubic- 
foot volume classes. Then, 764 ground plots 
from the previous inventory were remeasured 
and 166 new ground plots were established. Of 
the total 930 plots, 652 were forested at plot 
center. The data collected were summarized 
using the FINSYS computer system developed 
at the Northeastern Research Station. 


In January of 1998, a series of ice storms in 
northern New England and New York damaged 
an estimated 900,000 acres in New Hampshire. 
Nine counties were declared disaster areas and 
FIA was asked to reinventory the area that was 
most severely impacted. During the spring and 
summer of 1998, 78 plots were selected and 
remeasured within the damage footprint 
identified by the State of New Hampshire. The 
entire inventory was reprocessed incorporating 
the updated data from the damage footprint. As 
part of the agreement with the State of New 
Hampshire only one set of inventory data will be 


available and that data will contain the ice 
damage update. 


The resurvey of New Hampshire’s forest 
resources involved several associated studies 
and considerable analysis. Reports on the 
state's private forest-land owners and its primary 
forest-products industry also will be available, 
and a report analyzing New Hampshire’s forest 
resource in greater detail is being prepared. 


The forest area, numbers of trees, biomass, 
timber volume, growth, and change statistics in 
this report summarize the information collected 
(see Index to Tables in this report). Other 
information or additional summaries may be 
developed. For information about these, contact 
the Forest Inventory and Analysis Unit, USDA 
Forest Service, 11 Campus Boulevard, Suite 
200, Newtown Square, PA 19073 (Telephone: 
610-557-4075; Fax: 610-557-4200). 


Reliability of the Estimate 


The data in this report are based on a carefully 
designed sample of forest conditions throughout 
New Hampshire. However, because the field 
crews did not measure every tree or every acre 
in the state, the data are estimates. The 
reliability of the estimating procedure can be 
judged by two important statistical measures: 
accuracy and precision. Accuracy refers to the 
success of estimating the true value; precision 
refers to the clustering of sample values about 
their own averages or to the variation among 
repeated samples. We are interested primarily 
in the accuracy of the inventory but in most 
cases we can only measure its precision. 


Although accuracy cannot be measured exactly, 
it can be checked. Preliminary tables are sent to 
other agencies and to outside experts familiar 
with the forest conditions in the New Hampshire. 
If questions arise, the data are reviewed and 
reanalyzed to resolve differences. Great care is 
taken to minimize sources of procedural error 
through careful training of both field and office 
personnel, frequent inspection of field and office 
work, and application of the most reliable 
inventory methods. 


Because of the care exercised in the inventory 
process, estimates of precision afford a 
reasonable measure of the  inventory's 
adequacy. The precision of each estimate is 


described by its sampling error. Sampling errors 
are given with several tables in this report. The 
others are available upon request: 


Here is an example of how the sampling error is 
used to indicate reliability. The estimate of 
timberland for New Hampshire is 4,509,000 
acres. The associated sampling error is 1.1 
percent, or 49,599 acres. This means that if 
there are no errors in the procedure, we are 68 
percent confident that the true number of acres 
is between 4,459,401 and 4,558,599 acres, or 
4,509,000 + 49,599 (one standard deviation). 
Similarly, we are 95 percent confident that the 
true number of acres is within + 99,198 acres 
(two standard deviations). County estimates are 
less precise. In New Hampshire, for example, 
while the sampling error for timberland at the 
state level is 1.1 percent, the sampling error for 
Rockingham County is 6.1 percent. In general, 
as the size of the sample decreases the 
sampling error, expressed as a percentage of 
the estimate, increases. A high amount of 
variance within a county increases the sampling 
error. 


For many of the tables in this report, both the 
last column and last row are labeled "SE." 
These figures are the sampling errors of the 
column and row totals. The last sampling error 
given (SE) is for the table total. To calculate the 
approximate sampling error (SEj) for a table cell 
(ij), use the following formula (this formula is 
reliable only for estimating sampling errors 
of individual cells in AREA tables): 


SE, = 1/P4((P, (1- Pi))/n)”” 
where: 


n =total number of sample plots of a 
population 

Pi = Ajj /A 

Ai = cell estimate 

A = total land area of a population 

ij = row(i) and column() 


Any estimate with a sampling error of 50 percent 
or more is not significantly different from zero, 
and estimates with errors of 25 to 50 percent are 
suspect. Therefore, any estimates with errors 
exceeding 25 percent should be used with 
caution. 


Comparison Between Inventories 


To evaluate the condition of the forest resource, 
it is useful to compare the current estimates with 
those from ihe previous inventory. However, as 
a result of ongoing efforts to improve the 
efficiency of the inventory, we have made 
several changes in procedures and definitions 
since 1983. Because these changes make 
inappropriate the direct comparison of sorne of 
the current estimates with those published by 
Frieswyk and Malley (1985), readers should use 
caution when comparing the data in this report 
with those in the 1983 report. In this report, 
several tables containing 1983 data are provided 
to allow comparisons. The changes in methods 
and definitions follow. 


To improve data consistency at the national 
level, a standard plot design is being used by all 
Forest Inventory projects in the country. The 
new plot design, a cluster of four 24-foot-radius 
subplots covering a 1/6-acre area, was 
established at all selected plot locations, both 
new and previously measured. Field crews 
recorded different conditions on the plots if 
certain attributes (land use, forest type, stand 
origin, stand size, tree density, and/or owner) 
differed from those at plot center. They 
“mapped” these conditions by recording 
information that described the boundaries of the 
conditions. This mapping procedure is designed 
to reduce bias in the estimates. In previous - 
inventories, a ground plot was established 
wholly within the land class (forest or nonforest) 
that the plot was chosen to represent. The 
condition (e.g. privately-owned  northern- 
hardwoods sawtimber timberland) that was 
found at plot center was used to classify the 
entire plot. 


On all selected remeasured plot locations, a 
subsample of the trees that were recorded in the 
past were reconciled, and growth and removals 
estimates were calculated using these data. 
Condition mapping was ignored for calculations 
of estimates of change because this procedure 
was not used at the previous occasion. 


Forest Inventory uses Bureau of Census 
estimates of total land area in a state or county 
as the basis for estimating land area by various 
classes. For the 1983 report, 1980 Bureau of 
Census data were used; in 1997, 1990 data 
were available. Between 1980 and 1990, the 
Bureau of Census changed its estimating 


procedures. It now can identify as inland water 
streams more than 200 feet wide and bodies of 
water 4.5 acres and larger in area. Previously, 
the minimum width was 660 feet for streams 
and the minimum area was 40 acres for bodies 
of water. This procedure results in a reduction 
in total land area. For comparison of land area 
between inventories, 1983 estimates of land 
area by class were recalculated using 1990 
land-area values from the Bureau of Census. 


Stocking is a quantitative expression of live tree 
stand density that may be expressed in absolute 
terms, such as basal area per acre, volume per 
acre, or number of trees per acre; or in relative 
terms, such as a percent of a previously defined 
standard’. For the 1983 inventory statistics, the 
stocking value of a tree was calculated using the 
basal area of the tree as a percent of 75 square 
feet per acre, which is the basal area standard 
for full use of the site”. Basal area stocking may 
well describe current timber volume, but it is 
inadequate to describe stand composition in a 
multi-resource inventory in that it neither 
adequately measures present site utilization nor 
describes small-diameter stands. For the 
Statistics in this publication, stocking is 
calculated using relative density, which 
represents site occupancy based on normal 
yield tables. Basal area is diameter-dependent 
only; whereas relative density reflects species 
composition, stage of development and the 
social position of the trees present. A relative 
measure of stand density is a useful tool for 
interpreting findings of extensive inventories, 
such as those performed by Forest Inventory 
and Analysis, where a wide variety of stands are 
sampled. A procedure using relative density to 
calculate stocking was developed and accepted 
as a Standard to be used by all FIA projects in 
the country. 


Stand size is a classification (Sawtimber, 
poletimber, seedling and sapling, or nonstocked) 
of forest land based on the size of the trees that 
dominate an area, and forest type is a 
classification of forest land based on the species 
found in the area. Stand size and forest type 
are both calculated based on stocking of all live 
trees, and therefore are affected by the change 
in the procedure to calculate stocking. To allow 
comparisons, this report includes several 1983 
area tables showing estimates of area of 
timberland by stand-size class and forest type 
and forest-type group that are calculated based 
on relative density. There are also tables that 
show estimates of timberland area by forest type 
and stand size for both 1983 and 1997, where 
stocking is based on the basal area of all live 
trees. 


Forest type is a Classification of forest land 
based on species that form a plurality of live-tree 
stocking. Prior to 1995, basal area was used to 
determine plurality of live-tree stocking. 
Currently, forest type classification is based on 
stocking values calculated using relative density. 
There have been refinements with respect to 
how several species (e.g.red maple and beech) 
are allocated to local types since the previous 
inventory and a programming error that affected 
the white pine type was corrected. 


Eighty-two percent of the plots that were visited 
during the 1983 inventory were remeasured in 
1996-98. The estimates of average annual net 
growth and change are derived from this set of 
data. These estimates afford an opportunity to 
look at change in overall volume from occasion 
to occasion and from plot to plot. The estimates 
showing 1983 information are from the plots that 
were selected at that occasion to produce an 
estimate of the current area and volume. 


‘ Amer, Stanford L. et al. 2000. National Algorithms for Determining Stocking Class, Stand 
Size Class, and Forest Type for Forest Inventory and Analysis Plots. Unpublished document 
on file at Northeastern Research Station Forest Inventory and Analysis, 11 Campus Boulevard, 


Suite 200, Newtown Square, PA 19073. 


* Author unknown. 1967. Forest Survey Handbook. Unpublished document on file at 
Northeastern Research Station Forest Inventory and Analysis, 11 Campus Boulevard, Suite 200, 


Newtown Square, PA 19073. 


These data have been used in current 
procedures to recalculate estimates of area and 
volume at the 1983 occasion so _ that 
comparisons can be made. Although the data 
set from which estimates of growth and change 
are derived contains a portion of the plots from 
which the 1983 recalculated estimates were 
calculated, they are different data sets designed 
to produce different types of estimates. 
Inconsistencies in trends may result when the 
annual change tables are compared with the 
total change between the 1983 and 1997 tables. 
Sampling errors have been included to indicate 
the precision of the data. 


In addition to the traditional data gathered to 
estimate forest area and tree volumes, 
information was collected to describe forest 
wildlife habitat and forest-tree biomass. 


Definitions of Terms 


Acceptable tree. (a) Live sawtimber trees that do 
not qualify as preferred trees but are not cull trees. 
(b) Live poletimber trees that prospectively will not 
qualify as preferred trees, but are not now or 
prospectively cull trees. 


Accretion. The estimated net growth on 
growing-stock trees that were measured during 
the previous inventory (divided by the number of 
growing seasons between surveys to produce 
average annual accretion). It does not include the 
growth on trees that were cut during the period, 
nor those trees that died. 


Basal-area class. A Classification of forest land 
based on basal area (cross-sectional area of a 
tree stem at breast height in square feet per acre) 
of all live trees of all sizes. 


Board foot. A unit of lumber measurement 1 foot 
long, 1 foot wide, and 1 inch thick, or its 
equivalent. Intemational % inch rule is used as 
the USDA Forest Service standard log rule in the 
eastem United States. 


Board-foot stand-volume class. A classification of 
forest land based on net board-foot volume of 
sawtimber trees per acre. 


Bog/Marsh/Swamp. Land that has less than 10.0 
percent stocking with live trees and which 
characterstically supports low, generally 
herbaceous or shrubby vegetation, and which is 


intermittently covered with water during all 
seasons; includes tidal areas that are covered 
with brackish water during high tides. 


Commercial species. Tree species currently or 
prospectively suitable for industrial wood products; 
excludes species of typically small size, poor form, 
or inferior quality, such as hawthom and sumac. 


Condition. A classification of a land area based 
on land use, forest type, stand origin, and stand 
size (see definitions). 


County and municipal lands. Lands owned by 


counties and _ local public agencies’ or 
municipalities or leased to them for 50 years or 
more. 


Cropland. Land that currently supports 
agricultural crops including silage and feed grains, 
bare farm fields resulting from cultivation or 
harvest, and maintained orchards. 


Cubic-foot stand-volume class. A classification of 
forest land based on net cubic-foot volume of all 
live trees per acre. 


Cull decrement. The net volume of rough or 
rotten trees in the previous inventory that are 
classified as growing-stock trees in current 
inventory (divided by the number of growing 
seasons between surveys to produce average 
annual cull decrement). 


Cull tree. A rough tree or a rotten tree. 


Cull increment. The net volume of growing-stock 
trees in the previous inventory that are classified 
as rough or rotten trees in the current inventory 
(divided by the number of growing seasons 
between surveys to produce average annual cull 
increment). 


Diameter at breast height (d.b.h.). The diameter 
outside bark of a standing tree measured at 4-1/2 


feet above the ground. 


Dry_ton. A unit of measure of dry weight 
equivalent to 2,000 pounds or 907.1848 
kilograms. 


Dry ton stand-volume class. A Classification of 
forest land based on net dry weight of the 
aboveground components of all live trees per unit 
area; uSually expressed in dry tons per acre. 


Dry weight. The weight of wood and bark as it 
would be if it had been oven-dried; usually 
expressed in pounds or tons. 


Farmer-owned lands. Lands owned by farm 
operators, whether part of the farmstead or not; 
excludes land leased by farm operators from 
nonfarm owners. 


Federal lands. Lands (other than National 
Forests) administered by Federal agencies. 


Forest industry lands. Lands owned by 
companies or individuals that operate primary 


wood-using plants. 


Forest land. Land that is at least 10 percent 
stocked with trees of any size, or that formerny had 
such tree cover and is not currently developed for 
a nonforest use. The minimum area for 
classification of forest land is one acre. The 
components that make up forest land are 
timberland and all noncommercial forest land (see 
definitions). 


Forest type. A Classification of forest land based 
on the species that form a plurality of live-tree 
stocking. 


Forest-type group. A Classification of forest land 
based on the species forming a plurality of live- 
tree stocking. A combination of forest types that 
share closely associated species or site 
requirements are combined into the following 
major forest-type groups (the descriptions apply to 
forests in this state): 


a. White/red pine. Forests in which eastem 
white pine, red pine, or eastem hemlock, 
singly or in combination, make up the plurality 
of the stocking; common associates include 
red maple, oak, sugar maple, and aspen. 


b. _Spruce/fir. Forests in which red, white, 
black, or Norway spruces, balsam fir, northem 
white-cedar, tamarack, or planted larch, singly 
or in combination, make up a plurality of the 
stocking; common associates include white 
pine, red maple, yellow birch, and aspens. 


c. Hard pine (also called loblolly/shortleaf 
pine). Forests in which eastem redcedar or 
pitch pine, singly or in combination, make up 
a plurality of the stocking; common associates 
include white pine, paper birch, sugar maple, 
and basswood. 


d. Oak/pine. Forests in which hardwoods 
(usually hickory or upland oaks) make up a 
plurality of the stocking and in which pines or 
eastem redcedar contribute 25 to 50 percent 
of the stocking. 


e. Oak/hickory. Forests in which upland 
oaks, hickory, yellow-poplar, black locust, 
sweetgum, or red maple (when associated 
with central hardwoods), singly or in 
combination, make up a plurality of the 
stocking and in which pines or eastem 
redcedar make up less than 25 percent of the 
stocking; common associates include white 
ash, sugar maple, and hemlock. 


f. Oak/gum/cypress. Bottomland forests in 
which tupelo, blackgum, sweetgum, oaks, or 
southem cypress, singly or in combination, 
make up a plurality of the stocking and in 
which pines make up less than 25 percent of 
the stocking; common associates include 
cottonwood, willow, ash, elm, hackberry, and 
maple. 


g. Elm/ash/red_ maple (also called 
elm/ash/cottonwood). Forests in which elm, 


willow, cottonwood, or red maple (when 
growing on wet sites), singly or in 
combination, make up a plurality of the 
stocking; common associates include white 
ash, sugar maple, aspens, and oaks. 


h. Northem hardwoods (also _ called 
maple/beech/birch). Forests in which sugar 
maple, beech, yellow birch, black cherry, or 
red maple (when associated with northem 
hardwoods), singly or in combination, make 
up a plurality of the stocking; common 
associates include white ash, eastem 
hemlock, basswood, aspens, and red oak. 


i. _Aspen/birch. Forests in which aspen, 
paper birch, or gray birch, singly or in 
combination, make up a plurality of the 
stocking; common associates include red 
maple, white pine, red oaks, and white ash. 


Gross growth. The sum of accretion and 


ingrowth. 


Growing-stock trees. Live trees of commercial 
species classified as sawtimber, poletimber, 
saplings, or seedlings; that is, all live trees of 
commercial species except rough and rotten 
trees. 


Growing-stock volume. Net volume, in cubic feet, 
of growing-stock trees 5.0 inches d.b.h. and larger 
from a 1-foot stump to a minimum 4.0-inch top 
diameter outside bark of the central stem, or to the 
point where the central stem breaks into limbs. 
Net volume equals gross volume less deduction 
for cull. 


Hard hardwoods. Hardwood species with an 
average specific gravity of greater than 0.50. 


Hardwoods. Dicotyledonous trees, usually 
broad-leaved and deciduous. 


Harvested cropland. All lands from which crops 
were harvested or hay was cut; all land in 
orchards, citrus groves, vineyards, and nursery 
and greenhouse products. 


Idle farmland. Former cropland or pasture that 
has not been tended for within the last 2 years 
and has less than 10 percent stocking with live 
trees (established seedlings or larger trees), 
regardless of species. 


Improved/maintained pasture. Land that is 
currently used and maintained for grazing (not 


including grazed cropland). 


Indian lands. (a) Lands held in trust by the United 
States or States for Indian tribes or individual 
Indians. (b) Lands owned in fee by Indian tribes 
whether subject to Federal or State restrictions 
against alienation or not. 


Industrial and commercial land. Supply yards, 
parking lots, factories, etc. 


Ingrowth. The estimated net volume of 
growing-stock trees that became 5.0 inches d.b.h. 
or larger during the period between inventones 
(divided by the number of growing seasons 
between surveys to produce average annual 
ingrowth). Also, the estimated net volume of 
growing-stock trees 5.0 inches d.b.h. and larger 
that are growing on land that was reclassified from 
noncommercial forest land or nonforest land to 
timberland. 


Intemational 1/4-inch rule. A log rule or formula 
for estimating the board-foot volume of logs. The 
mathematical formula is: 


(0.22D? - 0.71D)(0.904762) 


for 4-foot sections, where D=diameter inside bark 
at the smali end of the log section. This rule is 
used as the USDA Forest Service standard log 
rule in the Eastem United States. 


Land area. (a) Bureau of Census: The area of 
dry land and land temporarily or partly covered by 
water, such as marshes, swamps, and river flood 
plains; streams, sloughs, estuaries, and canals 
less than 200 feet wide; and lakes, reservoirs, and 
ponds less than 4.5 acres in area. (b) Forest 
Inventory and Analysis: same as (a) except that 
the minimum width of streams, etc. is 120 feet, 
and the minimum size of lakes, etc. is 1 acre. 


Land use. A Classification of land that indicates 
the primary use at the time of inventory. Major 
categories are forest land and nonforest land (see 
definitions). 


Merchantable stem. The main stem of the tree 
between a 1-foot stump height and a 4-inch top 
diameter (outside the bark), including the wood 
and bark. 


Mining and waste land. Surface mining, gravel 
pits, dumps. 


Miscellaneous private lands. Privately owned 
lands other than forest industry and farmer-owned 


lands. 


Mortality. The estimated net volume of 
growing-stock trees at the previous inventory that 
died from natural causes before the current 
inventory (divided by the number of growing 
seasons between surveys to produce average 
annual mortality) . 


National Forest lands. Federal lands legally 
designated as National Forests or purchase units 
and other lands administered as part of the 
National Forest System by the USDA Forest 
Service. 


Net change. The difference between the current 
and previous inventory estimates of growing-stock 
volume (divided by the number of growing 
seasons between surveys to produce average 
annual net change). Components of net change 
are ingrowth plus accretion, minus mortality, 
minus cull increment, plus cull decrement, minus 
removals. 


Net dry weight. The dry weight of woody matenal 
less the weight of all unsound (rotten) material. 


Net growth. The change, resulting from natural 
causes, in growing-stock volume during the period 
between surveys (divided by the number of 
growing seasons to produce average annual net 
growth). Components of net growth are ingrowth 
plus accretion, minus mortality, minus cull 
increment, plus cull decrement. 


Noncensus water. Streams/rvers between 120 
feet and 200 feet in width, and bodies of water 
between 1 and 4.5 acres in size. The Bureau of 
the Census classifies such water as land. 


Noncommercial forest land. Reserved productive 
forest land, Christmas tree plantations, other 
forest land, and other reserved forest land (see 
definitions). 


Noncommercial species. Tree species of typically 
small size, poor form, or inferior quality that 
normally do not develop into trees suitable for 
industnal wood products. 


Nonforest land. Land that has never supported 
forests, or land formerly forested but now in 
nonforest use such as_ cropland, pasture, 
residential areas, marshes, swamps, highways, 
industnal or commercial sites, or noncensus 
water. 


Nonsalvable dead tree. A dead tree with most or 
all of its bark missing that is at least 5.0 inches 
d.b.h. and is at least 4.5 feet tall. 


Nonstocked_ area. A stand-size class of forest 
land that is stocked with less than 10 percent of 
minimum full stocking with live trees. 


Other cropland. Includes cropland used for cover 
crops and soil improvement (legumes). 


Other farmland. All nonforest land on a farm 
excluding cropland, pasture, and idle farmland; 
includes farm lanes, stock pens, and farmsteads. 


Other forest land. Forest land that is incapable of 
producing 20 cubic feet per acre per year of 
industnal wood under natural conditions, because 
of adverse site conditions (formerly known as 
unproductive forest land). 


Other reserved forest land. Forest land that is 
incapable of producing 20 cubic feet per acre per 
year of industrial wood under natural conditions, 
because of adverse site conditions, and is 


protected through statute or administrative 
designation. 


Ownership class. A Classification of forest land 
based on ownership and nature of business or 
control of decisionmaking for the land. It 
encompasses all types of legal entities having 
ownership interest in the land, whether public or 
private. 


Pasture land. Includes any pasture land other 
than cropland and woodland pasture. It can 
include lands that have had lime fertilizer or seed 
applied, or that had been improved by imigation, 
drainage, or control of weeds and brush. 


Pastured cropland. Includes rotation pasture and 
grazing land that would have been used for crops 
without additional improvement. 


Pastured_ timberland. Land that is partially 
developed, maintained, or managed for pasture 
and grazing, but which continues to meet the 
definition of timberland. 


Poletimber stand. A stand-size class of forest 
land that is stocked with at least 10 percent of 
minimum full stocking with live trees with half or 
more of such stocking in poletimber or sawtimber 
trees or both, and in which the stocking of 
poletimber exceeds that of sawtimber. 


Poletimber tree. A live tree of commercial species 
meeting regional specifications of soundness and 
form and at least 5.0 inches in d.b.h., but smaller 
than a sawtimber tree. 


Preferred tree. A high-quality tree, from a lumber 
viewpoint, that would be favored in cultural 
operations. General characteristics include grade 
1 butt log (if sawtimber size), good form, good 
vigor, and freedom from serious damage. 


Recreation site. Parks, campgrounds, playing 
fields, tracks, etc. 


Relative stand density. A stocking classification 
procedure that reflects species, stage of 
development, and the characteristics of the trees 
present in a stand. 


Removals. The net growing-stock volume 
harvested or killed in logging, cultural operations 
(such as timber stand improvement) or land 
clearing, and the net growing-stock volume neither 
harvested nor killed but growing on land that was 


reclassified from timberland to noncommercial 
forest land or nonforest land during the period 
between surveys. This volume is divided by the 
number of growing seasons to produce average 
annual removals. 


Reserved productive forest land. Forest land 
sufficiently productive to qualify as timberland but 


withdrawn from timber utilization through statute 
or administrative designation; land exclusively 
used for Christmas tree production. 


Rights-of-way. Highways, pipelines, powerlines, 


canals. 


Rotten tree. A live tree of commercial species that 
does not contain at least one 12-foot sawlog or 
two noncontiguous sawiogs, each 8 feet or longer, 
now or prospectively, and does not meet regional 
specifications for freedom from defect primarily 
because of rot; that is, more than 50 percent of 
the cull volume in the tree is rotten. 


Rough tree. (a)The same as a rotten tree except 
that a rough tree does not meet regional 
specifications for freedom from defect primarily 
because of roughness or poor form; also (b) a live 
tree of noncommercial species. 


Salvable dead tree. A tree at least 5.0 inches 
d.b.h. that has died recently and still has intact 
bark; may be standing, fallen, windthrown, 
knocked down, or broken off. 


Sampling error. A measure of the reliability of an 
estimate, expressed as a percentage of the 
estimate. The sampling errors given in this report 
correspond to one standard deviation and are 
calculated as the square root of the variance, 
divided by the estimate, and multiplied by 100. 
Indicated in statistical tables as “SE”. 


Sapling. All live trees 1.0 through 4.9 inches 


d.b.h. 


Sapling/seedling stand. A stand-size class of 
forest land that is stocked with at least 10 percent 


of minimum full stocking with live trees with half or 
more of such stocking in saplings or seedlings or 
both. 


Sawlog. A log meeting regional standards of 
diameter, length, and freedom from defect, 
including a minimum 8-foot length and a minimum 
top diameter inside bark of 6 inches for softwoods 


10 


and 8 inches for hardwoods. (See specifications 
under Tree-Grade Classification.) 


Sawlog portion. That part of the bole of a 
sawtimber tree between the stump and the sawlog 
top. 


Sawlog top. The point on the bole of a sawtimber 
tree above which a sawlog cannot be produced. 
The minimum sawiog top is 7.0 inches diameter 
outside bark (d.o.b.) for softwoods and 9.0 inches 
d.o.b. for hardwoods. 


Sawtimber stand. A stand-size class of forest 
land that is stocked with at least 10 percent of 
minimum full stocking with all live trees with half or 
more of such stocking in poletimber or sawtimber 
trees or both, and in which the stocking of 
sawtimber is at least equal to that of poletimber. 


Sawtimber tree. A live tree of commercial species 
at least 9.0 inches d.b.h. for softwoods or 11.0 
inches for hardwoods, containing at least one 
12-foot sawiog or two noncontiguous 8-foot 
sawlogs, and meeting regional specifications for 
freedom from defect. 


Sawtimber volume. Net volume in board feet, by 
the Intemational 1/4-inch rule, of sawlogs in 
sawtimber trees. Net volume equals gross 
volume less deductions for rot, sweep, and other 
defects that affect use for lumber. 


SE. See Sampling error. 


Seedling. A live tree less than 1.0 inch d.b.h. and 
at least 1 foot tall. 


Single-family house. House sheltering one family 
and immediately adjacent managed land. 


Snag. Standing dead tree with most or all of its 
bark missing that is at least 5.0 inches d.b.h. and 
at least 4.5 feet tall (does not include salvable 
dead). 


Soft hardwoods. Hardwood species with an 
average specific gravity of 0.50 or less. 


Softwoods. Coniferous trees, usually evergreen 
and having needles or scalelike leaves. 

Stand. A group of forest trees growing on forest 
land. 


Stand origin. An indication of how the measured 
stand originated: 100 percent natural, 100 percent 
artificial, or a combination of both. 


Stand-sizé class. A Classification of forest land 
based on the size class (that is, seedlings, 
saplings, poletimber, or sawtimber) of the stocking 
of all live trees in the area. 


Standard cord. A unit of measure for stacked 
bolts of wood, encompassing 128 cubic feet of 
wood, bark, and air space. Fuelwood cord 
estimates can be derived from _ cubic-foot 
estimates of growing stock by applying an 
average factor of 80 cubic feet of solid wood per 
cord. For pulpwood, a conversion of 85 cubic feet 
of solid wood per cord is used because pulpwood 
is more uniform. 


State lands. Lands owned by the state or leased 
to the state for 50 years or more. 


Stocking. The degree of occupancy of land by 
trees relative to the growth potential utilized by a 
site. It is expressed as a percent of the “normal” 
value presented in yield tables and stocking 
quides. Two categories of stocking are used in 
this report: all live trees and growing-stock trees. 
The relationships between the classes and the 
percentage of the stocking standard are: 
nonstocked (0 to 9); poorly stocked (10 to 34); 
moderately stocked (35 to 59); fully stocked (60 to 
100); and overstocked (greater than 100). 


Strip mine. Area devoid of vegetation due to 
current or recent general excavation. 


Stump. The main stem of a tree from ground level 
to 1 foot above ground level, including the wood 
and bark. 


Timberland. Forest land producing or capable of 
producing crops of industrial wood (more than 20 
cubic feet per acre per year) and not withdrawn 
from timber utilization (formerly known as 
commercial forest land). 


Timber products. Roundwood (round timber) 
products and manufacturing plant by-products 
harvested from growing-stock trees on timberland; 
from other sources, such as cull trees, salvable 
dead trees, limbs, tops, and saplings; and from 
trees on noncommercial forest and nonforest 
lands. 


11 


Timber _ removals. The growing-stock » or 
sawtimber volume of trees removed from the 
inventory for roundwood products, plus logging 
residues, volume destroyed during land clearing, 
and volume of standing trees on land that was 
reclassified from timberland to noncommercial 
forest land. 


Top. The wood and bark of a tree above the 
merchantable height (or above the point on the 
stem 4.0 inches in diameter outside bark); 
generally includes the uppermost stem, branches, 
and twigs of the tree, but not the foliage. 


Tract/multiple family housing. Multiple individual 
residential units or attached units (e.g., apartment 


buildings and condominiums) and immediately 
adjacent managed land. 


Transportation right-of-way. Land associated with 
highways and railroads. 


Tree class. A Classification of the quality or 
condition of trees for sawlog production. Tree 
class for sawtimber trees is based on their current 
condition. Tree class for poletimber trees is a 
prospective determination—a forecast of their 
potential quality when they reach sawtimber size 
(11.0 inches d.b.h. for hardwoods, 9.0 inches 
d.b.h. for softwoods). 


Tree grade. A Classification of sawtimber quality 
based on guidelines for tree grades _ for 
hardwoods, white pine, and southem pine. (Note: 
Red pine was graded using the guidelines for 
southem pine. All specifications are shown under 
Tree-Grade Classification.) 


Trees. Woody plants that have well-developed 
stems and that usually are more than 12 feet tall 
at maturity. 


Unproductive forest land. See Other forest land. 


Upper-stem portion. That part of the main stem or 
fork of a sawtimber tree above the sawiog top to a 
diameter of 4.0 inches outside bark, or to the point 
where the main stem or fork breaks into limbs. 
Urban forest land. Forest land _ sufficiently 
productive to qualify as timberland that is 
completely surrounded by or nearly surrounded by 
urban development (not parks), whether 
commercial, industrial, or residential. 


Utility right-of-way. Land associated with pipeline 
or electric transmission lines; identified only if 
vegetative cover differs from adjacent land use. 


Veneer log or bolt. A roundwood product from 
which veneer is sliced or sawn that usually meets 


Volume suitable for pulpwood. The sound volume 
(only rotten cull excluded) of growing-stock and 


rough trees. 


Windbreak/hedgerow. Linear areas, less than 
120 feet in width, with predominantly tree and/or 
shrub vegetation 


certain minimum standards of diameter, length, 
and defect. 


References 


Ferguson, Roland H.; Jensen, Victor S.. 1963. The timber resources of New Hampshire Resour. Bull. 
NE-1. Upper Darby, PA: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Northeastern Forest 
Experiment Station. 46p. 


Frieswyk, Thomas S.; Malley, Anne M.. 1985. Forest statistics for New Hampshire—1973 and 1983. 
Resour. Bull. NE-88. Broomall, PA: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service,Northeastern 
Forest Experiment Station. 102 p. 


Kingsley, Neal P. 1976. The forest resources of New Hampshire. Resour. Bull. NE-43. Upper Darby, 
PA: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Northeastern Forest Experiment Station 71 p. 


Larson, E. H.; Rettie, J. C.; Gilbert, A. M.; McGuire, John R. 1954. The forest statistics for New 
Hampshire. For. Resour. Rep. 8. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest 
Service. 39 p. 


Lund, H. Gyde (ed.). 1998. IUFRO Guidelines for designing multipurpose resource inventories: 
A Project of IUFRO Research Group 4.02.02. IUFRO World Series, Vol. 8. Vienna, Austria: 
IUFRO. 216 p. 


Scott, Charles T. 1979. Northeastern forest survey board-foot volume equations. Res. Note 
NE-271. Broomall, PA: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Northeastern Forest 
Experiment Station. 3 p. 


Scott, Charles T. 1981. Northeastern forest survey revised cubic-foot volume equations. Res. Note 
NE-304. Broomall, PA: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Northeastern 
Forest Experiment Station. 3 p. 


Wharton, Eric H.; Griffith, Douglas M. 1998. Estimating total forest biomass in Maine, 1995. 


Resour. Bull. NE-142 Radnor, PA: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, 
Northeastern Forest Experiment Station. 50p. 


12 


Tree Species of New Hampshire (as encountered on field plots) 


Scientific Name *** 


Abies balsamea (L.) Mill. 
Juniperus virginiana L. 

Lanx laricina (Du Roi) K. Koch 
Picea glauca (Moench) Voss 


_ Picea mariana (Mill.) B.S.P. 


Picea rubens Sarg. 

Pinus resinosa Ait. 

Pinus rigida Mill. 

Pinus strobus L. 

Thuja occidentalis L. 

Tsuga canadensis (L.) Carr. 


Acer negundo L. * 

Acer pensylvanicum L. * 

Acer rubrum L. 

Acer saccharinum L. 

Acer saccharum Marsh. 

Acer spicatum Lam. * 

Ailanthus altissima (Mill.) Swingle * 
Amelanchier sp. Medic. * 

Betula alleghaniensis Britton 
Betula lenta L. 

Betula papynfera Marsh. 

Betula populifolia Marsh. * 

Carya sp. Nutt. 

Carya cordiformis (Wangenh.) K. Koch 
Carya glabra (Mill.) Sweet 

Carya laciniosa (Michx. f.) Loud. 
Carya ovata (Mill.) K. Koch 
Fagus grandifolia Ehrh. 

Fraxinus americana L. 

Fraxinus nigra Marsh. 

Fraxinus pennsylvanica Marsh. 
Juglans cinerea L. 

Malus sp. Mill. * 

Nyssa sylvatica Marsh. 

Ostrya virginiana (Mill.) K. Koch * 
Populus balsamifera L. 

Populus grandidentata Michx. 
Populus tremuloides Michx. 


Common Name(s) 


Softwoods 


balsam fir 

eastern redcedar 
tamarack (native) 
white spruce 
black spruce 

red spruce 

red pine 

pitch pine 

eastern white pine 
northern white-cedar 
eastern hemlock 


Hardwoods 


boxelder 

striped maple 
red maple 

silver maple 
sugar maple 
mountain maple 
ailanthus 
serviceberry 
yellow birch 
sweet birch 
paper birch 

gray birch 
hickory 

bitternut hickory 
pignut hickory 
shellbark hickory 
shagbark hickory 
American beech 
white ash 

black ash 

green ash 
butternut 

apple 

blackgum 
eastern hophornbeam 
balsam poplar 
bigtooth aspen 
quaking aspen 


13 


Occurrence** 


Tree Species of New Hampshire (continued) 


Scientific Name *** 


Prunus sp. L. * 

Prunus pensylvanica L. f. * 
Prunus serotina Ehrh. 
Prunus virginiana L. * 
Quercus alba L. 

Quercus bicolor Willd. 


Quercus coccinea Muenchh. 


Quercus prinus L. 

Quercus rubra L. 

Quercus stellata Wangenh. 
Quercus velutina Lam. 
Robinia pseudoacacia L. 
Salix sp. L. * 

Sorbus americana Marsh. * 
Tilia sp. L. 

Tilia americana L. 

Ulmus americana L. 

Ulmus rubra Muh. 


*** Names according to: Little, Elbert L., Jr. 1979. Checklist of United States Trees (native and naturalized). Agric. Handb. 541. 


Common Name(s} 


cherry, plum 

pin cherry 

black cherry 
chokecherry 

white oak 

swamp white oak 
scarlet oak 
chestnut oak 
northern red oak 
post oak 

black oak 

black locust 

willow 

American mountain-ash 
basswood 
American basswood 
American elm 
slippery elm 


Washington, DC: U.S Department of Agriculture. 375 p. 


** Occurrence is based on the proportion of the species among all live trees 5.0 inches d.b.h. or larger encountered on forest survey 


Occurrence** 


field plots: vr = very rare (<0.05%), r = rare (0.05 to 0.49%), c = common (0.5 to 4.9%), and vc = very commen (>5.0%). 


* Noncommercial species. 


14 


Species Groups of New Hampshire 


Species Group 


Balsam fir 

Tamarack 

White spruce 

Black spruce 

Red spruce 

Red pine 

White pine 

Northern white-cedar 
Hemlock 


Other softwoods 


Sugar maple 


Red maple 


Yellow birch 
Paper birch 
Beech 
White ash 
Black ash 


Aspen 


White oaks 


Scientific name 


Abies balsamea 
Larix laricina 
Picea glauca 
Picea mariana 
Picea rubens 
Pinus resinosa 
Pinus strobus 
Thuja occidentalis 
Tsuga canadensis 
Juniperus virginiana 
Picea abies 

Pinus rigida 

Acer saccharum 


Acer rubrum 
Acer saccharinum 


Betula alleghaniensis 
Betula papyrifera 
Fagus grandifolia 
Fraxinus americana 
Fraxinus nigra 
Populus balsamifera 
Populus grandidentata 
Populus heterophylla 
Populus tremuloides 
Quercus alba 
Quercus bicolor 


Quercus prinus 
Quercus stellata 


Common name 


balsam fir 
tamarack (native) 
white spruce 
black spruce 

red spruce 

red pine 

eastern white pine 
northern white-cedar 
eastern hemlock 
eastern redcedar 
Norway spruce 
pitch pine 

sugar maple 


red maple 
silver maple 


yellow birch 
paper birch 
American beech 
white ash 

black ash 
balsam poplar 
bigtooth aspen 
swamp cottonwood 
quaking aspen 
white oak 
swamp white oak 


chestnut oak 
post oak 


Species Groups of New Hampshire (continued) 


Species Group Scientific name Common name 
Red oaks Quercus coccinea scarlet oak 
Quercus ellipsoidalis northern pin oak 
Quercus phellos willow oak 
Quercus rubra northern red oak 
Quercus velutina black oak 
Basswood Tilia americana American basswood 
Elm Ulmus americana American elm 
Ulmus rubra slippery elm 
Other hardwoods Acer sp. maple 
Acer pensylvanicum striped maple 
Acer negundo boxelder 
Acer spicatum mountain maple 
Ailanthus altissima ailanthus 
Amelanchier sp. serviceberry 
Betula sp. birch 
Betula lenta sweet birch 
Betula populifolia gray birch 
Carpinus caroliniana American hornbeam 
Carya sp. hickory 
Carya cordiformis bitternut hickory 
Carya glabra pignut hickory 
Carya laciniosa shellbark hickory 
Carya ovata shagbark hickory 
Castanea dentata American chestnut 
Corus florida flowering dogwood 
Crataegus sp. hawthorn 
Fraxinus pennsylvanica green ash 
Juglans cinerea butternut 
Malus sp. apple 
Morus rubra red mulberry 
Nyssa sylvatica blackgum 
Ostrya virginiana eastern hophornbeam 
Prunus sp. cherry, plum 
Prunus pensylvanica pin cherry 
Prunus serotina black cherry 
Prunus virginiana chokecherry 
Quercus ilicifolia bear oak, scrub oak 
Robinia pseudoacacia black locust 
Salix sp. willow 
Salix nigra black willow 
Sassafras albidum sassafras 


Sorbus americana 
Tilia sp. 


American mountain-ash 
basswood 


unknown or not listed tree 


Tree-Grade Classification 


HARDWOOD TREE GRADES 


GRADING FACTOR TREE GRADE 1| TREE GRADE 2| TREE GRADE 3 


Length of grading section ° (feet Best 12 eS so Best 12 


2 


Aidan 
Time to) tees) Sino 
2 Pas unlimited 
5/6 4/6 


Whenever a 14- or 16-foot section of the butt 16-foot log is better than the best 12-foot section, 
the grade of the longer section will become the grade of the tree. This longer section, when 
used, is the basis for determining the grading factors, such as diameter and cull deduction. 


Minimum Diameter inside bark at top 
of grading section (inches) 


Clear cuttings on 3rd best face® 


minimum length (feet) 


number on face (maximum) 


yield in face length (minimum) 


Cull deduction, including crook and 
sweep but excluding shake, maximum 
within grading section 


In basswood and ash, diameter inside bark at the top of the grading section may be 12 inches 
and DBH may be 15 inches. 


Grade 2 trees can be 10 inches diameter inside bark at the top of the grading section 
if otherwise meeting surface requirements for small grade 1's. 


A clear cutting is a portion of a face free of defects, extending the width of the face. 
A face is one-fourth of the surface of the grading section as divided lengthwise. 


Fifteen percent crook and sweep, or 40 percent total cull deduction are permitted in grade 2 
if size and surface of grading section qualify as grade 1. If rot shortens the required clear 
Cuttings to the extent of dropping the butt log to grade 2, do not drop the tree's grade to 3 
unless the cull deduction for rot is greater than 40 percent. 


17 


Tree-Grade Classification (continued) 


TIE AND TIMBER GRADE 


SPECIFICATIONS 


Scaling Diameter (inches 8 inches d.i.b. and larger 
Length, without trim (feet) 12 feet and larger 
no requirements: not graded on cutting 
Clear cuttings basis 


Maximum sweep allowance 


Sound surface defects permitted Any number, if none has an average collar® 
diameter that is more than one third of the 
Single knots log diameter at the point of occurrence 


GRADE FACTORS 


One-fourth d.i.b. of small end for half logs, 
and one-half d.i.b. for logs sixteen feet long 


Any number, provided the sum of the collar 
diameters does not exceed one third the log 
diameter at the point of occurrence 


Sound surface defects permitted 


Whorled knots 


Sound surface defects permitted Any number not exceeding knot 
specifications, if they do not extend more 
Knots than 3 inches into the contained tie or 

timber 


Unsound surface defects permitted? Any number and size if they do not extend 
into contained tie or timber. If they extend 


into the contained tie or timber, they shall 
not exceed size, number, and depth of limits 
for sound defects. 


Knot collar is the average of the vertical and horizontal diameters of 
the limb, or knot swelling, as measured flush with the surface of 
the log. 


Interior defects are not visible in standing trees. They are 
considered in grading cut logs. No interior defects are permitted 
except one shake not more than one-third the width of the contained 
tie or timber, and one split not more than 5 inches long. 


18 


Tree-Grade Classification (continued) 


EASTERN WHITE PINE TREE GRADE SPECIFICATIONS 


GRADING TREE GRADE 1| TREE GRADE 2| TREE GRADE 3} TREE GRADE 4 
FACTOR 


Two full length or | NO GOOD FACES| NO GOOD FACES | Includes all trees 
four 50% length REQUIRED. REQUIRED. not qualifying for 
good faces' (In Maximum diameter| Maximum diameter] grade 3 or better 
addition, knots on | of knots on three of knots on three and judged to have 
balance of faces best faces: SOUND) best faces: at least 1/3 of their 
shall not exceed RED KNOTS not to} SOUND RED gross volume in 
size limitations for | exceed 1/6 of KNOTS not to sound wood 
grade 2 sections) | scaling dia. or 3 exceed 1/3 of suitable for 
inch maximum scaling diameter or| manufacture into 
DEAD OR BLACK | 5 inch maximum? | standard lumber 
KNOTS, including | DEAD OR BLACK 
overgrown knots, KNOTS, including 
not to exceed 1/12 | overgrown knots, 
scaling dia. and 1- | not to exceed 1/6 
1/2 inch max. scaling dia. and 2- 

1/2 inch max. 


(2) Maximum 
weevil injury in butt 
16 ft section 


(3) Minimum face 
requirements on 
butt 16 ft section 


(4) Maximum 
sweep or crook in 
butt 16 ft section 


(5) Maximum total 
scaling deduction 
in butt 16 ft. 
section (percent) 


After the tentative grade of the section is established from face examination, the section will be reduced 
one grade whenever the following defects are evident: 


CONKS, PUNK KNOTS, AND PINE BORER DAMAGE ON THE SURFACE OF THE SECTION® 
Degrade one grade if present on one face. Degrade two grades if present on two faces. Degrade three 
grades if present on three or four faces. 

(7) If the final grade of the grading section is 1, 2, or 3, examine the tree for weevil injuries in the 
merchantable stem above 16 ft. If the total apparent weevil injuries exceed three, degrade the tree one 
grade below the section ‘grade’. Otherwise the tree grade equals the final section grade. 

Trees under 16 inches DBH require four full length good faces. 
2 Scaling diameter is estimated at the top of the 16-foot grading section. 


> No tree will be designated below Grade 4 unless net tree scale is less than one-third of gross tree 
scale. 


19 


Tree-Grade Classification (continued) 
SOUTHERN PINE TREE GRADES 
Grade 1 - trees with 3 or 4 clear faces on the 16-foot grading section. 
Grade 2 - trees with 1 or 2 clear faces on the 16-foot grading section. 
Grade 3 - trees with no clear faces on the 16-foot grading section. 
After the tentative grade is established, the tree will be reduced one grade for each of the following: 


(1) Sweep. Degrade any tentative Grade 1 or 2 tree one grade if sweep in the lower 12 feet of the grading 
section amounts to 3 or more inches and equals or exceeds one-fourth the diameter at breast height. 


(2) Heart rot. Degrade any tentative Grade 1 or 2 tree one grade if conks, punk knots, or other evidence of 
advanced heart rot is found anywhere on the tree stem. 


NOTE: No tree can be degraded below Grade 3, provided the total scaling deductions for sweep and/or rot do 
not exceed two-thirds the gross scale of the tree. Trees with total scaling deductions in excess of two-thirds 
are classified as cull. 


A face is one-fourth the circumference of the 16-foot grading section and extends the full length of the grading section. 
Clear faces are those free from knots measuring more than 1/2 inch in diameter, overgrown knots of any size, and 
holes more than 1/4 inch in diameter. Faces may be rotated, if necessary, to obtain the maximum number of clear 
faces on the grading section. 


One-log trees are graded by using the Southern Pine Log Grades. This is recommended because the entire 


merchantable volume of the tree is contained in the graded section. The log grading system gives a more accurate 
prediction of the lumber grade-yields for such trees than would the tree grading system. 


SPRUCE, FIR, CEDAR, TAMARACK, AND HEMLOCK LOGS 


Minimum Merchantability Sp ecifications for Grade One Log s 


LENGTH? TOTAL SWEEP OTHER REQUIREMENTS 
DEDUCTION PERMITTED 


12'- 16’ in2 50% 25 % Sound knots not over 2” in diameter 
foot multiples permitted. Shake permitted up to 20 


% of gross scale if not combined with 
other serious defect. 
12-16’ in2 Sound knots not over 3” in diameter 
foot multiples permitted. Shake permitted up to 20 
% of gross scale if not combined with 
other serious defect. 


1 at small end of log. 
? without trim. 


TREE GRADE 5 (ALL SPECIES) 


Any tree which does not make tree grade 1,2, or 3 (or 4) but is still a merchantable tree. 


20 


Field Plot Data Quality Standards 


A quality assurance (QA) program is 
performed to ensure that a final product will 
meet the desired level of accuracy and 
precision. Quality control (QC) procedures 
are specific actions within the quality 
assurance program that are designed to 
maintain data quality within an acceptable 
range. There are three basic aspects of any 
QA program: error prevention, assessment 
and appraisal, and_ correction. Error 
prevention is achieved by developing 
standardized methods, establishing 
measurement quality objectives and data 
quality standards, and applying calibration 
techniques and training. Assessment and 
appraisal is accomplished by performing 
audits, debriefings and field personnel 
feedback, data validation and verification, 
and a remeasurement program for QC data 
collection. The purpose of correction, the 
last aspect of the quality assurance program, 
is to use all of the information from the 
prevention and assessment and appraisal 
components to make improvements, where 
needed, in the measurement system. 


Our periodic resource inventories are 
designed to satisfy specified precision 
objectives. Much of our resource information 
comes from a Statistically sound but very 
small sample of actual ground conditions that 
were selected to satisfy the precision 
objectives. While there is no guarantee that 
the data are completely error-free, it is 
obvious that field errors must be kept to a 
minimum. Establishing and adhering to a 
quality assurance (QA) program- can 
accomplish this objective. By setting 
standards and monitoring fieldwork, we can 
detect and correct, prevent, or eliminate the 
repetition of most errors. 


After the initial training period, periodic 
inspections are made of every crew's 
fieldwork by field supervisors. The number of 
errors detected will partially determine 
frequency of inspections. All instances of 
error are analyzed and discussed with the 
crew concerned. Supervisors monitor 
progress and _ goals, and = minimum 
acceptable performance levels are adjusted 
as conditions warrant. In addition, a 


21 


percentage of all plots are subjected to a 
second measurement as part of the quality 
control program. 


Tolerance levels are set depending on the 
type of data item. When an item is obtained 
by measurements that can be repeated with 
uniform results by several individuals, close 
tolerance limits that define acceptable data 
are set. Some items require subjective 
evaluation; the breadth of the tolerance limits 
depends on the degree of subjectivity. When 
an item requires a mutually exclusive 
answer, crews are expected to complete the 
item as best they can, based on their 
training, instructions received, and evidence 
on the plot, with zero tolerance for error. 


Quality Control Program 


The following procedures were followed to 
obtain the QC tree data results. 


Sample Size 


* Four percent random sample of all plots 
in state is selected. 


Data Collection 


* Crew 1 visits a plot. 
x The plot is identified as QC by field 
supervisor. 


/* Crew 2 visits the same plot. 


Compilation 


*x Trees from both data sets (Crew 1 and 2) 
are extracted from forested subplots. 
* Trees are matched between sets based 
on the following criteria: 
1) Tree numbers for all 
trees. 
2) Distance, azimuth, and species for 
all new or ingrowth trees. 


remeasure 


Comparison 


x Tolerance limits from _ state field 
instructions are used to compare the tree 
data between Crew 1 and Crew 2. 

* Four tree data item classes are grouped 
prior to applying tolerance. 

1) Six condition classes are reduced to 
three: live, dead, 


2) Six tree grades are reduced to four: 4) Three merchantability classes are 
merchantable, tie & timber, cull, and reduced to two: sound and unsound. 
dead. 

3) Six tree classes are reduced to five: 
preferred and acceptable, rough, 
rotten, dead, and snag. 


Results 

* Percentage of data within tolerance limits, and 

* Number of times data exceeded tolerance limits. 

* Values are either within tolerance (1x) or exceed 
tolerance (2x, 3x, or 4x). 


New Hampshire QA Tree Data Resuits from 
123 Subplots 


Percentage of data within 
tolerance Number of times data exceeded tolerance 
Tree data item @ix @& @3x @4 1x 2x 3x 4x Records 
Species — No tolerance 97% 55 1,599 
Trees (missed) — No tolerance 99% (23) 1,599 
Horizontal distance - .2 feet (+ or -) 72% 89% 94% 454 175 90 1,599 
Azimuth - 2 degrees (+ or -) 73% 91% 95% 430 146 73 1,599 
Tree history — No tolerance 96% 25 698 
Diameter — .1 inch (+ or -) 91% 94% 96% 112 71 51 1,268 
Ecotype - No tolerance 97% 32 1,180 
Condition — No tolerance** 97% 40 1,249 
Tree grade — No tolerance** 80% 65 318 
Saw length — 4 feet (+ or -) 47% 68% 82% 92% 168 103 56 21. 318 
Bole length — 4 feet (+ or -) 51% 75% 90% 96% 486 250 104 36 996 
Total length - 10 feet (+ or -) 77% 96% 98% 245 47 17 1,084 
Board foot cull — 10% (+ or -) 75% 87% 92% 93% 81 4 27 21 318 
Board foot soundness _ -- 1 class (+ or -) 85% 89% 90% 92% 47 35 32 27 318 
Cubic foot cull — 10% (+ or -) 78% 93% 97% 98% 221 72 33 18 996 
Cubic foot soundness - 1 class (+ or -) 85% 87% 89% 92% 1530913055 2107, 83 996 
Crown ratio — 1 class (+ or -) 83% 95% 169 52 996 
Crown class — No tolerance 69% 313 996 
General damage — Variable tolerance 96% 40 996 
Special damage — Variable tolerance 86% 288 1,992 
Tree class - No tolerance** 91% 118 1,249 
Merchantability class - No tolerance** 89% 126 1,148 


22 


Metric Equivalents 


1 acre = 4,046.86 square meters 
1 acre = 0.404686 hectares 
1,000 acres = 404.686 hectares 
1,000,000 acres = 404,686 hectares 

1 board foot = 0.00348 cubic meters 

1 board foot = 3,480 cubic centimeters 

1,000 board feet = 3.48 cubic meters 

1,000,000 board feet = 3,480 cubic meters 

1 cubic foot = 0.028317 cubic meters 

1,000 cubic feet = 28.317 cubic meters 

1,000,000 cubic feet = 28,317 cubic meters 

1 cord (wood, bark, and air space) = 3.6246 cubic meters 

1 cord (Solid wood, pulpwood) = 2.4069 cubic meters 

1 cord (solid wood, other than pulpwood) = 2.2654 cubic meters. 

1,000 cords (pulpwood) = 2,406.9 cubic meters 

1,000 cords (other products) = 2,265.4 cubic meters 

1 inch = 2.54 centimeters or 0.0254 meters 

1 foot = 30.48 centimeters or 0.3048 meters 

1 mile = 1.609 kilometers 

1 square foot = 929.03 square centimeters 

1 square foot = 0.0929 square meters 

1 square foot per acre basal area = 0.229568 square meters per hectare 
1 cubic foot per acre = 0.0699 cubic meters per hectare 

1 ton = 907.1848 kilograms 

1,000 tons = 907.1848 metric tons 

Breast height = 1.4 meters above ground level 


Although 1,000 board feet are theoretically equivalent to 2.36 cubic meters, 
this is true only when a board foot is actually a piece of wood with a volume 
1/12 of a cubic foot. The International 1/4-inch log rule is used by the USDA 
Forest Service in the East to estimate the product potential in board feet. The 
reliability of the estimate obtained by conversion will vary with the size of the 
log measure. The conversion given here, 3.48 cubic meters, is based on the 
cubic volume of a log 16 feet long and 15 inches in diameter inside bark 
(d.i.b.) at the small end. This conversion could be used for average 
comparisons when accuracy of 10 percent is acceptable. Because the board 
foot unit is not a true measure of wood volume and because products other 
than dimension lumber are becoming important, this unit may eventually be 
phased out and replaced by the cubic meter. 


23 


INDEX TO TABLES 


The following tables are divided into four major 


sections: 


(1) State, (2) Northern Unit, (3) 


Southern Unit and (4) County tables. 


State Tables 


10. 


Area 


Total land area by land use class, New 
Hampshire, 1997. 


Area of timberland by forest type, forest- 
type group, and stand-size class, New 
Hampshire, 1983. 


Area of timberland by forest type, forest- 
type group, and stand-size class, New 
Hampshire, 1997. 


Area of timberland by forest-type group 
and ownership class, New Hampshire, 
1997. 


Area of timberland by stand-size class 
and ownership class, New Hampshire, 
1997. 


Area of timberland by forest-type group 
and cubic-foot stand-volume class of all 
live trees, New Hampshire, 1997. 


Area of timberland by forest-type group 
and cubic-foot stand-volume class of 
growing stock trees, New Hampshire, 
1997. 


Area of timberland by forest-type group 
and board-foot stand-volume class, New 
Hampshire, 1997. 


Area of timberland by forest-type group 
and basal-area class, New Hampshire, 
1997. 


Area of timberland by forest-type group 
and stocking class of all live trees, New 
Hampshire, 1983. 


24 


Lie 


12. 


13. 


14. 


15. 


16. 


cee 


19. 


20. 


2: 


22. 


Area of timberland by forest-type group 
and stocking class of all live trees, New 
Hampshire, 1997. 


Area of timberland by forest-type group 
and stocking class of growing-stock 
trees, New Hampshire, 1983. 


Area of timberland by forest-type group 
and stocking class of growing-stock trees, 
New Hampshire, 1997. 


Number of Trees 


Number of trees (5.0+ inches d.b.h.) on 
timberland by species and tree class, 
New Hampshire, 1997. 


Number of standing dead trees (5.0+ 
inches d.b.h.) on timberland by species, 
condition class, and diameter class, New 
Hampshire, 1997. 


Number of seedlings, saplings, and 
shrubs on timberland by species and 
stand-size class, New Hampshire, 1997. 


Number of live trees (1.0+ inches d.b.h.) 
on timberland by species and diameter 
class, New Hampshire, 1997. 


Number of growing-stock trees (5.0+ 
inches d.b.h.) on timberland by species 
and diameter class, New Hampshire, 
1983. 


Number of growing-stock trees (5.0+ 
inches d.b.h.) on timberland by species 
and diameter class, New Hampshire, 
1997. 


Volume 


Net volume of all trees on timberland by 
species and tree class, New Hampshire, 
1997. 


Net volume of all live trees on timberland 
by species and diameter class, New 
Hampshire, 1983. 


Net volume of live trees on timberland by 
species and diameter class, New 
Hampshire, 1997. 


23. 


24. 


25. 


26. 


Zt: 


28. 


29. 


30. 


31. 


32. 


33. 


34. 


35. 


Net volume of growing-stock trees on 
timberland by species and diameter 
class, New Hampshire, 1983. 


Net volume of growing-stock trees on 
timberland by species and diameter 
class, New Hampshire, 1997. 


Net volume of growing-stock trees on 
timberland by species and _— stand-size 
class, New Hampshire, 1983. 


Net volume of growing-stock trees on 
timberland by species and stand-size 
class, New Hampshire, 1997. 


Net volume of growing-stock trees on 
timberland by forest type and stand-size 
class, New Hampshire, 1997. 


Net volume of growing-stock trees on 
timberland by species and forest-type 
group, New Hampshire, 1983. 


Net volume of growing-stock trees on 
timberland by species and forest-type 
group, New Hampshire, 1997. 


Net volume of growing-stock in the 
sawlog portion of sawtimber trees on 
timberland by species and diameter 
class, New Hampshire, 1997. 


Net volume of sawtimber trees on 
timberland by species and diameter 
class, New Hampshire, 1983. 


Net volume of sawtimber trees on 
timberland by species and diameter 
class, New Hampshire, 1997. 


Net volume of sawtimber trees on 
timberland by species, size class, and 
tree grade, New Hampshire, 1997. 


Change 


Average annual net change of growing- 
stock volume on timberland by species 
and component of change, New 
Hampshire, 1997. 


Average annual net change of sawtimber 
volume on timberland by species and 
component of change, New Hampshire, 
1997. 


25 


Northern Unit Tables 


36. 


37. 


38. 


39. 


40. 


41. 


42. 


43. 


44. 


45. 


46. 


Area of timberland by forest type, forest- 
type group, and_ stand-size class, 
Northern Unit, New Hampshire, 1983. 


Area of timberland by forest type, forest- 
type group, -and_ stand-size_ class, 
Northern Unit, New Hampshire, 1997. 


Number of live trees (1.0+ inches d.b.h.) 
on timberland by species and diameter 
class, Northern Unit, New Hampshire, 
1997. 


Number of growing-stock trees (5.0+ 
inches d.b.h.) on timberland by species 
and diameter class, Northern Unit, New 
Hampshire, 1983. 


Number of growing-stock trees (5.0+ 
inches d.b.h.) on timberland by species 
and diameter class, Northern Unit, New 
Hampshire, 1997. 


Net volume of all trees on timberland by 
species and tree class, Northern Unit, 
New Hampshire, 1997. 


Net volume of all live trees on timberland 
by species and diameter class, Northern 
Unit, New Hampshire, 1983. 


Net volume of live trees (5.0+ inches 
d.b.h.) on timberland by species and 
diameter class, Northern Unit, New 
Hampshire, 1997. 


Net volume of growing-stock trees on 
timberland by species and diameter 
class, Northern Unit, New Hampshire, 
1983. 


Net volume of growing-stock trees on 
timberland by species and diameter 
class, Northern Unit, New Hampshire, 
1997. 


Net volume of growing-stock trees on 
timberland by species and __ stand-size 
class, Northern Unit, New Hampshire, 
1983. 


47. 


48. 


49. 


50. 


31. 


92. 


53. 


54. 


59. 


Net volume of growing-stock trees on 
timberland by species and stand-size 
class, Northern Unit, New Hampshire, 
1997. 


Net volume of growing-stock trees on 
timberland by forest type and stand-size 
class, Northern Unit, New Hampshire, 
1997. 


Net volume of growing-stock trees on 
timberland by species and forest-type 
group, Northern Unit, New Hampshire, 
1983. 


Net volume of growing-stock trees on 
timberland by species and forest-type 
group, Northern Unit, New Hampshire, 
1997. 


Net volume of growing-stock in the 
sawlog portion of sawtimber trees on 
timberland by species and diameter 
class, Northern Unit, New Hampshire, 
1997. 


Net volume of sawtimber trees on 
timberland by species and diameter 
class, Northern Unit, New Hampshire, 
1983. 


Net volume of sawtimber trees on 
timberland by species and diameter 
class, Northern Unit, New Hampshire, 
1997. 


Average annual net change of growing- 
stock volume on timberland by species 
and component of change, Northern Unit, 
New Hampshire, 1997. 


Average annual net change of sawtimber 
volume on timberland by species and 
component of change, Northern Unit, 
New Hampshire, 1997. 


Southern Unit Tables 


56. 


57. 


Area of timberland by forest type, forest- 
type group, and_ stand-size class, 
Southem Unit, New Hampshire, 1983. 


Area of timberland by forest type, forest- 
type group, and_ stand-size_ class, 
Southern Unit, New Hampshire, 1997. 


26 


58. 


59. 


60. 


61. 


62. 


63. 


64. 


65. 


66. 


67. 


68. 


Number of live trees (1.0+ inches d.b.h.) 
on timberland by species and diameter 
class, Southern Unit, New Hampshire, 
1997. 


Number of growing-stock trees (5.0+ 
inches d.b.h.) on timberland by species 
and diameter class, Southern Unit, New 
Hampshire, 1983. 


Number of growing-stock trees (5.0+ 
inches d.b.h.) on timberland by species 
and diameter class, Southern Unit, New 
Hampshire, 1997. 


Net volume of all trees on timberland by 
species and tree class, Southern Unit, 
New Hampshire, 1997. 


Net volume of all live trees on timberland 
by species and diameter class, Southern 
Unit, New Hampshire, 1983. 


Net volume of live trees (5.0+ inches 
d.b.h.) on timberland by species and 
diameter class, Southern Unit, New 
Hampshire, 1997. 


Net volume of growing-stock trees on 
timberland by species and diameter 
class, Southern Unit, New Hampshire, 
1983. 


Net volume of growing-stock trees on 
timberland by species and diameter 
class, Southern Unit, New Hampshire, 
1997. 


Net volume of growing-stock trees on 
timberland by species and _ stand-size 
class, Southern Unit, New Hampshire, 
1983. 


Net volume of growing-stock trees on 
timberland by species and stand-size 
class, Southern Unit, New Hampshire, 
1997. 


Net volume of growing-stock trees on 
timberland by forest type and stand-size 
class, Southern Unit, New Hampshire, 
1997. 


69. 


70. 


thle 


t2: 


73. 


74. 


75. 


Net volume of growing-stock trees on 
timberland by species and forest-type 
group, Southern Unit, New Hampshire, 
1983. 


Net volume of growing-stock trees on 
timberland by species and forest-type 
group, Southern Unit, New Hampshire, 
1997. 


Net volume of growing-stock in the 
sawlog portion of sawtimber trees on 
timberland by species and diameter 
class, Southern Unit, New Hampshire, 
1997. 


Net volume of sawtimber trees on 
timberland by species and diameter 
class, Southern Unit, New Hampshire, 
1983. 


Net volume of sawtimber trees on 
timberland by species and diameter 
class, Southern Unit, New Hampshire, 
1997. 


Average annual net change of growing- 
stock volume on timberland by species 
and component of change, Southern Unit, 
New Hampshire, 1997. 


Average annual net change of sawtimber 
volume on timberland by species and 
component of change, Southern Unit, 
New Hampshire, 1997. 


27 


County Tables 


76. 


Ute 


78. 


79. 


80. 


81. 


82. 


83. 


84. 


85. 


86. 


Net land area by county, and land class, 
New Hampshire, 1997. 


Area of timberland by county and 
ownership class, New Hampshire, 1997. 


Area of timberland by county and forest- 
type group, New Hampshire, 1997. 


Area of timberland by county and stand- 
size class, New Hampshire, 1997. 


Area of timberland by county and 
stocking class of growing-stock trees, 
New Hampshire, 1997. 


Net volume of growing-stock trees on 
timberland by county and _ forest-type 
group, New Hampshire, 1997. 


Net volume of growing-stock trees on 
timberland by county and_ stand-size 
class, New Hampshire, 1997. 


Net volume of sawtimber trees on 
timberland by county and _ forest-type 
group, New Hampshire, 1997. 


Net volume of sawtimber trees on 
timberland by county and_ stand-size 
class, New Hampshire, 1997. 


Biomass of all trees and shrubs on 
timberland, by county and class of 
material, New Hampshire, 1997. 


Biomass of all timber on timberland, by 
county and class of material, New 
Hampshire, 1997. 


Sw dike, ai 
aa ai: 4 tats sinning oO 
+977 


“ ‘ a, 4 
~liperty aa eg rik sje — iG 
aye Shi) ast “4 eh aie ake A 
a6 i - 
hae ay oe ‘hen Weta 


centile toe! a be et 
bi a 


cuittuel ar 
: ute | 
.- _ Pebuss ‘bast =| 


% | sidbe ey aire 


steered fen | it Senna i 
OB. ra ya brane 


no , lea 
erie i nite 
; oe, 


a Ge . Wher. x 
an “ws ea = | 
~9 
SF; 
£ 
2 
bse \s ere 


ral =>) en <— =f 


STATE TABLES 


ie 
| 
| 
Coos 
\ 96% 
See Se 
Grafton J 
88% ier Carroll. 
te 86% | 
teil is Belknap 
ay, 80 
pun) Merrimack ~~. Strafford 
82% ae ; 67%, 
“Hillsboro Rockingham 
Cheshire 71% | 70% 


Loe 


Percentage of land in forest by county, 1997 
(State average = 84 percent) 


Timberland area by stand-size class 
New Hampshire, 1983 and 1997 


Sawtimber 
41.7% 

Poletimber 

53.0% 
Sapling/seedling 
5.3% 
Sawtimber 
52.1% 

Poletimber 

39.2% 


Sapling/seedling 
8.6% 


1997 


a 
Table 1.--Land area by land class, New Hampshire, 1983 and 1997 


b 
(In thousands of acres) 


Area 
Land class 
1983 Percent 1997 

Timber land 4,799.3 84 4,508.6 
Noncommercial forest land: 

Reserved productive 102.5 2 148.6 

Urban forest banc 0.0 <1 50.1 

Other forest land 56.5 1 108.1 

Reserved other forest land 0.0 <1 8.3 

Total noncommercial ... 159.0 3 315.2 

Total forest land 4,958.3 86 4,823.8 © 
Nonforest land: 

Cropland 145.4 2 138.8 

Pasture 80.8 1 52.5 

Other 555.9 10 725.3 
Total nonforest land 782.1 14 916.6 

d 

Total land area 5,740.4 100 5,740.4 


F In this and other tables, a zero indicates that the data are 
negligible or the condition was not encountered in the sample. 
A dash indicates that the condition is not possible under current 
Forest Service definitions. 
Rows and columns in all tables may not sum due to rounding. 
"Other forest land" formerly known as unproductive forest land. 
Source: 1990 United States Department of Commerce, Bureau of Census. 


31 


Percent 


79 


84 


100 


Table 2.--Area of timberland by forest type, forest-type group, and stand-size 


class, New Hampshire, 1983 


(In thousands of acres) 


Forest type 
San- 
timber 

Red pine 24.1 
White pine 343.0 
white pine/hemlock 90.6 
Hemlock 97.9 

wWhite/red pine group 555.6 
Balsam fir 39.3 
Red spruce -0 
Red spruce/balsam fir 27.2 
White spruce -0 
Tamarack 0 

Spruce/fir group 66.5 
Pitch pine 9.4 

Loblolly/shortleaf group 9.4 
wh. pine/no.red oak/wh. ash 93.8 
Other oak/pine -0 

Oak/pine group 93.8 
Post, black, or bear oak 7.3 
Chestnut oak 0 
White oak/red oak/hickory 21.6 
Northern red oak 48.4 
Scarlet oak -0 
Red maple/central hardwood -0 
Mixed central hardwoods 96.4 

Oak/hickory group 173.7 
Black ash/Amer. elm/red maple 0 
Red maple( lowland) 0 
Red maple(upland) 0 

Elm/ash/red maple group -0 
Sugar maple/beech/yellow birch 753.8 
Black Cherry -0 
Red maple/northern hardwoods 141.7 
Pin cherry/reverting field -0 
Mixed northern hardwoods 107.7 

Northern hardwoods group 1,003.2 
Aspen 38.5 
Paper birch 52.8 
Gray birch 7.3 

Aspen/birch group 98.6 
All forest types 2,000.7 
SE 4.8 


Stand-size class 


Pole- Sapling and Non- 
timber seedling stocked 
.0 -0 0 
84.4 t3 -0 
38.0 0 0 
34.7 .0 0 
157.1 WS -0 
148.5 27.1 0 
88.4 9.7 0 
105.5 9.7 0 
20.1 «0 0 
10.0 -6 0 
372.5 46.4 0 
9.4 -0 0 
9.4 0 0 
76.2 -0 0 
7.3 -0 0 
83.5 0 0 
14.5 -0 0 
7.1 0 0 
42.8 -0 0 
114.1 8.4 0 
7.1 0 0 
23 Ai 0 
160.3 6.9 0 
353.3 32.4 0 
20.8 8.5 0 
14.2 2.9 -0 
14.3 10.0 0 
49.3 21.5 0 
490.1 35.0 0 
10.0 16.6 -0 
502.8 5-3 0 
10.0 25.35 0 
178.8 16.2 0 
1,191.7 98.4 0 
127.4 14.5 0 
201.4 10.7 0 
-0 21.9 0 
328.8 47.1 -0 
2,545.5 253.0 0 
3.9 16.8 0 


32 


ALL 
classes 


SE 


oo-f 


RROMWNON 


* 8 
ues ut 


Ww wDoURDS oO 


o 


o 


Table 3.--Area of timberland by forest type, forest-type group, and stand-size 
class, New Hampshire, 1997 


Forest type 


Red pine 

White pine 

White pine/hemlock 
Hemlock 


White/red pine group 


Balsam fir 

Red spruce 

Red spruce/balsam fir 
White spruce 


Spruce/fir group 
Pitch pine 
Loblolly/shortleaf group 


Wh. pine/no.red oak/wh. ash 
Other oak/pine 


Oak/pine group 


Post, black, or bear oak 
White oak/red oak/hickory 
White oak 

‘Northern red oak 

Red maple/central hardwood 
Mixed central hardwoods 


Oak/hickory group 
Black ash/Amer. elm/red maple 
Red maple( lowland) 
Red maple(upland) 
Willow 
Elm/ash/red maple group 
Sugar maple/beech/yellow birch 
Black Cherry 
Red maple/northern hardwoods 
Pin cherry/reverting field 
Mixed northern hardwoods 
Northern hardwoods group 
Aspen 
Paper birch 
Gray birch 
Aspen/birch group 
All forest types 


SE 


(In thousands of acres) 


Saw- 
timber 
1.8 
322.4 
154.8 
121.6 
600.6 
31.6 
20.5 
35.3 
11.6 
99.0 


10.4 


71.6 
2,346.0 
3.6 


Pole- 
timber 
4.9 
49.0 
36.3 
45.6 
135.8 


127.6 
34.0 
86.0 

-0 


247.6 


33 


Stand-size class 


Sapling and 


seedling 


-0 
8.7 


Non- 
stocked 


All 
classes 


Table 4.--Area of timberland by forest-type group and ownership class, New Hampshire, 1997 


(In thousands of acres) 


Ownership class 


Forest- type a Ge a ee ee TN Se ME OS Tas a SE 
; classes 
group National Other Forest Other 
Forest public industry private 

White/red pine 19.4 55.0 6.9 668.8 750.1 7.2 
Spruce/fir 102.0 19.3 115.7 173.1 410.1 Wea 
Loblolly/shortleaf -0 322 -0 ee LOLS 15.5 56.0 
Oak/pine 0 17.6 .0 187.6 205.2 15.7 
Oak/hickory 21.9 59.4 -0 515.9 597.1 8.8 
Elm/ash/red maple -0 17.2 : -0 55.1 (2.3 26.9 
Northern hardwoods 329.8 156.9 307.2 1,407.0 2,200.9 Sal, 
Aspen/birch 52.6 30.2 28.0 146.6 257.4 14.5 
Total, all groups 525.6 360.9 457.7 3,164.4 4,508.6 1.1 
SE 6.3 qe 8.2 2.0 vat 


Table 5. Area of timberland by stand-size class and ownership class, New Hampshire, 1997 


(In thousands of acres) 


Ownership class 


l 
Stand-size class a ea. nn en ee ae SE 

. classes 

National Other Forest Other 
Forest public industry private 

Sawt imber 275.5 - 191.9 171.7 1,706.9 2,346.0 3.6 
Poletimber 199.6 157.4 211.3 1,196.2 1,764.5 4.6 
Sapling and seedling 50.5 11.6 69.7 257.4 389.1 10.9 
Nonstocked .0 .0 5.0 3.9 8.9 71.3 
Total, all classes 525.6 360.9 457.7 3,164.4 4,508.6 USL 
SE 6.3 12.1 8.2 2.0 Vol 


34 


Table 6.--Area of timberland by forest-type group and all-live stand-volume 


class, New Hampshire, 1997 


(In thousands of acres) 


Stand-volume class (cubic feet per acre) 


All 
Forest-type alasses SE 
group 0- 500- 1000- 1500- 2000- 
499 999 1499 1999 2499 2500+ 
White/red pine 14.4 15/2 69.3 118.2 126.0 407.0 750.1 7.2 
Spruce/fir 66.6 48.3 17.6 107.4 53.6 116.5 410.1 Adie 
Loblolly/shortleaf -0 -0 5.2 -0 5.2 5.2 15.5 56.0 
Oak/pine 8.4 Wat: 18.1 23.5 44.0 109.5 205.2 LEIA 
Oak/hickory 18.7 50.4 65.0 153.0 147.1 163.0 597.1 8.8 
Elm/ash/red maple 9.9 23.4 24.1 6.0 6.2 2.9 72.3 26.9 
Northern hardwoods 191.8 230.2 318.5 359.0 511.2 590.1 2,200.9 Sct 
Aspen/birch 77.1 20.3 27.9 50.1 35.2 46.8 257.4 14.5 
Total, all groups 386.8 389.5 545.5 817.1 928.6 1,441.0 4,508.6 last 
SE 10.9 11.2 9.6 7.8 7.2 5.3 USL 
Table 7.--Area of timberland by forest-type group and cubic-foot stand-volume 
class, New Hampshire, 1997 
(In thousands of acres) 
Stand-volume class (cubic feet per acre) Atl 
Forest-type SE 
l 
group 0- 500-  1000-  1500- —2000- Phere 
499 999 1499 1999 2499 2500+ 

White/red pine 14.4 S722 89.9 103.8 121.8 383.1 750.1 7.2 
Spruce/fir 66.6 48.3 52.2 88.9 54.4 99.5 410.1 11.1 
Loblolly/shortleaf .0 .0 52 -0 5.2 5.2 15.5 56.0 
Oak/pine 8.4 3.4 21.0 18.9 44.0 109.5 205.2 15.7 
Oak/hickory 18.7 50.4 77.4 148.3 143.5 158.9 597.1 8.8 
Elm/ash/red maple 14.5 18.8 25.4 10.8 -0 2.9 72.3 26.9 
Northern hardwoods 205.5 258.2 356.5 401.1 455.3 524.3 2,200.9 3.7 
Aspen/birch 77.1 20.3 44.8 33.2 42.3 39.7 257.4 14.5 
Total, all groups 405.2 436.6 672.4 805.0 866.5 1,323.0 4,508.6 usu 
SE 10.5 10.4 8.7 7.8 7.6 5.6 USL 


35 


Table 8.--Area of timberland by forest-type group and board-foot stand-volume 


Forest-type 
group 


White/red pine 
Spruce/fir 
Loblolly/shortleaf 
Oak/pine 
Oak/hickory 
Elm/ash/red maple 
Northern hardwoods 
Aspen/birch 


Total, all groups 


SE 


class, New Hampshire, 1997 


(In 


thousands of acres) 


Stand-volume class (board feet per acre) 


2000- 
3999 


119.5 
90.9 
0 
12.6 
150.2 
24.1 
538.4 
60.2 


995.9 


6.9 


Table 9.--Area of timberland 


Forest- type 
group 


White/red pine 
Spruce/ fir 
Loblolly/shortleaf 
Oak/pine 
Oak/hickory 
Elm/ash/red maple 
Northern hardwoods 
Aspen/birch 


Total, all groups 


SE 


Hampshire, 1997 
(In 
Basal area 
0- 50- 
49 99 
12.1 107.0 
59.2 54.8 
-0 552 
6.9 25.8 
21.0 143.8 
9.9 52.1 
244.7 577.8 
5321 77.6 
406.9 1,044.1 1, 
10.5 6.6 


4000- 6000- 

5999 7999 
139.1 100.8 
100.4 44.9 
5.2 0 
31.8 17.8 
159.9 77.2 
6.2 153 
468.1 263.8 
22.9 13.8 
933.6 519.6 
hee 10.0 


by forest-type group and basal-area class, New 


thousands of acres) 


8 


000- 


9999 


72.1 
12.0 
-0 
29.0 
50.4 
-0 
129.3 
16.2 


309.0 


13.7 


class (square feet per acre) 


100- 150- 200- 
149 199 249 
283.7 250.7 80 
171.6 63.7 60 
5.2 5.2 
69.8 76.4 14 
348.5 68.1 9 
0 10.4 
969.6 376.0 30 
49.0 65.6 12 
897.5 915.8 207 
4.2 7.2 16. 


36 


NOWOODODONON 


250- 
299 


11 


SCcOoOOO ROO GM 


ALL 

classes 

10000+ 
266.7 750.1 
11.1 410.1 
5.2 15.5 
91.5 205.2 
43.1 597.1 
-0 72.3 
180.5 2,200.9 
i223 257.4 


610.4 4,508.6 


8.8 1.1 


ALL 

classes 

300+ 
4.8 750.1 
-O 410.1 
.0 15:5 
=0' ) 205.2 
6.7 597.1 
.0 T2235 
1.8 2,200.9 
AORN 25104 
13.3 4,508.6 
63.0 est 


SE 


SE 


te 


un O ON OO - N 


Vn OO ON O —- N 


Table 10.--Area of timberland by forest-type group and stocking class of all 


live trees, New Hampshire, 1983 


(In thousands of acres) 


Stocking class 


: = All 

nSS eG SES classes 
group Poorly Moderately Fully Over- 
Nonstocked stocked stocked stocked’ stocked 
White/red pine .0 48.1 219.8 408.7 43.4 720.0 
Spruce/fir -0 39.5 158.1 258.1 29.7 485.3 
Loblolly/shortleaf .0 .0 .0 18.7 -0 18.7 
Oak/pine .0 14.4 53.3 102.6 vol 177.3 
Oak/hickory 0 EE) 128.4 386.6 36.9 559.3 
Elm/ash/red maple .0 30.9 15:25 14.3 10.0 70.7 
Northern hardwoods 0 93.5 513.9 1,403.0 282.8 2,293.2 
Aspen/birch -0 21.9 76.3 312.3 64.1 474.6 
Total, all groups .0 255.9 1,165.2 2,904.1 474.1 4,799.3 
SE -0 16.7 7.4 3.4 W257 8 
Table 11.--Area of timberland by forest-type group and stocking class of 
live trees, New Hampshire, 1997 
(In thousands of acres) 
Stocking class rin 
Forest-type 
classes 
group Poorly Moderately Fully Over - 
Nonstocked stocked stocked stocked stocked 

White/red pine 5.0 7.5 148.1 451.9 137.5 750.1 
Spruce/fir 3.9 39.2 72.8 236.0 58.1 410.1 
Loblolly/shortleaf -0 -0 52 5.2 52 1525 
Oak/pine .0 2c2 46.5 134.9 21.6 205.2 
Oak/hickory -0 15.5 113.0 409.6 59.0 597.1 
Elm/ash/red maple .0 13/4 34.4 20.4 4.5 72.3 
Northern hardwoods .0 55.6 445.1 1,373.0 327.2 2,200.9 
Aspen/birch .0 4.5 69.6 132.1 51.2 257.4 
Total, all groups 8.9 137.7 934.5 2,763.1 664.3 4,508.6 
SE 71.3 20.0 6.9 3.0 8.9 low 


37 


SE 


all 


SE 


7.2 
11.1 
56.0 
15.7 

8.8 
26.9 

3.7 
14.5 


1.1 


Table 12.--Area of timberland by forest-type group and stocking class of 
growing-stock trees, New Hampshire, 1983 


Forest- type 
group 


White/red pine 
Spruce/fir 
Loblolly/shortleaf 
Oak/pine 
Oak/hickory 
Elm/ash/red maple 
Northern hardwoods 
Aspen/birch 


Total, all groups 


SE 


Table 13.--Area of timberland by forest-type group and stocking class of 
growing-stock trees, New Hampshire, 1997 


Forest-type 
group 


White/red pine 
Spruce/ fir 
Loblolly/shortleaf 
Oak/pine 
Oak/hickory 
Elm/ash/red maple 
Northern hardwoods 
Aspen/birch 


Total, all groups 


SE 


Nonstocked stocked 


0 
8.5 
0 
0 
10.0 
2.9 
22.0 
14.9 


58.3 


37.0 


Nonstocked stocked 


5.0 
22.4 


(In thousands of acres) 


Stocking class 


Poorly Moderately 


stocked 

122.6 275.3 
152.3 188.2 
.0 18.7 
31.6 95.1 
sl 260.7 
50.5 -0 
375.9 761.5 
63.3 191.9 
837.8: U. 791-5 
8.8 55 


Fully 
stocked 


314.3 
136.3 
20 
50.6 
238.6 


Test 


1,099.2 
187.3 


2,033.7 


4.8 


(In thousands of acres) 


Stocking class 


Poorly Moderately 


stocked 

68.0 284.2 
113-3 157.3 
-0 5.2 
202 96.2 
62.6 183.8 
29.8 36.2 
338.4 Cited 
76.6 78.4 
690.8 1,612.8 
8.2 4.9 


38 


Fully 
stocked 


330.8 
113.6 
10.4 
97.9 
319.1 
4.7 
976.0 
91.7 


1,944.3 


4.3 


Over- 
stocked 


7.8 


Over- 
stocked 


ALL 
classes 


ALL 
classes 


SE 


SE 


Timberland area by forest-type group and 
percent change, New Hampshire, 1983-97 


White /red pine eee ee +4.2% 


-15.5% 


Spruce/fir | | ™ 
Bae ~ 4983 
Aspen/birch _ -45.8% i 199 
Oak/hickory ee 46.8% 
Other a +9.9% 
0 0.5 1 125 2 2.5 


Millions of acres 


0°e £°9 0°9 0°e b°2 8°Y 0°2 0°e 2°97 -3S 


G66'9L0'L 422'28 SOL’ 42 GIL’ S06 L972‘Sh 896'L4 926'L78 6S1'628 18°2L satoeds 1)e@ ‘)e}0) 
2°2 £89'229 ose ’Sy 9162 247'99S LYE‘ SL 629 '9¢ O77'4LS 8£6'80S 20S’S Spoompsey 12301 
O°OL 87S'02 OLL’Y 69L'L £92'SL 020'L 292’ 41 0 0 0 SPOOMPJeYy 1281 9JauODUON 
eZ 2se'22 86S'2 009 £SL'92 9¢¢ cle’ 20S'22 eee ‘'22 6LL Spoompsey ]eLdJeuM0d 413430 
S22 ze2'2 252 601 olE"L 0 2d £62'L £62'1 0 w3 
8°12 626'1 CLL 9¢ bee"L 09 941 S29'L 629'L 0 poomsseg 
£°9 289'89 L6£'2 242'L 8970'S9 267 288 029'S9 L6E'L9 6L2'2 syeo pay 
g°2L 6£0'6 26S 629 gle’. g0L £04 g0c’2 g0c’2 0 syeo 3314A 
be 299'92 222'¢ G60'L ose’t2 ce2 O12 G8e'L2 9750'L2 Lee uedsy 
0°6¢ L972’ 82 ol G60'L Z 0 850'L gS0'L 0 yse ye] 
L°8 069’ 92 os2'L gc0'L 227'22 L6g £6¢ 859'L2 62L ‘12 OLS yse 33144 
CA) zee'¢s 99S'2 91¢ 947'0S 262'2 G8y7’2 SOL'SY 74 ey) 0% yoaag 
¢°9 Leo" LL 068'2 0162 1£8'99 062'1 0s2’2 L62'¢9 965'29 22 youtq Jaded 
“9 OLf£’8S L29'9 958 £28'0S gcs' ¢sy'¢ £¢8'S4 9799'S4 682 Yotiq MO}]aA 
Xs cle’0sL £77'6 912'2 865891 99'S S708 616'9S1 999'9SL Gc2 a)dew poy 
G2 62902 cce's 60S 588'99 G07’ 92L'2 962‘'29 cl8'l9 246 @)dew sebns 
e"¢ Ze" 96E oLe'24 68L' LL £S2'0%E 968'L 92o"LL 9¢S' 225 L22‘ozs Gls’ SPOOM}40S 12301 
0°99 Ly2’¢ 291 2 295'¢ 0 L9 ogy’¢ osy’s 0 SPOOM}40S 139430 
6°9 9£8'1L6 ec2'¢ 89S‘ c¢o’28 062 b92°S s0S‘08 898 ‘62 959 190 ]WaH 
6°LS deez 662 cB GS8‘L 9) 80 919'L 2¢9'L 2 Jepad-33 14M UsJa4IJON 
2°s 8L7‘22L 889°C 2L9°2 8LE’90L 06¢ c9¢'4 9795" LOL 088'66 989'1 auid a31u4 
£°ee Ges‘¢ Os ¢y rane 0 6£ ¢2'¢ ¢/2'¢ 0 auid pay 
2°8 gss’¢9 Gl6'S 96£'2 98L'SS ¢0¢ 9247 SS7' 4S 297° 2s g00'2 aonuds pay 
0°O0L ef 0 0 ge 0 0 B¢ gE 0 aonuds 49e)¢g 
2°8¢ 890'¢ 9¢ cyl 988'2 9¢ 801 £4l'2 969'2 84 aonuds 2314 
L°6¢ 622'L 291 0 BLL‘L 0 69 670‘ 670‘ 0 yoesewe | 
0°6 G0S‘Z0L G9 SL 909'% 994'6L Log 804 95282 GSB’ SZ 206'2 Ji} wes)eg 

pesp pesp SAL] y)ns yyns 4903S a)]qQe\das0y PpetJajodd 
sasse]9 3]GEA]}eBSUON 3]qGeA1]eS 11V ua, 40Y yBnoy Burmoub 11 


dnou6 saiseds 


VW sse@})9 os9d1 


(saa4} 40 spuesnoy3 ul) 


266| ‘a4tysdwey maN ‘sse)9 aas3 pue satoeds Aq pue}sequi3 Uo (“Yy"q"p SaYysUl +0°G) Saas, JO JaqUINN--°y| a)qGei 


40 


0°” iE, 2°0b pase 23:7 8°s 6°72 9OL 09 as 


o"y S77’ 601 92L'98 2e2'¢ 696'8 L87'o2 692'¢2 949 24S'L L80‘L2 satoads }]e ‘)e301 
Ly 29¢'LS 985'99 9S”'2 sa BLS 692'8¢ 18601 8S7 298 GS9'6 spoompsey ]€301 

L°eh 8L'S 229'¢ 0 Z¢ 9¢9'¢ 2us‘L 0 0 Zbs‘L SPOOMPJEY } 61 I1aUWODUON 
£"9L 22L’¢ 6S9'2 92 671 ¢c2'2 £99 ¢¢ MLL 91S Spoompsey }eLIVaWOD J2a430 
S62 198 LiZ Leg Bel £7S OsL 0 zg cll w)3 
2°19 871 LLL 0 0 LLL 2 0 0 Ze poomsseg 
9°OL £99'¢ 91¢'2 901 982 G86'L 680'L 62 BLL 288 seo pay 
2°12 L221 056 6£ ool 062 162 0 0 L6z SyeO 33 LUM 
9°SL 2024 208’¢ 0 ze 629'¢ S68 0 GZ 128 uadsy 
8°25 L2L £8 0 0 £8 2g 0 0 2 yse 498)¢ 
S°Sk 821 ‘2 299° ¢¢ cL 96S‘L 299 dl Zl CLE yse a31UA 
cL 8£6'2 2292 Sse £09 899'L LLE 0 2s 952 yoaeg 
2°OL G2Z‘OL 6088 691 202 226'2 9L6'L gc 9S 928'L ydsiq Jaded 
9°6 Lb9'2 0ss’9 9601 262‘ 861L'7 898 ¢ 8 602 YOJiq MO} 3A 
sl 279" tL £82'6 262 926 sls’8 798" 1 8S 92 bell a)dew pay 
8°sl 289'¢ 808'2 coe 884 210'2 628 671 SLL 919 @)dew se6ns 
2°9 920'2S 062'6£ L22'b 292'¢ 2¢2'%¢ 88221 28L Gl9 G27’ LL SPOOM}4OS ]8301 

8°S4 002 001 0 0 0OL 0oL 0 0 0OL SPOOM}}OS J2430 
9°91 979'4 669'¢ gsz 96S see’2 296 0 cst 192 90 ]WSH 
2°12 Lg? 99£ 0 9¢ oss SLL 0 0 SLL JBpad-331 4M UJ2YZION 
9°8 Z18'SL 2£2'6 689 9LO’L 2£0'8 cl0'9 ge LZ2 292'S auid a314A 
9°02 ¢22 ev 0 0 €%L 08 0 0 08 auid pay 
9° LL LLL’S 286'S 2st bez 90L'S 62L'2 92 601 9961 aonids pay 
9° 6S LL Sv 0 9¢ 601 9¢ 0 0 9¢ aonuds 3314A 
£°99 291 291 of 9£ G6 0 0 0 0 yoesewe | 
SLL 092'22 GSY’6L 9£1 2Zec’t 226'L1 s08’2 9. 601 229'2 Jly wes)eg 

S99s} })8 18201 +S 6°71 6°0L 8301 +S 6°47 6°OL 
3S e301 -O"LL -0°S -O'LL -0°S 


dnou6 satoads 
do} ue youg do} }9e83u] 


(S394} 40 spuesnoy3 ul) 


2661 ‘aitysdwey Man 
*ss®]9 Jajoweip pue ’sse)}9 UolzLpUuod ‘saiozads Aq pue)Joquily uo (“Yyq*p SaysUL +9°S) Saad} peap Bulpueys jo JaquINN--"s| a)qeL 


41 


Table 16.--Number of seedlings, saplings, and shrubs on timberland by species 
and stand-size class, New Hampshire, 1997 


Species 


Balsam fir 

Common juniper 
Eastern redcedar 
Tamarack 

Spruce species 
Red pine 

Pitch pine 
Eastern white pine 
Canada yew 
Northern white-cedar 
Eastern hemlock 
Maple species 
Boxelder 

Striped maple 

Red maple 

Silver maple 
Sugar maple 
Mountain maple 
Alder species 
Serviceberry 

Bog rosemary 
Chokeberry species 
Azalea species 
Barberry 

Yellow birch 
Sweet birch 

Paper birch 

Gray birch 
American hornbeam 
Hickory species 
Bitternut hickory 
Pignut hickory 
Shagbark hickory 
American chestnut 
Sweetfern 
Flowering dogwood 


Alternate-leaved dogwood 


Silky dogwood 
Round-leaved dogwood 
Panicled dogwood 
Red-osier dogwood 
Hawthorn species 
American hazelnut 
Beaked hazelnut 
Leatherwood 
American beech 
White ash 

Black ash 

Green ash 
Huckleberry 
Witch-hazel 
Large-leaved holly 
Winterberry holly 
Butternut 

Sheep laurel 
Mountain Laurel 
Labrador tea 
Common spicebush 
Bush honeysuckle 
Apple species 
Mountain holly 


(In thousands of stems) 
Stand-size class 


Saw- Pole- Sapling and 
timber timber seedling 


1,214,155 1,980,983 382,195 
14,960 32,685 23,524 


398 1,655 0 

0 4,597 2,053 
348,535 565,140 98,472 
415 409 0 
4,332 2,745 0 
617,273 290,933 44,536 
5,409 29,359 1,599 
3,988 0 0 


489,340 207,573 59,799 
1,682 0 0 

0 1,408 0 
1,240,870 791,268 204,641 
1,371,581  964,227° 529,280 
1,227 489 3,254 
1,337,703 855,225 485,975 
444,976 458,754 67,603 
262,844 334,042 278,456 


57,144 63,451 6,713 
16,827 0 0 
4,676 0 0 

0 102,620 0 


21,536 42,732 34,638 
705,814 491,467 247,535 
69,579 67,218 14,662 
350,085 250,842 368,023 
36,731 154,551 91,108 


27,018 4,243 0 
3,311 1,617 0 
2,189 0 0 
2,313 3,551 0 

13,947 2,820 1,617 

40,656 16,331 0 

56,553 4,597 14,309 
4,146 1,412 0 

32,263 4,059 6,586 
3,091 12,076 6,621 

12,344 0 21,780 
2,823 1,315 1,621 

165,998 35,274 226,781 
23,217 37,404 1,402 
187,890 46,814 0 
207,418 46, 786 48,561 
137,029 111,350 0 


1,138,368 556,352 213,508 
361,101 249,926 107,652 


2,506 8,717 0 
21,682 11,065 0 
0 3,378 45 ,828 
321,132 237,670 24,090 
15,848 0 0 
79,006 246,251 3,389 
430 0 0 
252,391 209,690 74,334 
188,190 117, 162 6,319 
0 24,519 12,175 

9,589 72,575 0 
77,953 184,188 46, 784 
:9,038 1,884 33,251 


89,380 106,477 99,217 


42 


Non- 
stocked 


DOOD TDDDGDADVTVGDODDODMDGDGVDOOODOODOOOMOOOCODOOOOCOOCOOCOOOOCOOCOOOOOOOOOOOOOCOCO0OCA0OO 


ALL 
classes 


3,577,333 
71,169 
2,053 
6,650 
1,012,147 
824 
7,077 
952,743 
36,367 
3,988 
756,711 
1,682 
1,408 
2,236,779 
2,865, 088 
4,970 
2,678,903 
971,333 
875,342 
127,307 
16,827 
4,676 
102,620 
98,905 
1,444,816 
151,459 
968,951 
282,389 
31,261 
4,928 
2,189 
5,865 
18,384 
56,987 
75,460 
5,558 
42,907 
21,789 
34,124 
5,760 
428,053 
62,023 
234,704 
302, 765 
248,378 
1,908, 228 
718,679 
11,222 
32,747 
49, 206 
582,892 
15,848 
328, 646 
430 
536,415 
311,671 
36,694 
82,165 
308,925 
44,172 
295 , 073 


SE 


—_ 
BDNNWEARDUUNAWEUON EN AB aHWOKRONN —- A 


FRONOBWNWONWODOEN DAN R= UDUDWDORNOWN=O0DDOANWEONDO 


NUNROBNOCOCMH2 A ROAWRORWORNORDOODNNNVDODRF A WDNWRAOWD OM NO OO 


WWOWDOD> OU = 


38 


WYUWa 
-UUISO 
. 


Table 16.--continued 


Species 


Eastern hophornbeam 
Balsam poplar 
Bigtooth aspen 
Swamp cottonwood 
Quaking aspen 

Cherry species 

Pin cherry 

Black cherry 
Chokecherry 

White oak 

Swamp white oak 
Northern pin oak 
Scrub, bear oak 
Willow oak 

Chestnut oak 
Northern red oak 
Black oak 

Buckthorn species 
Rhododendron species 
Smooth sumac 
Staghorn sumac 
Poison sumac 

Currant species 
Black locust 

Rose species 

Rubus species 

Willow species 

Black willow 
American elderberry 
Red-berried alder 
Sassafras 

American mountain ash 
Spirea species 

Sweet leaf 

Basswood species 
American basswood 
American elm 
Blueberry 

Viburnum species 
Maple-leaved viburnum 
Hobblebush viburnum 
Wild raisin 
Arrowwood 

Nannyberry 

Blackhaw 

Highbush cranberry 
Unknown deciduous shrub 
Unknown evergreen shrub 
Unknown tree 


ALL species 


SE 


(In thousands of stems) 


Saw- 
timber 


31,942 
0 
17,311 
0 

88, 734 
0 

45 ,066 
409,409 
102,215 
104,613 
0 

5 568 
62,895 
1,514 
1,593 
458,225 
43,284 
32,564 
0 

1,454 

0 

0 
23,004 
0 

6,543 
1,668, 729 
2,752 

0 

2,999 
13,542 
1,655 
32,257 
476,761 
2,613 

0 
38,001 
31,789 
1,055,859 
77 ,486 
248,086 
1,175,977 
135,483 
118,850 
1,382 
6,469 
4,535 
80,369 
9,496 
11,214 


18,743, 146 
6.2 


Stand-size class 


Pole- 
timber 


47,126 
5,488 
6,681 
2,591 

122,468 
1,344 
151, 705 
285 , 687 
60,603 
61,480 
4,192 

0 
27,997 
0 

5,740 
282,436 
14,790 
17,625 
0 

0 

7,647 
1,563 
25,201 
1,382 
21,823 
1,886, 043 
33,003 
0 

2,783 
11,374 
0 
119,928 
304,073 
2,613 

0 

5,201 
15,551 
853,615 
32,323 
89,589 
712, 166 
45 ,482 
51,194 
22,981 
0 

0 
201,042 
0 

0 


15,598,408 
6.7 


Sapling and 


seedling 


8,789 
4,680 
12,093 
0 
155,884 
0 
319,471 
144,834 
109, 127 
13,712 
0 

0 
103,233 
0 


398 
54,126 
7,996 
1,400 
91,317 


0 
21,785 
0 


0 

0 

0 
4,058, 063 
11,111 
1,511 
7,898 
20,668 
0 

9,828 
410,585 
0 
47,371 
2,805 
10,502 
339,044 
32,969 
8,413 
121,528 
79,835 
17,835 
14,442 
0 
42,651 
61,023 
19,983 
9,692 


10,316,498 
13.6 


43 


Non- 
stocked 


6,79 


ooooooocoeo°dceodce°c°oc°cocoeMaq0c0cocoocoocococoocoocoe°cooc9o~eoeecooece~ocaoaoaoececaa~cacaeeaeaececCecCCcCeo 


6,795 


100.0 


All 
classes 


87,857 
10,169 
36,085 
2,591 
367,085 
1,344 
516,242 
839,930 
271,945 
179, 805 
4,192 
5,568 
194, 125 
1,514 
7,731 
794,787 
66,070 
51,590 
91,317 
1,454 
29,432 
1,563 
48,204 
1,382 
28 , 366 
7,612,835 
46, 866 
1,511 
13,680 
45,585 
1,655 
162,012 
1,198,214 
5,227 
47,371 
46,007 
57,842 
2,248,518 
142,778 
346, 089 
2,009,671 
260,801 
187,879 
38,805 
6,469 
47,185 
342,434 
29,479 
20,906 


44,664,847 
3.7 


SE 


9°4 s‘¢ o's s°2 s‘2 g°2 0'” o"y 3s 
668'S2 266'1S 9¢¢'68 Gl2'St 0L4' 122 878'2E¢ 607'66S 618'9L6'L satoads 1]@ ‘)}e}0) 
262'E1 299' LE £95'9S 667'96 LEL’O¥L S70’ 702 £69'8L¢ LL" L521 spoompsey }e}0) 

0 £8 HLL 698 OvL'’s 96601 Lo2‘L L4S'0S2 SpoompJey ]e19JauOUON 
6%E DLVau rd £79'¢ 060'2 696'6 bey" 2b g02'¢9 SpoomMpsey }eLIJauMlod 19410 
0% 92 6£ S22 LZe 819 Ls8'2 gSL'9 wa 
0 2g £92 HLL 094 802 0 1e2’z poomsseg 
gS7'2 6SS'9 €28'6 90921 9ec'Sh 229’ 20L'€2 £98'9S syeo pay 
6£1 92S 16 922‘ L98'L G02'2 684'2 ¢29'4 syeo 214K 
659 298'1 9942 2L9'4 6L1'9 28'S 222'8 900'64 uadsy 
0 0 0 222 66% 92E 266'1 Gsy'L yse ye] 
82S Sle'L 6£2'2 o1s’s ¢OL’s 968'2 c29'Sl 0%S'0£ yse 3314M 
gco'2 L922 020'°S 420'8 BELL 69S’ 61 0%2'0% oss’ BL yoaeag 
982 9292 L8s'9 2042 £0S'6L 919’ 92 BEL‘ 42 965‘ 62 yosiq Jaded 
666'1 6LL’S 29S'S 986'2 62221 929' LL 9L2'0% 897' 221 Yosq MO} 139A 
%69'2 028'9 L8L’sL yy’ 12 999'L9 L979'°L9 S08 ‘LZ 699'222 a)dew pay 
250'2 L28'¢ 66L'L 06S’E1 9497'S 972L'L2 Lye'2¢ 2£S'82L a)dew sebns 
20L’2b 9£5'02 166'2¢ 082'84 6£e' 18 4708 '82L LZL2‘022 S70'6S9 SPOOM}jOS 1830) 
292 6SL Gs2 LE 948 99S'1 £9L'2 bye’ SPOOM}J}OS J24I10 
929'¢ 696'S 2086 26£' 41 £08'02 62162 225'0S B78" LLL 490 WAH 
6£ 0 981 ¢ly S0S 225 0 S68 Jepas-33 14m UJay JON 
29t'l 9o2'OL BLL’EL 082'SL 6SE'L2 90S'92 9SL' 9S 818'68 autd a3LuA 
69 42S 9G¢ 922 £95 9LO’L 607 Gly auid pay 
292 LL2‘2 612'S L9L’8 9S8'SL 287'22 2tS‘0¢ L28’60L aonuds pay 
0 0 0 0 0 ge 0 0 aonids 49e)9 
86 £cl LE 959 192 OL 290'2 ¢08'L aonuds 33144 
9¢ 0 g0L "82 LUE 2Z¢ 0 6£0'L yoesewe | 
g22 01g L2S’¢ 656'2 9S¢'02 £6594 6S2'001 GOL 24E Jly wesjeg 
6'9OL 6°41 6°2L 6°0L 6°8 6°9 6°4 6°2 

-0°SL -O°£1L -O'LL -0°6 -0°2 -0°S -0°¢ -O'L 


(2y6BLay yseasq ye Sayoul) sse)o Jajowelg 


dnouB saioads 


(Saau} 40 spuesnoy3 uy) 


266. ‘a4: ysdwey Man ‘sse]2 Jazawelp pue satoads Aq pue)saquily uo ("Y"q"p SaYyou! 4+0°,) Saad} SAL] JO JaquUINN--"Z, 3)qeL1 


oh) 


ATARANONDON 
-nem 


wv MEY MOnmUE ANA 
wn 


mo ~ SO 
=_ 


NTTOWUOARDODNOS 
onwooorvuowrnonm 


—-mM oO 


L2°2 


S6g'L2y'¢ 
628'002'2 


G00’ 20¢ 
262° 901 
o9eOL 
Z219'4 
9L9'S¥L 
0£6' FL 
19562 
89S'4 
2s4'89 
Glz2’sz2 
696 ‘OLL 
90S‘8L2 
220’°¢9S 
292'¢ss2 


SLS‘022‘L 


sasse}9 
Vv 


0°2 


S9L’ S06 
219° 99S 


£92'Sl 
eS 42 
ole'L 
Lee’ 
840'S9 
gLe’2Z 
ose’Lz 
G60‘ 
229'22 
944'0S 
1£8'99 
€28'0S 


86S ‘S91 


688'99 


£S2'0%E 


295'¢ 
s£0'28 
Sse‘ 


(34BLay yseasq ye SayoUL) sse)9 sajowelg 


(s8a4} 40 spuesnoy3 ul) 


as 


saisads 378 ‘7]eI01 


spoompsey }e30) 


SPOOMPJeYy }LIGaUUOOUON 
Spoompsey }e1IJeuOD JaYyI0 


yosiq saded 
Ydttq MO)}9A 

a)dew pay 
a)dew se6ns 


SPOOM}}OS }e0] 


SPOOM}4OS 19430 
90 ]WeH 

J@pad-3314M UJ2YZION 
autd 3314mM 

auld pay 

aonuds pay 

aonsds 498)g 

aonuds 3a31uM 
yoeyewe | 

Jt} wes)eg 


dnos6 satsads 


panul3u09--"2, 2]qe1 


45 


L°2 0°02 Ls £°8 29 6°47 8°s 3 B°2 8°2 pers as 


rd L7o’088 L6¢ 681L'S c8y'y L8S"O0L 24S'6L OSL’B8E S562 Ozy’BEL Ly2’Ss2 92L'2S¢ satgads }]e “e301 
Ure 29S'LLS 661 0S2'2 698'L 092'S 2S¢'0L 000’22 g2e’sy 2€0'98 ELS'Syl 269002 spoompsey }&301 

2°6 926'¢2 0 02 92 08 Gs2 2S4 807'L G69'¢ 029'9 csc’ Ll Spoompsey 13410 
0°S2 gor’ 0 ZL 0 0” cy £OL L8L 40S 261 95S w)3 
cle 888" 1 oL 0 0 0S ¢2 Z Sol cle GlZ 89S poomsseg 
2°8 2tS'99 0 cly =, ~£0E ¢22'"1 950'2 0S6'¢ 0L'L cO9'LL 922"6L 624°6L syeo poy 
8°OL 260'6 O€ ZL gl £8 192 g9F G90‘ HE" | Gl8’2 640°¢ syeo 314M 
9°E1 B6L‘LE 0 0 ee 2¥L oly 22‘ 879'2 gel" 219'6 O24 LL uadsy 
9°2¢ g2L'2 0 0 0 0 0 92 2s 994 2S 69S'L yse ye] 
6°2L 659'L2 6L OSL 0 Gd2 cys Ley" LS8°L 206'2 4959'S  249'8 yse 33144 
6°OL 290'9€ EL 2c LOL 289 60£'1 69S5'2_L4S'¢ £68'S 92L4'8 982'S1 yoaeg 
c‘8 999'22 0 2s ZO £02 219 £4" 925'S GOS‘SL s9S'22 24G'S¢ yosiq saded 
2°6 GlZ'27 9% 294 oss 692 ¢ec'l 186'2 G2e’y 694'9 GLS‘OL €S4'Sl YOILqG MO} 129A 
9° 982'94L SL g0¢ coe 688 2621 c42'4 918'6 299'S2  LL6'LY = YL" SO a)dew pay 
0"OL 26S'9S 29 959 296 228 96S‘ G£6'2 O12’S 9S5'0L 950°9L 6LE’SL a)dew seins 
6°4 96L'29E LOL 6£6'2 819'2 g2ze'S 0616 6¥Z"9L 225'LE EBE'2S SE2'6R B0'2SL SPOOM}JOS ]2301 

2°29 290'S 0 Wa GY 82 08 922 gl2 £24 960'L 2282 SPOOM}J}0S 49430 
8° 908'29 0 G0¥ 694 4S0'L €26'L 6£0'4 108'9 G6L'6 L29'SL  662°E2 90 ]WeH 
L°6S 299" 0 22 0 0 2g LZ ¢2l 90¢ 9¢4 299 Jepas-a31yM UsayiJON 
"2 £S2‘60L él 6o4'2 Gle"L 599'¢ 656'S 220'6 2g2'9L 962°8L S¥S’¥2 S£0'62 auld 3314 
Oo" 9122 0 0 GZ 2S L¥2 2g¢ 289 894 vLL Z£l auid pay 
SOL csz'92 0 2S 4L2 Ooze Bol Gee" 92S'4 Lec'LL ves'o2 66E'2¢ aonids pay 
£°19 962'1 0 0 0 0 0 42 62 2g 21g cL sonuds 49e]4 
L"0% e/S‘4 0 0 0 0 0 SEL 68S 294 gS2'L O£L’2 aonids 3314 
0°84 Dies 40 0 0 62 2g ce OL g9¢ 665 Gye‘ yoeuewe } 
0°01 990'16 0 0 0 Gz 981 216 2£s2'y = =20S"LL =2b9"S2 —sL8S"4s5 diy wesjeg 

+0°62 6°82 6°02 6°8L ool 6°41 6°2l 6'0L 6°8 6°9 
sasse]9 -0"L2 -0°6L -O°LL -O°SL -O°EL -O'LL -0°6 -0'2 -0°S 
ELS dnou6B satseds 


ny (]yBLay yseeuq je sayoul) ssej2 sajzoweig 


(saa4s} JO Spuesnoy} UT) 


£86, ‘a1tysdwey MeN ‘Ssse]9 sajaweLlp pue satsads Aq pue}sequil} uo (“Yy"q"p SayoUL +9°G) Saad} 490}3S-BULMOUB Jo JaquiNN--"gL 2e}qe1 


46 


0°2 £6 £°8 c"8 9°9 "4 9°¢ Lg 9°2 Gr2 6°2 EIS 
o°2 926'L98 YELL g8e8'2 Gel’ 2 69Z"LL  yOE*S2 YLE’Ly $68'62 £06'9EL YLZ'9L2 126'60E satoads })e ‘)e301 
¢°2 O%97'LS 8S¥ Loz‘s 6SL’¢ 6S2'9 L70’2L 99%'22 86L'6% 929'26 SL8°9EL BOL‘EeL SpoompJey }&301 
£°8 z20s’zz2 0 0 2g Lut Loz 2£0'1 227‘ 2s9'¢ 989'9 67S'6 Spoompiey 12430 
2°92 £62‘ 0 0 0 0 04 92 6£ G22 LZ¢ L¥S w)3 
2°22 G29" 1 0 0 0 £6 0 2g CAL aL 09% £6S poomsseg 
£°9 029'S9  OLL Gl £18 958‘ 0242 92¢0'9 999'6 £67'2L O80'SL OSL’¥L SyeO pay 
e°Sl goc’2 0% gE 02 8L2 201 8S S08 981 ‘1 922" 1 18s‘2 syeo 33L4UM 
cll ces‘'lz 0 ol GLL 271 99S 298'L 994'2 g0%'4 220'9 b22'S uadsy 
oY g50'1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 t¥4 664 92¢ yse 49e)9 
9°8 go9'l2 16 ram) ¢22 G92 PAS 90L'L L6S‘2 cey's 0%6'4 L69'2 yse 32144 
9°) c9L'Sy 0 £42 L2z 26S cyl" GOL’2 98L'Y oy") Lo9‘OL g8so’sl yoaeg 
c°9 L6z2's9 0 0 0 62 602 6%2'2 2198'S L90’2L %2’SL 2g9'S2 youiq sede 
s°9 coe'sy = #2 984 94S 269 86S‘ 1 oLe’2 S74" y 92S5'2 eze‘lLlL 62e’9L Yottq MO] 2A 
XS 6L6'9SL 0 L9S 90S gle"l 6812 998'S 82S‘OL SlZ‘92 222’Sy 628'S9 a)dew pay 
eZ 996229 O81 Z16 09 28 296'1 292'¢ 9¢0°2 gz2’sl 0479'yL 220’02 a)dew se6ns 
0°4 9gc‘lze 929 889'4 916'¢ OLS’S c92'll OS8°6L S69’0E 922’yy 6£8'62 £18'92L SPOOM}JOS }&}01 
0°29 0s7's 0 Le Le LE gL2z 6SL GSz coe 498 99S'L SPOOM}40S 49430 
22 cos‘08 ¢¢ Gs9 6%6 2ss’L 9282 9797'S 042'8 G96'LL %20'02 £6182 90 ]WeH 
2°19 929" 0 0 0 GZ 6¢ 0 641 2£4 GOS 69% Jepad-32 14M UJa4zJON 
6°S 99S‘LOL £49 £18'¢ 908°2 9G¢'¢ 288'9 Os9‘OL v2b’2b 2os*¥L og2’02 126'S2 auid a3LUA 
£°9F i275" 10 2s 0 0 69 92S 9S¢ 989 £9 9L0'L aud pay 
0°6 csy'9S =O 0 62L cE 292 LeL‘2 6471'S 862'2 coJ"st sz¢e'ee aonuds pay 
0°00L ge 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ge aonids 49e)9 
2°9E ¢9l'z 0 rad 09 0 86 col OvE 979 192 912 aonuds 33L4M 
GL? 670‘ 0 0 0 0 9¢ 0 80L 842 982 2Z¢ yoesewe | 
8°6 95282 0 0 0 L2ZL g22 OLg ¢24'¢ 189'2 G62'02 84%L'9¥ Jt} wes)eg 

+0°62 6°82 6°02 68 6°91 6°47 6°2l 6°0L 6°8 6°9 
sasse}o -0°L2 -0°61L -0°LL -O"SL -0°E1 -O'LL -0°6 -0°2 -0°S 
as lv dnou6 satoads 


(7yBlay yseasq ye SayouL) ssejo saqjoweig 


(s90d} JO Spuesnoy} uy) 


266, ‘24tysduey MaN ‘Ssse]}9 JajaweLp pue saloeds Aq puejsaquil} uo (*Yy°q"p SaYyoUL +9°G) Saa4} 4907S-BULMOJB jo JaquNN--"6, 2)Ge1 


47 


(3934 91qnd yo suol))LW UT) 


266. ‘a4tysdwey MaN ‘sse]9 aa43 pue salosads Aq pue)Jsaquily UO saauj 1] 40 SUIN}OA JaN--"OZ 2)qe1 


tive s°sS 4°OL ¢°9 2°2 2°2 e°2b 3s 

G°2sS'6 G*2ss O°yLL S°SLy 0°000°6 0°299’8 L°ese saioeds }]e8 ‘18301 

6°495'S L°£9¢ £°86 49°92 2°102'S L°£40'S Z2°8sl spoompsey 18301 

9°94 Ve) ] 6° g°sY 0° 0° oO" SpoomMpJsey 7} IJauOUON 

2°002 "eh o°2 9° LL 2°28 S98 L°2 Spoompsey JeLIJeUMIOD 340 

9°6 L° 0° L° 2°76 2°6 0° w)3 

S°02 2° Ze S £°6l £°6l 0" poomsseg 
9°9 9°¢28 8°6L 8°8 O°LL 8°58 9°28 9° Ll syeo pay 
9°SL L°62 8°¢ Z bs ¢°Gd ¢° Gd 0° syeo 33 14uA 
L°2 ¢°2S2 2°¢ 9°2 9° L°9S2 6°9492 cl uadsy 
Lb°ey 9°9 e 2° 0° L°9 19 0° yse 398)¢ 
6°2L €° 82 8°9 be 2°¢ S°9L2 2°22 £°42 yse 93144 
9°8 €°9LS 8°l4 2°e2 9°42 S°99% 4° SOY ball yooag 
s°9 6°L2ES 4°02 L°9 ey G°LLS L°00S 9° Lb yosiq sade 
cao) 6°SLS 9°0S S*¢l 6°9£ S°S99 9°8S4 0-2 Yyostq MO} ]3A 
a) 9°2Ly" 9° SOL L°L2 £° 98 2° 205’ 2°S0E'L ss ajdew pay 
6°83 9° 208 2°94 2°sl 9°62 6° 292 £°6o2 9°¢2 a)dew sebns 
ss 2°L196'°S 8°89L 8°Sl O°ssl 8°86L'¢ 6°£29'¢ 6°4LL SPOOM}4OS 1830) 
0°0S 9° 9S 8° 0° 3° g°es 8°S¢ 0° SPOOM}JOS J94IO 
0's 2°868 8°S9 9°S 49°09 4° 258 49°908 0°92 90 ]WaH 
£°8S 0° Z ¢° ¢° eel 9°21 7h Jepas-3}1 ya UJayzJON 
8°S 6°6£6' 1 2°68 0°2 2°28 ¢°0S8"L 2° 98L'L 1°99 auid a314M 
zg S° 94 ¢° 0° ¢° 2°94 2°94 0° auid pay 
9°6 S*90S 0°9 yl 9°4 S°00S 8°6S¥ 8°04 aonids pay 
0°O0L LE 0° 0° 0° L° he 0" aonuds 49e)9 
0°44 L°S¢ 9°L S° 6° B°ss 9° LE L°2 aonids 33144 
9° LY 2°8 S O° S° 2°8 z2°8 0° yoeuewe | 
9°6 6°S84 Z’¢ 271 S’2 2° 284 O°s4y 2°6£ Jty wesjeg 

yyns yyns yyns 3)qe3da99e a)qeqydasoy PodJajold 
Vv uaz 0Y yBnoy /prssajaid 
s9sse)9 11V dnou6 satoeds 
S$s@]9 ved] 


48 


Volume of all live trees on timberland, for selected species and 
percent change, New Hampshire, 1983 and 1997 
(Volume increased by 2.1 percent for all species) 


White pine +6% 


Red maple 


Hemlock 


Red oaks 


Sugar maple 


Spruce 


Paper birch 


Yellow birch 


Beech 


Balsam fir 


+ 0 
Ash ae 


-20% 
Aspen 


0 0.5 ‘ 1.5 2 
Billions of Cubic feet 


Table 21.--Net volume of all live trees on timberland by species and diameter class, New Hampshire, 1983 


(In millions of cubic feet) 


lu 
2) 
n 
0) 
—%9 
—” 
<o 
~ 
oO 
1 
oO 
- 
N 
1 
=) 
an 
- 
n~ 
Y 
x 1 
Dn! oOo 
ov ~~ 
<= = 
v 
a 
oO 
(3) ' 
= So 
2 . 
wn 
baad —— 
o 
n 
ov 
<= t 
Oo oO 
c . 
= Mm 
— Gre 
“a 
n 
oO 
~ ! 
o oO 
< = 
3) - 
- 
a 
= 
oO 
-_ ' 
a oO 
. 
Oo 
' 
Oo 
~ 
' 
oO 
. 
w 
foe 
> 
° 
= 
io) 
n 
a 
oO 
pt) 
jos 
2) 


12.9 14.9 16.9 18.9 20.9 28.9 29.0+ 


10.9 


8.9 


6.9 


9.5 


626.3 


9 - A 


2.0 
2.0 


6.4 
1.0 


190.4 141.7 82.7 26.0 


178.1 


Balsam fir 
Tamarack 


2.2 


8 
6.5 


1.3 
12.8 


4.1 


2.8 


Wi 


3.9 
8.8 


6.8 


White spruce 
Black spruce 
Red spruce 


Red pine 


0 


Aci? 


3.0 
152.6 


2.9 
141.2 


4.8 


AE) 


89.2 52.0 29.4 


140.5 


4.6 


9.5 8.5 


252.8 


12.9 
275.7 


194.2 231.1 


122.3 


White pine 


8.6 


650.9 


0 
.0 


2.0 
97.7 62.6 45.6 23.9 28.4 


1.9 
119.2 


(4a) 
102.1 


2.6 
98.6 


ns 


—-N 
~ 


Northern white-cedar 


Hemlock 


2.2 1.5 


6.6 2.6 3.3 


4.6 


6.8 5.4 


8.5 


Other softwoods 


640.1 600.9 454.7 333.0 256.5 152.9 246.8 44.1 3,932.9 4.1 


663.2 


540.8 


Total softwoods 


125.2 137.4 106.0 80.5 59.8 50.4 LIAL 61.0 
300.1 Ai7e5 44.7 


62.1 
222.6 


Sugar maple 
Red maple 


31.5 


22.5 


69.8 


199.0 


320.8 


34.5 


51.8 


o 


82.2 


82.7 
Mele? 


81.9 
166.2 


54.1 
110.5 


Yellow birch 
Paper birch 
Beech 


8.1 
10.4 


630.2 


0 
2.0 


5.4 


4.4 


8.2 5.5 


38.7 


22.3 


wn 

. 
wt 
w 


97.0 


490.2 


91.0 78.2 77.4 57.4 
39.1 


Oat 


44.5 


50 


14.9 


40.7 41.2 20.5 8.8 248.4 


46.9 


31.8 


White ash 


2.5 


0 


8.3 
3.9 


50.5 


2.0 
30.8 


2.9 
52.2 


3.5 6.2 
82.4 


6.4 
47.3 


Black ash 
Aspen 


16.6 


80.3 


6.0 
68.3 


9.5 
94.9 


15.4 
131.2 


13.5 
137.8 


15.5 
139.3 


10.4 


White oaks 
Red oaks 
Basswood 


Elm 


65.7 


1.1 


1.3 


Quite 
1.5, 


1.3 
2.1 


1.2 
2.5 


3.0 
2.6 
27.9 


3.9 
3.5 
40.8 


5.4 
oe) 


46.6 


25 
2.4 


29.7 


Other commercial hardwoods 
Noncommercial hardwoods 


NiZieit 555 1.8 lhe 


35.1 


a 


G2n3e 5h0253 


Mele tie dite: 838.5 593.0 387.0 260.3 120.5 196.5 


725.0 


Total hardwoods 


86.4 9,335.2 1.7 


T7851. 1,7 5%) 1,439.3 1) 047.:7. 720.0 516.9 273.4 443.3 


1,265.8 


Total, all species 


Zialtt 3.0 3.7 4.7 5.8 (foth (hath Syst LEC 


2.7 


3.1 


SE 


SE 
9.4 


ALL 
classes 


29.0+ 


21.0- 
28.9 


19.0- 
20.9 


5.0 


17.0- 
18.9 


9.4 


15.0- 
16.9 


22.1 


13.0- 
14.9 


11.0- 
66.1 


(In millions of cubic feet) 
12.9 


Diameter class (inches at breast height) 


10.9 
96.1 


141.7 


Table 22.--Net volume of live trees on timberland by species and diameter class, New Hampshire, 1997 
145.5 


Species group 


Balsam fir 
Tamarack 


3.8 
2.8 
2.1 


41.4 
4 
0 
9 
3 


ir2 


ow 


Ce 


NO 


ee 
-— 


White spruce 
Black spruce 
Red spruce 
Red pine 


514.3 
283.3 
5,564.9 
on 


1 
15.7 
4.9 
17.9 


75.1 


135.4 3,967.7 
210.5 9,532.5 


4.5 


326.5 
3.4 


2.2 
384.2 
2.9 
50.8 
249.5 
633.7 
8.4 


6.9 
0 
163.8 
1.6 
226.0 
7.6 
3.2 
41.6 
3.1 
189.6 
415.5 
8.4 


157.8 
1.9 


17.3 
70.1 
1.6 
254.3 
4.3 
7.6 
74.6 
6.8 
286.7 
541.0 
6.5 


28.6 
2.7 
245.5 
102.3 
8.0 
402.2 
18.3 
3.7 
80.7 
10.3 
428.4 
830.7 
4.7 


15.8 
275.8 
133.5 

3.4 
513.5 

48.5 

12.7 
149.7 

29.4 

153 
734.9 
1,248.5 
3.7 


6.3 
233.8 
2.4 
155.9 
4.0 
577.8 
48.6 
14.0 
168.2 
30.9 
1.9 
970.8 
3.2 


1,548.6 


8.4 
3.5 
552.3 
12.3 
142.3 
1,105.4 
65707 
eth 


3.8 
5.3 
533.1 
10.2 
100.1 
948.4 
1,481.5 
2.6 


5.1 
135 
576.0 
3.1 


388.7 
964.8 


Total softwoods 


Other commercial hardwoods 
Total hardwoods 


Northern white-cedar 
Hemlock 

Other softwoods 
Noncommercial hardwoods 
Total, all species 


Yellow birch 
Paper birch 


Sugar maple 
Beech 


White pine 
Red maple 
White ash 
Black ash 
White oaks 
Red oaks 
Basswood 
Elm 


Aspen 
SE 


Table 23.--Net volume of growing-stock trees on timberland by species and diameter class, New Hampshire, 1983 


(In millions of cubic feet) 


lu 
” 
n 
a 
— on 
— Wn 
<a 
— 
oO 
+ 
Oo 
. 
an 
NN 
' 
oO 
— oO 
NN 
4 
oo 
e 8 
ao 
— ON 
~ 
Sd 
Bo 4 
nD oO 
= eo. 
o -% co 
= om 
ed 
n 
oO 
@ 0 
a 2e 
in sO 
bd -- 
oa 
n 
a 
x= 0 
(3) oon 
c ange 
- Ms 
ww Ce 
n 
7) 
oO 
_ 1 
1S) on 
. 8 
i —-~N 
cy) -- 
2 
oO 
-_ 0 
(=) oO 
ao 
—_ 
‘ 
oon 
e 8 
- 6 
a 
oo 
Nm oO 
Qa 
=] 
° 
= 
i=2) 
wn 
o 
z 
w 


9.5 


606.1 


182.3 139.1 81.3 25.5 6.4 


170.5 


Balsam fir 


-sroomorr 


41 
68 

1 
602.1 


oocoouo°ce 
3: a piie) Rie ite pee ae tie 
i 
fa 
OQO0O0O-OON® 
a: ice) Mew ee rte eteltedge 
wt o=- O 
oa N 
= 
OOOMNONOCOO 
eo yieva tie oie velenne ie 
to Mm 
- Oo NN 
- 
—-OOrRQAQOM 
. . e xe ° ows 
st 
Sea hs WPS ee 
— 
ooounk oOo 
Tere Nees eelcre) je 
- & 0c 0c [-<] 
oO wn 
fan 
oranmoannn~st 
(Siegen ipo oLeatae he 
Mm Aor ™M 


oNnd-AMNO 
ore) Weenie ples tae ite 
NANO wRNO 
wt so 
- - 
NONDNONWMN 
olin ie pe wie) Mrekicense 
mM No Mo — 
“I oa oO 
es 
(= 
3 
13) 
iy 
) 
~ 
oo - 
Oo oO <£ 
330 oz 
ej ogo Cc 
é~Qa 5d U- Cc 
onwnecCackcs 
a Qs eo 
Lex nadoco 
2-8 = \cie 
— -— 
SE®EBESS 
—- Soo oe zx 


6.2 4.6 4.6 6.0 2.6 3.3 2.2 1.2 


7.9 


Other softwoods 


4.2 


27.6 3,662.9 


611.9 612.8 575.5 431.9 314.4 240.2 142.5 229.3 


476.9 


Total softwoods 


Sugar maple 
Red maple 
Yellow birch 
Paper birch 
Beech 


White ash 
Black ash 


Aspen 


52 


White oaks 
Red oaks 
Basswood 


Elm 


1.5 
3.0 


1.2 
2.2 
11.0 


3.0 
2.6 


24.7 


— 


La) 


a 
. 


wn 


1.1 


5C 
8.5 


oO 
Mm 


— 
. 


— 


9.9 


172.5 


1.3 0 


1.1 


47.2 41.7 


34.0 


Other hardwoods 


2.9 


27.7 4,844.6 


1,025.4 1,047.9 772.9 538.0 340.9 221.1 100.2 149.3 


621.1 


Total hardwoods 


1.9 


55.4 8,507.5 


1,637.2 1,660.7 1,348.4 970.0 655.3 461.2 242.7 378.6 


1,098.0 


Total, all species 


2.9 2.8 3.1 3.9 5.0 6.3 8.4 8.6 20.2 1.9 


3.5 


SE 


Table 24.--Net volume of growing-stock trees on timberland by species and diameter class, New Hampshire, 1997 


(In millions of cubic feet) 


Ww 
” 
” 
o 
on 
— oo 
<0 
~ 
oO 
O 
oO 
- 
N 
1 
oO 
. 
an 
- 
~ 
— 
<= 
Le7) 1 
= Oo 
a . 
<= ~ 
- 
- 
n” 
oO 
o 
= ' 
ne} Oo 
. 
= w 
oO = 
2) 
vo 
a 
(Ss) ' 
Cc Oo 
_— . 
- Mm 
- 
” 
n 
oO 
a 
oO 1 
oO 
= . 
3) - 
~ — 
oO 
a ' 
oO 
a 
‘ 
oO 
. 
~ 
' 
oO 
. 
wn 
Qa 
=] 
° 
= 
Dn 
” 
a 
-— 
g 
n” 


12.9 14.9 16.9 18.9 20.9 28.9 29.0+ 


10.9 


9.4 
43.5 


482.2 


141.7 94.5 64.3 22.1 9.4 5.0 


145.1 


Balsam fir 
Tamarack 


4.2 


We 
3.7 


1.8 
6.1 


15 2.4 
6.9 


4.8 


1.2 
1.9 


2.3 


3.8 


White spruce 
Black spruce 
Red spruce 


Red pine 


oo 


Cail 
239.5 


99.4 
8.1 6.3 15.8 
174.7 223.5 274.4 


3.8 
138.7 


an 


wn 
OND 
~ ~ 


1.3 
72.4 


White pine 


4.1 2.1 
144.1 125.2 


126.6 


Sr 
114.7 


Northern white-cedar 


Hemlock 


88.3 


3.2 4.0 3.4 7.4 1.6 1.6 2.2 


5.3 


5.1 


Other softwoods 


3.9 


98.0 3,798.8 


528.3 520.0 552.8 501.5 381.6 242.4 20%, 374.9 


385.6 


Total softwoods 


8. 
4 
7 
6 


13.1 


762.9 
307 
465 
517 
466 
276.5 


22.2 
15.7 


70.1 
37.2 
8.6 


36.6 
26.1 
13.4 


1.9 


39.5 
56.8 
25.9 
26.7 
13.5 


4 


71.1 
46.9 
22.6 
60.7 
19.1 


83.3 
139.7 
55.2 
52.1 
56.6 


129.7 
186.8 

74.6 
102.8 


159.8 
309.9 

82.6 
139.4 


99 
299 
72.6 


Sugar maple 
Red maple 

Yellow birch 
Paper birch 


Beech 
White ash 


53 


43.9 
12 
5 


254.1 


0 
.0 
4.9 


2.9 


3G 
45.3 


3.2 
40.8 


16.9 
3.1 


48.5 
12.1 


48.6 
12.0 
166.2 


(ae) 
56.6 


12.1 
141.9 


Cells 


47.3 
10.0 


7.4 


PaLGt/ 
43.7 


White oaks 


Black ash 
Red oaks 


Aspen 


79.9 72.8 


147.0 


98.9 


5.4 


oe) 
7.0 


4.1 


3.4 


1.8 
1.3 


29.3 


Basswood 


Elm 


STee 


0 
5.5 


1.6 
27.0 


1.9 
47.3 


2.3 


27.9 


40.9 


Other hardwoods 


62.3 5,201.2 2.9 


915.2 1,084.0 889.6 673.9 392.8 259.9 168.6 213.4 


541.5 


Total hardwoods 


160.2 9,000.0 2.2 


1,443.5 1,604.0 1,442.4 1,175.5 774.4 502.3 382.4 588.3 


927.1 


Total, all species 


(aT 3.3 3.8 4.9 6.8 8.9 8.8 20.3 ce 


(ath 


3.2 


SE 


Table 25.--Net volume of growing-stock trees on timberland by species and 
stand-size class, New Hampshire, 1983 


Species group 


Balsam fir 

Tamarack 

White spruce 

Black spruce 

Red spruce 

Red pine 

White pine 

Northern white-cedar 
Hemlock 

Other softwoods 


Total softwoods 


Sugar maple 
Red maple 
Yellow birch 
Paper birch 
Beech 

White ash 
Black ash 
Aspen 

White oaks 
Red oaks 
Basswood 
Elm 

Other hardwoods 


Total hardwoods 


Total, all species 


SE 


Saw- 
timber 


142.6 
3.2 
2.6 
4.6 

201.9 

46.1 
1,187.3 
6.7 
430.2 
20.4 


2,045.6 


382.6 
468.7 
274.5 
174.4 
307.9 
111.3 
4.5 
84.2 
33.9 
320.8 
9.5 
10.1 
74.3 


2,256.7 


4,302.3 


Sit 


(In millions of cubic feet) 


Stand-size class 


Pole- 
timber 


458.2 
8.4 
35.1 
1.3 
400.9 
2.5 
476.9 
4.9 
171.7 
Vis 


1,577.0 


276.0 
694.3 
184.7 
424.4 
98.2 
125.5 
15.4 
214.2 
38.2 
385.6 
9.5 
3.9 
91.2 


2,561.2 


4,138.2 


4.6 


Sapling and 
seedling 


5.3 
2.8 

20 
1.0 
6.1 


66.9 


22.2 


54 


stocked 


o oro oo oo 8 CO .o 


ALL 
classes 


606.1 
14.4 
37.7 

6.8 

608.9 

49.4 
1,687.1 
11.6 

602.1 

38.7 


3,662.9 


662.6 
1,167.9 
461.4 
599.2 
406.9 
238.9 
19.9 
299.4 
lect 
710.1 
19.0 
14.1 
172.5 


4,844.6 


8,507.5 


1.9 


SE 


37.1 
42.4 
69.6 
38.3 


49.7 


47.8 


Table 26.--Net volume of growing-stock trees on timberland by species and 


Species group 


Balsam fir 

Tamarack 

White spruce 

Black spruce 

Red spruce 

Red pine 

White pine 

Northern white-cedar 
Hemlock 

Other softwoods 


Total softwoods 


Sugar maple 
Red maple 
Yellow birch 
Paper birch 
Beech 

White ash 
Black ash 
Aspen 

White oaks 
Red oaks 
Basswood 
Elm 

Other hardwoods 


Total hardwoods 


Total, all species 


SE 


stand-size class, New Hampshire, 1997 


(In millions of cubic feet) 


Stand-size class 


Saw- Pole- Sapling and Non- 
timber timber seedling stocked 
151.6 310.6 20.0 .0 
5.3 27, ail .0 
252 8.1 5 -0 
-0 .0 al .0 
251.1 236.7 12.7 20 
Stia2 12.5 aE) .0 
We S576 277.7 15.0 -0 
10.8 al 2.4 -0 
634.2 194.8 3.4 .0 
20.4 12.8 -6 .0 
2,687.4 1,056.1 55.3 .0 
499.6 251.3 12.0 -0 
761.5 524.7 21.0 -0 
303.8 155.0 6.8 -0 
255.0 249.2 13.4 -0 
327.3 132.0 ee: -0 
170.1 99.5 6.8 .0 
1.5) 4.6 -0 -0 
92.2 LEMISTE 10.3 -0 
51.0 24.3 -0 .0 
546.8 298.8 8.2 .0 
1253 7.0 -0 -0 
7.1 1.8 4 .0 
126.7 55.2.1 5.3 -0 
3,155.0 1,955.0 91.3 -0 
5,842.4 3,011.0 146.6 -0 
4.1 5.9 Vad .0 


55 


ALL 


classes 


OFWWNHY -]- On Nw 


NyNNWOW Re - VI 


SE 


9.4 
43.5 
43.6 

100.0 

9.5 
33.7 

5.9 
59.6 

8.3 
51.1 


3.9 


8.9 
4.4 
7.5 
6.6 
8.9 
13.1 
43.9 
12.2 
15.9 
6.6 
31.2 
37.2 
10°5 


2.9 


2.2 


Table 27.--Net volume of growing-stock trees on timberland by forest type and 
stand-size class, New Hampshire, 1997 


(In millions of cubic feet) 


Stand-size class 


ALL 
Forest type 
Saw- Pole- Sapling and Non- clecscs 
timber timber seedling stocked 

Red pine 11.3 4.8 -0 0 16.1 
White pine 925.6 76.9 6.2 -O0 1,008.8 
White pine/hemlock 473.2 73.6 -0 .0 546.7 
Hemlock 354.7 75.3 0 -0 430.0 
White/red pine group 1,764.8 230.6 6.2 20) 25,0015 
Balsam fir 48.9 229.7 24.1 -0 302.7 
Red spruce 50.0 73.9 4.6 -0 128.5 
Red spruce/balsam fir 73.2 184.4 1 -0 257.7 
White spruce 30.5 -0 -0 -0 30.5 
Spruce/fir group 202.7 488.0 28.8 -0 719.4 
Pitch pine 22.9 11.8 -0 -0 34.7 
Loblolly/shortleaf group 22.9 11.8 20 .0 34.7 
Wh. pine/no.red oak/wh. ash 503.1 65.8 -0 -0 568.8 
Other oak/pine 026 -0 -0 0 7.6 
Oak/pine group 510.6 65.8 0 0 576.4 
Post, black, or bear oak 9.9 -0 9 -0 10.9 
White oak/red oak/hickory 140.4 26.8 -0 -0 167.2 
White oak -0 2.5 -0 -0 2.5 
Northern red oak 260.1 135.0 -0 -0 395.1 
Red maple/central hardwood 30.8 21.9 -0 -0 52.6 
Mixed central hardwoods 292.6 254.2 7.5 0 554.4 
Oak/hickory group 733.8 440.4 8.5 Oo 8227 
Black ash/Amer. elm/red maple 14.2 7 252 3 tijent 
Red maple( lowland) 15:5 16.5 0 0 31.9 
Red maple(upland) 15.6 12.9 -0 0 28.4 
Elm/ash/red maple group 45.2 30.0 2.2 -0 77.4 
Sugar maple/beech/yellow birch 1/550:5 769.7 26.9 -0 2,346.9 
Black Cherry 14.8 2.3 2.3 .0 19.4 
Red maple/northern hardwoods 502.2 548.7 28.9 20 07926 
Mixed northern hardwoods 337.2 238.0 28.2 -0 603.3 
Northern hardwoods group 2,404.54.) 1558.77 86.3 -0 4,049.4 
Aspen 57.4 81.9 6.2 0 145.5 
Paper birch 100.5 104.0 7.1 -0 211.5 
Gray birch 0 0 1.4 -0 1.4 
Aspen/birch group 157.9 185.9 14.7 -0 358.4 
ALL forest types 5,842.4 3,011.0 146.6 -0 9,000.0 
SE 4.1 5.5 17.5 -0 2.2 


56 


SE 


Percent of growing-stock volume by forest-type group 
New Hampshire, 1997 


White /red pine 


22.2% 
Northern hardwoods _ 
45.0% 
Oak/hickory 
13.1% 


Oak/pine 
6.4% 


él 9°41 0°sS Gedy, 0° 9 bb 0°22 S02 O° vl 8°6 as 


6°l S°20S‘'8 6°622 9°900'7 L°24 0" GS" SS8 2° Lye L*62 £"Sl8 2°229'L satoads je *)e}01 
6°2 9°998' O°2ES 2°ec0’e §=L°9E 0° 9° 959 £"62l Gb 6" lel 2°See Spoompsey }2830) 

6°6 G*2Zb 9°83 £°%6 O°2 0° G9 ol 0° 9°2 0°42 Spoompsey 49430 
L°S2 Lb°¥b 2° 2°s 0° 0° b“¢ 9: 0° 0° L°S wy 
LO O*6L 0° 9°9OL 0° 0° S 0° 0° 0° 6°L poomsseg 
DEL L°OLd 6°SL 6°08L 0° 0° 9°16¢ 9°94 0° 9°L 9°19 seo poy 
haar A L°el VP 9°83 0° 0° £°S7 L°9 0° 0° £"?L Syeo 33144 
2°eb 9" 662 B°LSL 2°62 0° 0° £"Sb G*S 0° 9°SL 2°62 uadsy 
8°SY 6°61 9° 2°?2b 0° 0° 9° 0° 0° 6°S 9° yse 49e)4 
L°SL 6°8£2 9°9 G°S6L 0° 0° 2°83 2°6 0° Lb“ 6°LL yse 931M 
6°0OL 6°904 bre 9° 98¢ 0° 0° L°eb 0°2 0° 0° cx yoe0q 
£°8 2°66S 9° LE?” 2°992 0° 0° L°¥2 8°2L OF £°64 L°9¢ youiq sede 
L°6 9° L949 ele 8° 20% Ve 0° £°4 ¢* 0° HAS 6°49 Yt MO}]9A 
G°S 6° 29L'L 7°89 S*982 2°62 0° 0°96 0°24 SL 2°92 9°6LL a)dew pay 
8°6 9°299 9°47 £° 229 0° 0° 3°83 2"2 OF 6°¢ 6°OL a)dew se6ns 
(Aimy / 6°299'E 6° L42 9°16 G°S 0° Lb" Loz O°2L2 9°l2 9°69 0*z0e"L SPOOM}}OS 1830) 

8° LY 2°8e 0° 0° 0° 0° 9°2 Plea 4 2°S2 0° LL: SPOOM}jJOS 49430 
223 L°209 b°¥b 8°9S2 ¢° 0° 9°64 9°92 0° 8°6 6°992 90 ]WeH 
2°64 O° LL 9°Y cal 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0°9 0° Jepesd-oF LYM UJOYJION 
8°9 L°289'L 9° Ls 4 % 3 Lng 0° 9° SEL L°GZL 6°L 8°0£ 2°£S56 auid 33144 
£°8Ee 9°64 0° 9°2 0° 0° o*L c"y 0° 0° OLY auld pay 
9°6 6°809 ered y" Lee 0° 0° £°S 9°¢ 0° 6°92 OLY aonids pay 
9°69 8°9 0° S° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 8"L 9°49 aonuds ye] 
CY, 2°24£ 0°S 9°? (oe 0° 0° 6° 0° G62 0° sonids 23144 
bi2Ze O° YL S° 9° 0° 0° g* 0° 0° L°2b 0° yoesewe | 
S*6 L°909 8°66 8°SSL S*L 0° 9°2 °° 0° 9°8EEe Crd: dty wes)eg 

yosiq spoompsey ajdew pas ssaudAo Ayoyoiy auid yeayjyoys sly auid pas 
/uadsy useyiJON /yse/w}3 /wn6/yeo = / 80 80 = /A))01907 /aonsds /23L4M 
qs jeqoL dnou6 saiseds 


dnou6 adA,-4seu04 


(392) 91qgno jo suoL}]LW UT) 


C861 ‘a4tysdwey man ‘dnouB adAj-ysas0} pue satoads Aq puejsaquiit} UO Saas} 490}S-BULMOUB JO aUIN}OA JAN--"gZ 31921 


58 


2-2 s*8l 2°9 L°62 0° 8°6 9°LL 6°2S 27eh 0°8 as 


0°000'6 ¥4°8s¢ 9°690'y 89°22 0° 2°28u’b = 9°92S 2°95 9°6LL S*100’2 salgads })e ‘)e301 

Z2°102'S 6°SE2 B°9yL’s 9°49 0° S*626 9°S02 S*2 8°92L G* L649 SpoompJey }8}0) 
S*OL 2°28 6°S 9°90L s°4 0° g°l¢e 2°21 0° O°L 0°92 SpoompJey 19430 
2°2¢ 2°6 L* 2*L jhe 0° (Se Ss 0° L* 9°9 w)3 
27s £*é6l 6° L°St 0° 0° SL 0° 0° 0° cal poomsseg 
9°9 8°¢S8 £°9 L°99L S 0° 9°¢0S :: a (Se gl £°l6 Ssyeo0 poy 
6°SL ¢°S2 tak g°2 0° 0° 8° 9S 2°¢ 0° 0° 6°2L Syeo 324M 
2°2b L°97S2 9°99 6°ZOL i 0° O° Lb 0°6 0° 9°LL £°Ly uadsy 
6°¢4 L°9 (ie SL 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 8° (4a yse 49819 
L°<b G*9l2 veal 6°S12 0° 0° ram 4 8°OL 0° 0° Cuee yse 3a} 14A 
6°83 S*994 O*L 8° eee 0° 0° 9°0S S*2 0° 0° S*82 yIe00g 
9°9 S°LLS 9°96 2°992 Ls 0° L°29 L°Y¥L 0° 9°89 S°69 youiq Jaded 
Gl S°S94 0°92 £°l6¢ be 0° 9°83 9°2 Oj: O°SsL L°SL YIttq MO} 9A 
VEY, es20Sak 8822 7°O0S2 ¢°ls 0° 2° 78l 9°69 We ¢*se G°L2LZL a)dew pay 
6°83 6° 292 6°< 9°02 O°L 0° Bel S*L 0° bob ge" a)dew se6ns 

8°862Z'E sS*22L 9° 706 6°2L 0° 2°£S2 8°OLE L°2e 9°26S L°OLS‘L SPOOM}}OS 1830] 
L°LS g°ce 0° 9° 0° 0° 2°L Ss L°o¢ 0° aL SPOOM}}OS 19430 
£°3 9°28 2°91 9° 792 6°2 0° 9°SS 2°69 0° 2° bb B°eey 90 ]WSH 
9°6S g°el ve S*2 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 6°6 9° JEpsd-9} LYM UtJOY JON 
6°S ¢°0s8'l O0°O¢ 9° LO¢ S*6 0° 2° 9Zb G*YLE Lod 9°9¢ L°286 autd 3314M 
2°¢¢ 2°99 Ss £°8 0° 0° 6°2 S° 0° 0° 0°22 auid pay 
S°6 S*00S ¢£°O0¢ 6° L6L 0° 0° Or LL 3° 0° 9° L2e2 S°94 aonids pay 
0°00 ts be 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° aonids 492) 
9°49 8°¢ee 9°3 (42¢4 0° 0° se 0° 0° 9°22 he aonuds 33144 
S°£4 2°38 0° 3° 0° 0° 0° 3° 0° Lad 0°% yoesewe) 
9°6 2° 284 L°8¢ 9° 221 9° 0° 9°? 9°49 0° 2° 282 £"OL aly wes)eg 

yd4tq  spoompsey ajdew pau ssasdA9 AuoyoLy auld $83) }40Ys Jty auid pes 
/uedsy usayzION /yse/w)}y /wnB/yeQo 8 /e0 / 20 /A\)0)907 /aonids = /a. LUM 
]e}01 dnou6 satsads 


dnos6 adAj-3sau04 


(}93} 9Lqnd jo suol})] LW UT) 


266, ‘a4tysdwey man ‘dnou6 adAj-jsau0} pue satoads Aq pue}soqui} UO Saad} 490}S-BULMOJB 40 OWN}OA JAN--"62 A)q9e1 


59 


o*s L°02 6°8 6°8 8°9 6°97 Bs Lae b°s as 


os 9°20L'9 = S" YL 6" LES L2vs Ss" 9974 2°29 £° 466 L°Ssb'L = ye satoads 1]e ‘)e301 
£"Y L'6zL'2  6"2s 7 LBL "Eyl 6°022 o"oss 6°S9S 27959 0° spoompsey 1230) 

£761 o"ss 0° 0° o°2 LY 6°S 6°12 S02 0° spoompsey 13430 
2°29 os 0° 0° 0° 0° tat ool 9° 0° wa 
So 0°Ol 0° 0° 0° 9°% 0° 7°¢ 0°2 0° poomsseg 
6°2 £°8S7 8°41 S*8s L748 6°19 1°29 L"6LL €*22l 0° Seo pay 
0°22 o-Zs LY G72 L2 S°9 9°2 8°6 6°8 0° syeo 22 14M 
L"8L 9° LOL 0° 672 8°S gts 2°91 2°68 L°SE 0° uadsy 
7°61 9°9E1 £°E1 ey aU 7 UL 0°91 g°ZE £°65 0° yse 2314m 
9° LL 0"£02 0° Zi 0°OL L°22 O"Ls 6°SY 6°19 0° yoaeg 
£"Ll S*8El 0° 0° 0° 9°1 0°61 2°24 L°SL 0° youiq Jaded 
6°6 S*El2 8°1 222 S*E2 0°22 97°65 L794 6°4S 0° Yo4tq HO} 12A 
v2 7 2Ly 0° Lg 2°22 £°8Y 2°65 2°11 7° LEL 0° ajdew pay 
6°01 2°09E 6°81 9°6S Lvs g°ss L"¥S wk) 4° S6 0° 2)dew se6ns 
"Y S84S‘2 9°16 9°0Ss 8° 861 9° £22 2° 29S 9°89 O° LY 9° LS SPOOM}40S e304 

9°25 o°L2 0° erg SL SL 19 o's s*s L-2 SPOOM}4OS 42430 
£°6 22s 6°£ 7°27 9°£% 9°6S £°08 6" LLL 9°S2L S*901 490 1U9H 
8°45 dee 0° 0° 0° vig 8° 0° 8"1 7s Jepad-3314M UJa4y2JON 
2°9 G*S/7'L = L728 6° 262 2°Sy71 L"Ovl 6°LL2 £"Sv2 4° 961 6°97 auid 2314M 
ovzs 2°E¢ 0° 29 0° 0° S*2 2°91 S*S 8°9 auid pay 
6°01 27022 0° 0° "9 0°91 0°92 6°0S £°28 9°£8 sonids pay 
LLY o"¥2 0° 6°¢ 272 0° vs 9°¢ £75 8°S sonids 2314M 
S0S Ly 0° 0° 0° 0° ier 0° 91 L°2 OeJEWe | 
9°01 77891 0° 0° 0° 97% s°8 2°61 0°9S S*6L J1y wesjeg 

+0" 62 6°82 6°02 6°81 6°91 6°41 6°21 6°0L 
Z eoeneis o-L2 0°61 O°LL o°Sl O°sl OvLL 0°6 Seana eek 


Vv (]yBLay yseasq ye sayoul) ssej}9 sajawelg 


(3284 91qno 4o suoL})1W UT) 


266, ‘astysdwey may ‘sse)9 
Jajzowelp pue satsads Aq puejyaquii} UO saat} JaquiLyMes JO UOLJUOd BoyMeS ay} UL 490}S-BULMOUB JO SWN}OA AN--"OE a]qe1 


60 


Sawtimber volume on timberland, for selected species and 
percent change, New hampshire, 1983 and 1997 


White pine 
Hemlock 
Red oaks 
Red maple 
Sugar maple 
Spruce 
Beech 
Yellow birch 
Balsam fir 
Paper birch 
Ash 


Aspen 


(Volume increased by 18.8 percent for all species) 


© 


3 4 5 
Billion of board feet 


6 


| 1983 
1997 


7 


672 S*02 6°8 9°38 09 L°S 6°¢ ae 9°S as 


6°2 2°S6S’6L  1°082 9°258'L L°2eb'L 49° 160'2 G°828'2 6°L20'4 8°S22’'s 2°12 satoeds })e ‘]eI0) 
SY 9°S29'8 =F" LZEL 8°99 6°S£Y 9° 146 L°SL9'L S°<St'2 9°226'2 0° spoompsey 230) 

O'ZL 6° 461 0" 6°9 0°S 9°21 2°9¢ 9° Ly 1°26 0° Spoompsey 12430 
8°0¢ 2°2¢ 0° s°S 0° 09 9°9 2°8 £°Ol 0° w)3 
2°94 6°9F 9°9 0° 0° 9°21 6°2 8°S 9°6 0° poomsseg 
2°8 2° 29S 0° 2°24 9°02 S"LL2 8°22 0° L9¢ 2°6L4 0" syeo pay 
2°12 6°9SL 9°SL 22 ¢"¢ e° LL G°0g 6°LE 9°95 0" sy80 3314M 
S*6L ¢°8<y 0" 0° o°2L 27s 9°22 9°¢2L 8° 861 0° uadsy 
9°OL 9°02 0° 0° 0° 0" 0° 0°6 2200 0° yse 49e)9 
£°02 6°SES Lee 6°SE 0° £°99 6°98 L°S9L 0°OSL 0° yse 33144 
s"2l 2°196 92 9°G¢ 2°04 6°6E1 O°<6L £° 162 8°6S2 0° yooeg 
9°21 0°59 0° o°2L 8°12 2°82 8°22 8°2Sl £°99¢ 0° yosiq sade 
SOL L°2£0"L 6°LE 0°¥0L 2°92 s°20L G*2ZL 2°82 2° 882 0° Youiq MO} ]aA 
2°8 0°219'1 L°6 6°S8 8°89 ¢"SSL 2°62 8°S0% 9° 799 0° a)dew pay 
vet £°9E4'L see L°¢22 9°6E1 g°SOL 9° 922 0° 262 2°2S¢ 0° a)dew sebns 
8°4 0°026'0L g°2¥L 8°B9L'L 2°969 O° 77L'L G°o947'L 47°398' 1 2°¢£0¢'2 2°esL'2 SPOOM}JOS ]e}0]1 

£°99 0°66 0" 8°S L°OL 2°St Sout L2°¢2 O°LL 8°Sl SPOOM}J$0S J9Y30 
c°6 2°G22'h 0" ¢°82l 9°901 9°S6L 2° 4S2 g°LZE 9°024 2°00£ 90 ]WaH 
L9 0°92 0° 2's 0° 0° s°2 c°S 2°s 2°s Jepes-33 14M UJa4yzJON 
Ae) L°262'9 g°24L 6°200'L ¢° 164 9° 208 9°16 8°8S0'L s°270'1 9°22 autd a314A 
2°04 0"OL2 0° 0° 2°€2 6°8E 2°04 8°8E £°Ls 9° LL auld pay 
9°LL 6° 224" 0° Gl2 0°6S 8°82 9°21 0°22 ose O°9LS aonids pay 
0°00 AD) 0° 0° 0° 0° 0" 6°¢ £°2 st aonuds 49e)9 
8° oy ¢°28 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° s°SL 0°0S 8°L2 aonuds 3314A 
2°c¢ 2" UE 0" 0° 0" L°s 2°47 ss 6°97 Lb’ yoesewe | 
8° LL €"S00'1 0° 0° 0° 8°4 ole 6°4LL 0°9E¢ 9°81S jij wesjeg 

+0°62 6°82 6°02 6°8L 6°9L 6°4L 6°2L 6°0L 
-O°L2 -0°6L -O°LL -0°SL -O°E1 -O°LL -0°6 
as ea dnos6 saioeds 


(]YyBlay yseaig ye sayouL) sse]9 sajzowelg 


(1224, pueog jo suol)]1W UT) 


€B6l ‘astysdwey Man ‘sse]2 Jajzaweip pue satoads Aq puejsaquil} UO Saas} JEqUILAMeS JO SUN]OA JOEN--"|E a1qGeL 


62 


b“¢ S*02 b°6 L°6 O°2 o°s Bre £5e: 2a as 


be L°S22’e2 6° S62 0°Ss8’2 2°062"1 8°822'2 yLle's 8°6S8'4 8°225'S 9°€08'L satoads }]e@ ‘)e}0) 
ay] 2°989'0L  £°262 8° 756 9° 19d L°L60°L L°S09"1 8°829'2 9°24E'¢ 0° Spoompsey ]e&}0] 

2°6L 8°£92 0° 0° 2°6 9°6L 8°62 2°20 S*201 0° SpoompJey 19430 
g°£9 9°91 0° 0° 0° 0° s‘9 L°9 0°” 0° w)3 
2°19 0°2s 0° 0° 0° 729 0° SLL L°8 Os Poomsseg 
6°2 £°90E'2 b°9l 9°902 6°S8L S°S0£ eles 6°28S 6°4L9 0° syeo poy 
2°42 2°46 £°0e 9°SL 9°OL L°82 6°2b L°9% 2°S7 0° sye0 3314M 
£°6l 9°9SS 0° 2°Sb 9°S¢ £°2e S°9l 9°OL2 6°26L 0° uedsy 
£°02 O°9Ld 7°08 278k 9°09 S°L9 £°Sl £°S6L 9°4702 0° yse 314A 
O°2L 8°640'L 0° £°6S Bs 2°S2l 9°GS2 8° Lee £° yee 0° y9ee9 
"Ll 9°02 0° 0° 0° Cel 0°%6 L°gbe L°90% 0° ydsiq Jadeq 
LOL g°SZ0'L £°8 8° Sel S*Ebl 8°90L O°sZL 8° L02 2° 182 0° YOttq MO}}2A 
Tied 2°00‘2 0° L°2S1 6° LLL 8°622 6° S82 9°£9S S° 4789 0° a)dew pay 
LLL L°9LL'L L°66 S"LLE 9°21 9°8S1L 9°6S2 6°92E 8° 894 0° a)dew sens 
9°49 o°6es’2L Z°L0S L°026'L 9°840'L 2° Leb" £°99L"1 O"L8L’2 2°02'2 9°€08"'L SPOOM}}FOS 1230] 

L°09 9°86 0° 2°O0L Sid: 6°L 9° 2s o°vL S°SL 9°OL SPOOM}}0S J94I0 
2°6 O°¥ES‘2 £°02 9°SL2 9°9L2 0° 282 ViCes: L° 267 0°82S 0°66£ 90 ]WSH 
L°9S 0°92 0° 0° 0° £°s B°2 0° LL 2°OL Jeped-37 14M UJOYION 
9°9 £°969'L 9° L847 S°899'L L°s22 6°0£2 L°SEL’L 6°8L2'L £°906 L°S6S auid 334M 
2°6£ 6°89 0° 6°42 0° 0° 8°el 0°22 0°92 2°22 auld pay 
£°bb 9° Ese'L 0° 0° S°9¢ L°28 8° 6EL £° 992 9° 6£9 9° ole aonids pay 
s°99 Z°OLL 0° 9°LL 6° LL 0° 2°81 BOL S°¥2 2°b2 aonsds 331yA 
9°LS 8°6L 0° 0° 0° 0° 0°S 0° 939. 9°83 WOBIeWe | 
8° OL 6° 208 0° 0° 0° 9°92 £°949 6°16 e922 L°8s¢ Jt} wes)eg 

+0°62 6°82 6°02 6°8L 6°9L 6°41 6°2L 6°0L 
sasse}2 -O°L2 -0°6L -O°LL -O°SL -O°EL -O°LL -0°6 
as dnou6 satoads 


nv (2yBLay yseasq ye SayoUL) sse)9 Jajzoweig 


(3984 pueoq yo suol))1W UT) 


2661 ‘a4tysdwey MaN ‘’Sse}9 sajowelp pue saloveds Aq pue}Jequil} UO Saas} UaqWIAMeS JO SWN}OA JeN--"ZE BIqGeL 


63 


be 


92 7°6 a 0°9 6°S 8°” 9°6 eel a2 9°38 0°6 as 


L's L°S22‘e2 yLLL’S B°SBE'L 6°989'8 B°SOL’y 2°S8f'S 2°6S0'LL E°S22'2 B°S9Z 2°198'2 L2°882'2 2°86¢'2 setgads })e ‘e301 
"4 2°989'0L 7°9¢0°L 8°98S 8°S84'S S°26%7'2 9°LB80'L 8°999'4 OT Lyd 0°892 27-2E2'L O° LES" 9° LB80'L spoompsey }e301 

2°61 8°S92 = 6 6°SL c"£9L c°49 0" L°6S 6°S 0° 9°22 G*S2 0" spoompsey J2430 
s°£9 9°9L Ly (0) Cae sel 0° 0° ‘9 0° 0° s°9 0° 0° w73 
2°24 0°2s 6"l 6° 6°El L°OL 2°61 9°92 0° 0° 0° 22 2°61 poomsseg 
6°2 £°90E'2 9°ELL 6°SL 2°26 0°642 G'22y G°SOL‘L 8°06 9°84 Gel 2° 665 G24 syeo pay 
2°42 2°%61 0°"E 8°83 O° LLL 4°82 o°2L ¢° SOL 0°4%E 24 6°94 6°8 O°2L syeo 3314M 
£"6L 9°95 L°O¢ L°4S 6° L0E c°Zel 8°92 0°84 2°82 £°6 6°9S 8°94 8°92 uedsy 
£°02 O°9LZ £°69 o"L 6°20¢ ¢°6lL2 = 6" 22h L°9Lg = 82S 0° 8°84 G"Lé6 6°22 yse 314M 
0°21 8°640'L 6°S4L 9° LSL 0°66S 9° 9EL 9°02 2°16% s° 201 L°09 0°922 9°¢8 9°02 yosaq 
ra) 4° 022 2°S¥ raat £°6S9 2°291 9°SE 2° LOL 6°OL 0" 2°0L 9°44 9°S¢ youiq sade 
L"OL 8°S20’L S°SLL 2°82 2° LES L“LE2 9°SLL ¢°275 = 2°68 Z°8L 4° SOL O"L4L 9°8LL Yo4iq MO} aA 
9°2 2°200'2 9°0LE 9°O¥L 8 L6L‘L 8°90E 6°25 2°6LL2 6°602 g°s9 £° £62 L"SSL 6°25 a)dew pay 
Bene 2°922'L Lb" 84L 4°16 9°198 0°44 9°042 0° 186 Jeune g°¢s9 2252 L°2e& 9°0%2 a)dew seins 
9°4 0°68S'ZL 0°S20’2 0°662 L°soz2’ €°802’2 9°E0E'Y 4°425'9 F°4By'L 6°164 0°729'L LLSy’L 9°OLE'L SPOOM}J}OS ]2}01 

L°09 9°86 Z°OL 0° c"4S O°SL 7°SL S"8S 2°01 0° 6°€2 6°6 oO" SPOOM}40S J9YyI0 
L°6 O"yes‘2 8°259 O° 0° 0: L°L8e‘L SB yLL’L S*09¢ 0° 0" 0" £°9SL 90 |W 
L°9S 0°92 09 0° 0" 0° 0°02 L°g GY 0" 0" 0" 9°¢ Jepas-33 YM UsayzJON 
49°9 £°49697'2 EF LOL"L 0°662 6°290'S 6°06L'2 2° 962 L°y22"% L°LLO’L 6°264 2°26S'L SB byy'lL L°Le? auld 3214u4 
2°6E 6°891 2°9 0° 2°SOL 9°2 2°9S 2°8¢ 0° 0" 672 0° 2°0¢ auld pay 
cL 9°gso'lL 6°60L 0° 0" 0° 2°S2@2z'b 4°9S2 9°8¢ 0° 0° 0° 8° LL2 aonids pay 
S°44 Z°OLL G"Se 0° 0° 0° 2°Sd cy 6°22 0° 0° 0" 9° SZ aonids 3314 
9°LS 8°6L s"2 0° 0" 0° c*Al 0°S 0° 0° 0° 0° 0°S yoeuewe | 
8°0L 6°208 0°48 0" 0" OF B'°slz = 2°02 0°9¢ 0° 0° 0" 9°4¢ diy wesjeg 

sepesub G 9pes9 4» apelH ¢ BpesH 2 apes | spes9) sepes6 Gg opel 4 aspes9 ¢ opesH 2 opely L spes9 
as Vv Vv 
dnos6 satsads 
sasse]9 3Zls ]1V WyBLay yseaug je Ja}OWeLG WSOL< 
(3994 pseog 4o suoL})] LW UT) 
266, ‘a4tysdwey MaN ‘apeu6 9a43 pue ‘sse}9 azis ‘satoads Aq pue}Jaqui} UO Saas} JOqUILAMeS 40 aWN]OA JON--"SS A]GeL 


64 


Gey Ss 02S'SSL- GSO '69L ££6'02- 1S6'9¢ OSL ‘0S- 28L'S0z GLE ‘O2L 12898 satoeds }]e ‘)}e}0) 
29061 966'LL- 966'06 912" 9L- 218'¢2 L697‘ 22- 988801 9¢8'09 250'84 spoompsey ]&301 
G62‘2 007'L- G6l' 9 0v¢- 000‘ B9L‘L- 901'4 087'2 922'2 spoompsey J3430 
6L2- 942- Gl4- 0 £S 21S- Sy 0 8Y w)3 
G6S 69- 099 2g- 69 0 ¢29 224 961 poomsseg 
cyl‘ y 862'2L- L97'9L 2L2- 126‘ 916'L- 96S5'91 959'8 096'2 syeo pay 
9¢- 267'L- L94‘L ¢2l- G9¢ 8SL- 2le't 928 LSS syeo 331UM 
cLL- 898'¢- G69'¢ LZL- 988 Les‘¢- LLS’9 BLy's £60'¢ uedsy 
9L2- 02- 971 - 0 0 O9L- 91 91 0 yse 49e)9 
6LL‘¢ 8S7'2- 825'S 28- 9S ¢SS'L- 6902 9197's 679'¢ yse 9331LUM 
ggc'l- 286'2- 665'9 ¢80'¢- 226'¢ 4780'¢- 961'8 601'S G89'¢ yoaeg 
827'8- 261 '6- eZ LOL ‘2- SS8 ¢20‘9- 9470'S L6L’4 2698'¢ ydsiq sadeg 
22 €1S5'S- G6S'S 2SL‘2- 02s‘2 682’¢- 120°6 £S9'4 6954 YO4lq MO})2A 
916'0L 902'ZL- L2L‘92 £16'¢- 96¢'3 29¢'4- £70'82 66021 £76‘OL a)dew poy 
0387's ¢20’0L- GSS‘ SL 9£6'L- g59's 68L‘L- £0'8L 292OL Log’2Z a)dew se6ns 
€29'9L 959'19- 6S0'82 212'9- Gol‘ LL 659 '22- 10296 187'6S oz8'9¢ SPOOM}}0S ]€301 
29¢ 2l- 659 0 94 29- GSY 822 2Lt SPOOM}JOS 419430 
9¢1'8 29¢'L- cOL'9L ¢2'¢- Log'L 800'2- ¢8S'6l OL’ LL 68¢'8 90 ]WeH 
6SL di- 9L1 0 0 002- 22g 892 601 Jeped-33 14M Ut9424ON 
OLE’SL L62‘LE- LOL’Sy 269'2- 806'9 968'¢- 08s‘4% 278° LE ee '2L auld 33144 
9S9'L- 616'L- G2 2L- ce Glz- 222 0sz 22s auld pay 
921 86S'2- 92L'L ¢L4- 626 280'%- csc‘ LL 22b'2 e8i'y aonids pay 
265- 892- 92L- 0 0 SSL - le le 0 eonuds 498)9 
988 99S- 0sy'l 0 999 88- 228 869 cle aonsds 33144 
€l 80¢- Le 2l- 202 OSL - ozs Loz 6LL yoeuewe) 
¢2o'S- 299'LL- 995'9 ogs- £495 Ble‘ LL- 6%6'L1 99L'2 €02'Ot Jly wes)eg 
S]EAOWSY y3MosB JUS ISUL USE IS9p AL] 8240W 4 MoJ6 UuoL{JsIIDY y Mo sBuy 
32N 119 11Nn9 SsoJ5 
Sane dnos6 saisads 


aBueys jo JUsuCdWO) 


(3284, 91qnd 4o spuesnoy) ul) 


2661 ‘a4tysdwey May ‘aBueyd yo jUauoduiod pue saiveds Aq pue)}Jaquil} UO aWwN]}OA 490}3S-BuIMOuB jo aBueys yau jeNUUe aBesaAy--"¥¢ a)qGeL 


65 


La 


LLL ‘E42 00S'S9£- 029'809 £0S'2S- 6£6'89 69S‘ L6- £82'389 Of '6EE £S9'6%F satoeds je ‘)e301 
£96'S2L Gos’ 2ZSL- 694 ' S82 6£4'4¢- G29'9¢ 289'8¢- 696'6LE 660' 401 998'SLZ spoompsey ]e}0) 
04S'9 LSL‘2- 169'8 868- 8252 GEL ’2- G6L ‘6 Lzu‘2 Gl0'L Spoompsey 134310 
206'2- 602'1- 669'L- 0 0 669'L- 0 0 0 w}3 
661 ‘2 0 6612 0 0 0 661'2 L82"L 216 poomsseg 
668'2¢ ELS‘ LE- £14'69: ¢oS- G09'2 940'¢- 98202 £9£'S2 £20'S% syeo pay 
222 G62‘2- 2is‘¢ 0gs- 884 0 609'¢ 6621 012'2 syeo 331UM 
S96’ 71 066'S- G£6'02 L6%- 968 2e2'4- 228" 92 186'9 be’ ZL uadsy 
692- 692- 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 yse 9e14 
cZ2‘9L GL7'9- 069'22 0 BE2 Lig'e2- 69292 0816 06S'SL yse a3LuA 
280'¢- 020'8L- 2£6' 41 29L'9- 8092 419'6- Ly2‘82 92L'OL 21981 yoaag 
0%2'S- €1L'8L- £562 £00'4- 669 L00"¢- 2E2'61 900‘¢ Le2"9L yosiq seded 
229'1 LeZ"2L- 80%'6L 281 'S- 60L'9 616'9- L9%'S2 620'8 zee’ Zl yostq MO] ]2A 
28S'0¢ 222‘ 62- 4708'6S 2£8'6- 696 ‘OL 198" %- 2g5'¢9 98S'02 LS6'24 ajdew pay 
829'92 196'¢2- S79'0S 22L'9- 69S'6 042 - 600’87 086'SL 620’2¢ a)dew sens 
202‘2bL 466'L02- Loz‘ Sze £90'¢2- 9LE'2¢ 298'2S- 218'89¢ Lez’ sez 985'SEL SPOOM}JOS 1230) 
L6S‘L GyL- 9E2"1 0 LZ 22- L621 20£"L 684 SPOOM}}0S 13430 
Gyl'S2 gS2'Gz- £00'LS SOE’ LL- 99L'¢ L22’s- G92‘¢9 928'2¢ 6£6'S2 90 WAH 
908'L 4¢- gce'l 0 0 ¢8s- 222'2 288'L Gee Jepas-33 14M UsJayzJON 
019'%6 Lyi‘ 22eL- 2S2'L22 L0L'6- 9¢8’22 4786'OL- G09’6L2 G90'SSL 6£S'49 auid 33144 
406'8- €20'6- 6LL 60¢- 0 596- c6E'L 982'1 601 auid pay 
col" 219" 61- 0247" 22 28S‘ L- 2902 £07 LL- BEEBE G8L ‘22 ZS 9L aonids pay 
68S- 069- LOL 0 0 0 LOL 0 LOL aonuds 49e)4 
09S'4 €18'L- ¢o4'9 0 9082 022- 678'¢ 2802 292" aonuds 23144 
012 22L'L- dgs'l 0 G9 Llg- ZL0°L 20S LLS yoesewe 
295'6- 020'¢2- gS7'El 99L- 9EL 842'S2- Gel ‘SE 160’¢1 9979'S2 Jiy wesjeg 
S]CAOWS Y y Mos6 JUSWEIIUL JUSS IIOP A}1]e]40W y MoJ6 UOLJIIIIy yy mMoubu] 
JON 1109 119 ssoJ9 
cae dnou6 sataads 


aBueys jo YUauoduo) 


(3384 pueoq Jo spuesnoy u]) 


266, ‘a4tysdwey Man ‘aBueyd jo YUSsUOdUIOD pue salads Aq pUue)}JaquiL} UO aUIN]OA JaquiL3yMes Jo aBueys you jenuue abesaay--"c¢ 3}qGe1 


66 


Millions of Acres 


NORTHERN UNIT 
TABLES 


Grafton 


Carroll 


1500 
[J 1983 
Hi 1997 
1000 
500 
0 


Sawtimber Poletimber Sapling-Seedling 


Northern Unit, area of timberland by stand-size class, 1983 and 
1997 


G 
ee 
Ca 
— 
ey) 
A oan 
a 
O 
a 


Table 36.--Area of timberland by forest type, forest-type group, and stand-size 
class, Northern Unit, New Hampshire, 1983 


(In thousands of acres) 


Stand-size class 


Forest type no 
Saw- Pole- Sapling and Non- classes 
timber timber seedling stocked 

Red pine 9.7 -0 -0 0 9.7 
White pine 30.2 20.5 0 -0 50.7 
White pine/hemlock 20.4 9.7 -0 0 30.1 
Hemlock 19.0 9.7 0 -0 28.7 
White/red pine group 79.3 39.9 0 -0 119.2 
Balsam fir 39.3 148.5 27.1 0 214.9 
Red spruce 20 69.8 9.7 -0 79.4 
Red spruce/balsam fir 19.8 105.5 9.7 -0 134.9 
White spruce 20 20.1 0 0 20.1 
Tamarack -0 10.0 0 0 10.0 
Spruce/fir group 59.2 353.8 46.4 .0 459.3 
Pitch pine 9.4 9.4 0 -0 18.7 
Loblolly/shortleaf group 9.4 9.4 -0 -0 18.7 
Wh. pine/no.red oak/wh. ash 28.6 18.7 -0 -0 47.3 
Oak/pine group 28.6 18.7 -0 -0 47.3 
Northern red oak 19.4 49.8 8.4 -0 77.6 
Red maple/central hardwood -0 .0 10.0 -0 10.0 
Mixed central hardwoods BU 38.2 -0 .0 47.9 
Oak/hickory group 29.1 88.0 18.3 0 135.5 
Black ash/Amer. elm/red maple -0 8.2 8.5 -0 16.7 
Red maple(upland) -0 -0 10.0 -0 10.0 
Elm/ash/red maple group 20 8.2 18.6 0 26.7 
Sugar maple/beech/yellow birch 559.6 332.2 28.0 0 919.8 
Black Cherry -0 10.0 9.7 -0 19.7 
Red maple/northern hardwoods 68.7 245.9 -0 -0 314.6 
Pin cherry/reverting field -0 10.0 .0 0 10.0 
Mixed northern hardwoods 28.5 48.0 8.9 0 85.4 
Northern hardwoods group 656.7 646.1 46.6 -0 1,349.4 
Aspen 38.5 76.3 7.0 -0 121.7 
Paper birch 38.7 158.0 10.7 -0 207.5 
Aspen/birch group Wwe. 234.3 UTAA -0 329.2 
All forest types 939.5 1,398.4 147.5 -0 2,485.4 
SE (fee) 5.4 23.4 .0 1.0 


68 


SE 


Table 37.--Area of timberland by forest type, forest-type group, and stand-size 


class, Northern Unit, New Hampshire, 1997 


Forest type 


Red pine 

White pine 

White pine/hemlock 
Hemlock 


White/red pine group 
Balsam fir 
Red spruce 
Red spruce/balsam fir 
White spruce 
Spruce/fir group 
Pitch pine 
Loblolly/shortleaf group 
Wh. pine/no.red oak/wh. ash 
Oak/pine group 
Post, black, or bear oak 
White oak/red oak/hickory 
Northern red oak 
Red maple/central hardwood 
Mixed central hardwoods 


Oak/hickory group 


Black ash/Amer. elm/red maple 


Red maple( lowland) 
Willow 


Elm/ash/red maple group 


Sugar maple/beech/yellow birch 


Black Cherry 
Red maple/northern hardwoods 
Pin cherry/reverting field 
Mixed northern hardwoods 
Northern hardwoods group 
Aspen 
Paper birch 
Gray birch 
Aspen/birch group 
All forest types 


SE 


(In thousands of acres) 


Stand-size class ALL 
Saw- Pole- Sapling and Non- classes 
timber timber seedling stocked 
.0 4.9 .0 -0 4.9 
55.8 16.0 .0 .0 71.8 
42.4 Ton .0 .0 49.5 
57.6 4.9 .0 =0 62.5 
155.8 32.9 0 0 188.7 
31.6 127.6 43.0 20 202.2 
12.3 10.6 10.2 .0 33.1 
28.5 86.0 6.3 3.9 124.7 
11.6 .0 0 .0 U6 
84.0 224.2 59.5 3.9 371.6 
10.4 552 .0 .0 15:35 
10.4 52 -0 .0 15)-5) 
18.1 15.8 1.4 0 35.3 
18.1 15.8 1.4 0 35.3 
.0 .0 5.2 .0 5.2 
525 5.4 -0 .0 10.9 
29.1 23.5 .0 .0 52.5 
14 -0 .0 .0 1.4 
29.1 52.6 .0 al) 81.8 
65.0 81.6 522 .0 151.8 
11.4 1.9 Ai) -0 13.3 
6.7 .0 .0 -0 6.7 
20 oO 1.6 .0 1.6 
18.1 1.9 1.6 .0 21.5 
539.2 378.7 66.7 0 984.5 
7.4 .0 19.0 .0 26.4 
104.1 Migs 34.0 .0 255.2 
0 4.5 11.0 .0 15:5 
38.2 52.0 23.6 .0 113.9 
688.9 552.3 154.4 0 1,395.6 
19.5 19.9 28.0 .0 67.4 
32.4 53.6 19.9 -0 105.9 
0 .0 6.9 .0 6.9 
51.9 73.4 54.9 .0 180.2 
1,092.2 987.2 276.8 3.9 2,360.2 
5.7 6.1 12.9 100.0 1.7 


69 


SE 


ry) 9°S Zy4 6's g°¢ a) 8°S a°S ES 
L86'LL G7a'S2 6£5'24 968’ LL g09'8LL 260'281 259 Se 266'891'L saioads 178 ’)e301 
400'8 20291 L40‘62 90L'L4 669' 42. 86S 401 061’ 761 LLO‘ YL spoompsey 1230) 

0 2s GL €l4 LS2’2 g0¢'9 €18'S2 892'691 Spoompiey ]@1IJauOOUON 
ELL OLE BLE 2ze 200'1 29L'1 6S6'% LEL"OL SPoomMpsey ]eLIJeUIOD 413430 
0 0 0 9¢ Le 92 0 228'1 wa 
0 ¢¢ 6 | 0 202 L492 0 80% poomsseg 
LL9 199'L 96L'1 2¢0’¢ 260'4 2824 802'9 Gey’ SL syeo pay 
0 cf 6£1 cc 291 291 606 00S syeo 3314M 
88S Gle’L 29S'L 2sy'2 29S’¢ 695'¢ 2104 0%4'62 uadsy 
0 0 0 it%4 669 42¢ €Ls'L cscy'L yse 49e)g 
£92 169 669'1 css‘ 1 G2L ‘2 645'¢ 620'2 G£9'6 yse 3314 
09’ 6821 ely'¢ 169'S B9L'2 929° 2L Gle'92 G96’ LLL yaaq 
225 £98" | oss’? zac’ 2 2¢8°S1 278'81 626'02 £18'Ss youiq Jaded 
Ly9'L 6092 SOL’y 09L’9 265'6 cyl’ 2b ££0'0E 290'86 yostq MO}]9A 
902"1 B6L'¢ 9470'S 90S'6 620'8L 9728'S2 922'6£ 9¢9' 901 a)dew pay 
£6S'1L 280'¢ 915'9 228’ OL €S6' LL 682'SL g2S'92 409'6 a)dew sebns 
€16'¢ ey" L 862'E1 26142 CLL’ yy 669' 22 194'6EL Lec’ 9s¥ SPOOMIJOS 12301 
Blz £6 2SL 91¢ 4948 99" €4L'2 68¢ SPOOM}J}0S 419430 
Gl2'1 €2L'2 6lE'¢ €1L'S G19°S 9542 BEl’Sl 019'82 90 ]WOH 
6£ 0 981 e14 GOS 21S 0 G68 Jepas-3314mM UsJayzJON 
90S’ gsc’2 cOL'2 590’¢ ces'4 6929 2528'S 819'92 auld 33144 
Le 2471 641 182 964 298 607 SLY auld pay 
264 109‘ 965'¢ 842'9 Gls‘ LL 6£2'91 902‘ 42 ZLL’88 aonids pay 
86 col OLE 959 192 OL z90'2 ¢08'L aonids 2314M 
9¢ 0 801 0s2 £42 Bee 0 6£0'L yoesewe | 
g22 £69 coc’¢ 069'2 067'6L GeL’24 227'06 G67 '90E Jiy wesjeg 
6°91 6° 6°2L 6'0L 6°8 6°9 6°97 6°2 

-0"SL -O°E1 -O'LL -0°6 -0°2 -0°S -0°¢ -0'L 


(1YyBLay yseasq ye SayoUL) sse)9 uazowelg 


dnou6 saiseds 


(Ssaa4} 40 spuesnoy3 uy) 


266, ‘a41tysdwey MAN ‘31UN UJaYy,ZJON ‘sse]9 sajawelp pue satosads Aq pue}saquil} uo (“Y"q"p SayoUL +09") Saeu} SAL] JO JaquiNN--"g¢e a)qeL 


70 


L°y 2°¢ 6°22 o°2L 9°21 L°6 3s 
Ly £10'296'L ol‘ 794 859 g28'¢ O£L‘¢ 1256'S satoads }}e ‘e301 
9°4 L7e‘26L'L 0%0'682 cee 222'2 916‘ 1 LL6’¢ Spoompuey }&301 
bo UL G82‘ 702 991'6 0 0 0 0 SPOOMPJEY ]CLIJaWLIODUON 
4°¢2 9S1'S2 9790'% 0 0 02 Ly SPOOMpPJeY }ELIJSUIOD 418430 
2°S4 9212 c0s 0 0 0 0 w)3 
9°44 020'L 299 0 0 0 £6 poomsseg 
o'9L 82L’8E 987'9L 08 891 99 889 syeo pay 
9°14 ¢10'2 £09 0¥ 0 ¢¢ 0 syeo 33L4yM 
G*¢2 06S'9% ESL‘El 0 9) OOL 24L uadsy 
B°L9 920'4 2S0°1 0 0 0 0 yse 49e)9 
O° 66S'92 788'6 09 Sz 49 €Sl yse 2314M 
2°01 GL6'221 9oL'SS ¢¢ 22¢ 082 ges yooseg 
S*2L 6S2'E2Z1 296'94 0 0 42 26 youig sadeg 
e"LL 702'991L COL ‘SE 92 98S LZS 029 YO4tq MO}]3A 
9°8 229’ 202 Z216'¢9 ¢¢ 6£2 LLz 619 a)dew pay 
6°6 002’ LZL 29S'LS 99 2s2 css G28 a)dew se6ns 
672 221 ‘692 62£'SLL gee G09"L OSL‘L 920'2 SPOOM}JOS } 2&0] 
2°S2 6S2'9 22u'¢ 0 Le LE Le SPOOM}JOS 13430 
L"SL 668'89 LSS‘92 ¢¢ Gog £09 259 90 ]WEH 
2°92 osZ‘2 GSB‘ i) 0 0 GZ Jepad-33 LYM UJay JON 
2°el 69%'SS GlLO’¢2 L62 OvL'L 89E 648 autd a3LyM 
a4) 828'2 400'2 0 2s 0 0 auld pay 
O'LL 0£6'2S1 209'04 0 0 £6 £92 aonuds pay 
9°9¢ LS2°9 9882 0 22 09 9¢ aonids 3}LyM 
6°SS e102 Gl6 0 0 0 0 yoesewe | 
6°OL 922'1L4 605‘ 72 0 0 0 LL Jly wesjeg 

+0°S +0°62 6°82 6°02 68 
sasse}9 8301 -0°L2 -0°6L -O°L1 


iv 


(2yBLey yseasq ye SayouL) sseyo sajoweig 


(S$9a4} $0 spuesnoy} ul) 


dnou6 satoads 


panul3uo9--"g¢ ajqel 


71 


2°¢ 2°62 8°2l Jitsth c"6 gL 6°S 6°% L"y "9 2°s as 
2°¢ 000’82y 291 0%4'2 9461 969'% 2506 260'81 2£0°9E 2E2'12 E€49'L2L 46L'902 satoeds je ‘e301 

2°49 952'S92 6E£L L291 €22'1 90'S  2L'9 692'2L 6LE'22 29%'Sy 166’22 £92001 spoompsey 230) 
S"02 ose’S 0 02 92 0 le SOL Gos G49 ¢22'L G66'2 SpoompJey J9430 
S"99 2g 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 08 082 w)3 
2°99 89L aL 0 0 Le 0 2g 0 0 0 98 poomsseg 
£"E2 G6L’9L 0 cS LZ 20¢ GZS 689 2g2' 228S'2 022'S 6949'S syeo pay 
0°92 22 0 0 0 0 0 6£ 0 0 0 68 syeo a3 14M 
s"9L g50'02 0 (ji. Lz 4g 824 868 286'1 Go0’y 229’¢ 296'9 uadsy 
L"9¢ Lze'L 0 0 0 0 0 0 6£ G22 BLY BEL'L yse 49e)9 
8°6L Stik6 . 61 "0g 0 O9L Ove 228 LS8 Gl2‘L gos’2 91¢'¢ yse a3 LUM 
9°41 ozs’¢2  €L 98 LOL BES G68 64L'L 907'2 L92’y L210'S 645'8 yoaeg 
2 Ue ces‘lS 0 24 gy Bel BLS G2L'L 9c8'¢ 858 '2 9y2'SL 92222 yosiq saded 
ect b9s’ze LY GLY ele 299 G66 ZeL‘2 G6S‘€ 6S2°S 862'8 2S2'0L YIstq MO71]2A 
0°6 995'49 GL LLL 921 GSY £70'L 240'2 c/c'y O9L’OL 68S’8L gge'sz a)dew pay 
g°2L 86”'8E LF 84S 8S9 0L9 662'1 z£0'2 gL9'¢ G92'2 698'OL ZLOL"LL a)dew se6ns 

co) %2'12 82 610'L L22 0s9'L 826'2 628'S LZ"SL 692°82 1599’4S O0&4’SOL SPOOM}}OS 12301 
8°62 2ee‘s 0 Lz GY BL 9S 661 20L 1g 819 229'2 SPOOM}4OS J3YI0 
L"OL 2E2'8L 0 £92 cyl o/¢ LOL 299'L 868" | 8872 £62'4  106'9 490 ]W2H 
L°6S 299'1 0 22 0 0 ze LZ A 90£ 954 259 Jepao-33 14m Usay JON 
2°6L 910'E2 2 129 VLE 902 26L'L G92‘ 2262 2s¢'¢ 8298'S £829 autd 3314 
L"2s 89S 0 0 GL Bl 29 ce €Sl 98 0 0 auid pay 
O°2L 465'99 0 Ly cyl Log 299 95S‘L 82Z'€ 106'6 969'9L 995'LE aonids pay 
8°02 2S 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ZL Ory aonuds 49e)9 
L"0Y 2s‘ 0 0 0 0 0 Bel 68S 299 gS2'L O£L’2 aonids 2314M 
6°LS 026'1 0 0 0 62 2¢ ce 02 g9¢ 66£ gc0'L yoesewe | 
2°01 g89'76 0 0 0 G2 BL 898 g2l’y i2"lL 286’%2 2192's Ji} wesjeg 

+0°62 6°82 6°02 68 6'OL 6°41 6°2L 6°0L 6°8 6°9 
-0°1L2 -0°6L -O'LL -0°SL -O'E1 -O'LL -0°6 -0°2 -0°S 
as ae dnou6 saigeds 


(3YyBLay yseauq ye SayouL) sse]9 sajowelg 


(Ssaa4} 40 spuesnoy UT) 


€86L ‘astysdwey MaN ‘3LU 
UJa4JON ‘Sse]9 JajoweLp pue saioads Aq puejsaquily uo (*Yy"q"p SaYysUL +09°G) Saad} 490}S-BULMOUB jo JaquinN--"6¢ ajqeL 


72 


fa b°62 Leb 7°eb 8°6 el 8°s 6°97 0°? B°s Sv as 


c2¢ c29'lS4 OLS 682'¢ 6192 9241'S 86S‘0L 2g8'02 499’ZE %E2'89 198'2ZLL S89‘691 satoads }]e ‘}e301 
9°¢ 672'6S2 822 892" 90S’ 9ez'€ 262'9 9S2'CL  Ll2'92 €2S'Sy 280'69 262'26 Spoompsey }&3}0) 

9°LL 977'¢ 0 0 2 Ly 59 00g L62 £S2 256 82S‘1 Spoompsey 42430 
6LY £0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 9¢ Le 92 w}3 
0°9E 209 0 0 0 £6 0 ¢¢ cf 0 202 L972 poomsseg 
g°el Gv0‘9L 0% Gel cc GS9 LL9 ces‘ 1 96L'1 00'¢ 950'% BL’ y syeo pay 
es) £09 0% 0 ¢¢ 0 0 ¢¢ 6EL ce 291 291 syeo 3314M 
9°41 cJe‘2zL 0 9. 92 241 G69 Gle'L 29S‘ 6gsc’2 20c’¢ Lies uadsy 
8°24 020'L 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 26L 667 92¢ yse 49e)9 
G2 Gl7'6 09 £6 Le £Sl 622 859 261 Gss‘L ss0‘2 os2’¢ yse 3314M 
9°6 608’62 0 691 ¢8l 60% G90‘L 892‘ 282'2 9g¢'S 998'9 202‘ LL yoaeg 
2°8 820'97 0 0 0 0 G69 22S'L GlL"¢ SOL'2Z 2g2"cb = £96" LL youiq Jadeg 
NN Bs0'"S 492 Boy 224 95S goc’L 898 ‘1 9¢2'¢ 78B'S 2L'6 LOL LL Youlq MO}]3, 
9°9 g82'8S 0 ofl LLL L67 796 602‘2 L6l‘¢ 252'6 290'2ZL = LE2" 92 a)dew pay 
2°6 G92'84 49 022 LS G89 667'L £1S‘2 696'S 097'0L 29E'LL 424’ ¥L @)dew seins 
"°9 92L'22L 182 L2s‘L CLL‘ L 0561 298'¢ 280°2 768'2L Oll’22 Yy2l'Sy 266'92 SPOOM}J$OS }&}0] 

¢"c) 960'E 0 Le Le Le 8Lz £6 2S £9F 448 oo" SPOOM}}$0S 49430 
O°EL 967'S2 ge Sos £09 299 602'L 060‘2 Gee'¢ 961'9 68£'S 26L‘2 90 ]WSH 
2°29 919" 0 0 0 GZ 6£ 0 67 2g SOS 694 Jepad-3} 14M UsJa4yzJON 
2°2L cos’22 842 950'L See 608 999'L tes'2 §=200'2 ~=s_ B22 G8s‘% 6%2'9 auid 33 14A 
2°15 996‘ 0 2s 0 0 Le 241 6% L972 964 298 auid pay 
2°01 16L‘07 0 0 £6 £92 264 L09‘L G9s‘¢ G26'S Z2es‘lL 02991 aonids pay 
L°9¢ £9l'2 0 22 09 0 86 col OvE 79S 192 912 eonids 33 14M 
LL 906 0 0 0 0 9¢ 0 801 912 O12 gee yoesewe | 
£"OL bc2’e2 0 0 0 L2L 822 £69 £6L'¢ 2b9'2 2S7'6L £09'2% Jty wes)eg 

+0°62 6°82 6°02 6°8L 6°9OL 6°47 6°2L 6°0L 6°8 6°9 
-0°12 -0°6L -O°LL -O°SL -O'EL -O'LL -0°6 -0°2 -0°S 
3s 8988612 dnou6 satseds 


nv (2y6Lay yseauq je Sayoul) sse)o Jazowelg 


(s8eaJ} 40 spuesnoy} uJ) 


2661 ‘a@4tysdwey MeN “3LUN 
UJaYyzJION “SSe)}9 Jajowelp pue satosads Aq pue}sequiiy uo (*Yy"q"p SaYysUL +9°S) Saaj1} 4903S-BULMOJB Jo JaqUINN--"Q% 2e)qGe1 


73 


Tae: 02 ee 672 Ged: ype 9° Lb as 


9°¢ 9°695'4 0"8%2 b*S2 6°22 9 Lee'y b°ebe’9 £° 802 sa1oads }]e ‘)e}01 
£*Y 9° 128'2 6° L22 £°99 9°SSL G°699'2 6°09S'2 G88 spoompjey 230) 

cL 9°92 9°92 6" G"S2 0° 0" 0° SPOOMPJeY 121 I12uMODUON 
6°0£ 6 LE 6°4 al g°¢ bse bss 0" Spoompsey }elIseuMod 419430 
2°94 Cal 0° 0° 0° ram 21 0" w43 
o°2s 2°01 La Ls 0° S°6 S°6 0° poomsseg 
o*sL G*2b2 7560 29 L°2 L* £02 6° 281 £*Sl seo pay 
6°LS £°OL 0° 0" (8 £°OL £"OL 0° seo 2314M 
2°9L S*<9L herd £°2 9° 8° 091 c"£Sl cl uadsy 
0°94 6°S Ci ap 0° 9°S 9°S 0° yse 98)4 
L°22 8° 9EL 24 £2 0°2 G"O£L 8° OLL 2°61 yse 33144 
8°OL S"94E 0°SE 0°61 o°oL 7" LLE 9 LLE 0° yoaeg 
6°8 LiLve 2° 6°% £°6 Gees 8°BLE 2°94 yod4iq Jaded 
c°8 L° 90% 9° LY £°6 L°2e 2° 298 8° SSE OL Yo4tq MO eA 
Vp £°SEsS S°8Y ya?) 8°04 8°984 8° 484 02 ajdew pay 
2°OL L*S¢9 2°9e bvbL L°s2 6°009 £°82s 2°22 a)dew se6ns 
L°9 0°869'L L°92 8°8 a A 6°LL9'L b"2ss' B°6LL SPOOM}}OS 1230] 

8°SS 8°0£ ae 0° 2° 9°0£ 9°0£ 0° SPOOM}40S 13430 
£°yL 6° LEE L°9 9° 9° 6°S2e 8° £0F L*22 90 )WaH 
£°8sS o'vL 2: <" c* £°el 9°2L Zs Jepad-33 14m UJayzJON 
o°2L L°9¢4 veul 6°4 c°9 L°9Ly £°£6E 9" Le auid 93144 
g°24 9" L2 Op 0° £" 2°12 cule 0° auld pay 
9°OL Lae’ 9°2 call ra £°69E o*Sse £° 9s aonids pay 
0°94 L"s¢ "1 S° 6° g's ole L*2 aonids 3314M 
9°44 0°8 S 0° S° cs G2 0° yoesewe | 
8°6 6°8S4 Ls cant 6"L 2°SS¥ S*9OLY 2°6£ dl} wes)eg 

yyno yynso yyns a)qe3da90e a)geqydac0y Pedsejold 
Vv ua} 04 y6noy /P2ssasedd 


sasse]}9 11V dnos6 saisads 


$se]9 dau) 


(3984 9Lqnd jo suol}]LW UT) 


266, ‘24tysduey MAN “2LUM UJayzZION ‘Sse]9 aa4} pue salovads Aq pue}Jaquil} UO Saas} }]E 40 SUIN]OA JAN--"|y AIGeL 


74 


Volume of all live trees on timberland, for selected species and 
percent change, Northern Unit of New Hampshire, 1983 and 1997 
(Volume decreased by 3.6 percent for all species) 


Sugar maple 


Red maple 


Balsam fir 


White pine 


Spruce 


-6% 


Yellow birch 


+6% 


Paper birch 


Beech 
Hemlock +54% 
Red oaks 

Aspen 


White Ash 


0 200 400 600 800 
Millions of Cubic feet 


Table 42.--Net volume of all live trees on timberland by species and diameter class, Northern Unit, New Hampshire, 1983 


(In millions of cubic feet) 


All 


classes 


Diameter class (inches at breast height) 


SE 


Species group 


11.0- 13.0- 15.0- 1730 19.0- 21.0- 
14.9 16.9 18.9 20.9 28.9 29.0+ 


12.9 


10.9 


9.7 


138.0 80.3 24.7 6.4 9 5 
2.0 


186.3 


173.2 


Balsam fir 
Tamarack 


4.1 1.3 8 1.0 
12.8 6.5 


2.8 


2.9 


6.8 


White spruce 
Black spruce 
Red spruce 


Red pine 


White pine 


Northern white-cedar 


Hemlock 


27.0 28.7 35.8 41.2 23.1 


20.9 


28.2 


4.1 ee) 2.0 4.4 1.9 3.3 2.2 1.2 


(hae) 


Other softwoods 


402.3 350.5 267.0 159.9 108.0 81.4 43.7 81.5 13.4 1,867.0 6.1 


359.3 


Total softwoods 


8.8 


10.0 
V152 
14. 


412.1 


520.7 
589.7 
431.6 


thats 
0 
6 


0. 

4 
31.5 

3.4 


2.5 
2.7 


38. 

23. 

29.7 
5.3 


41.5 68.0 


38 
2 
6 

26.2 


Yellow birch 
Paper birch 


Sugar maple 
Beech 


Red maple 


76 


White ash 


CABG 
58.2 


250, 
48.0 


5.0 
27.1 


Black ash 
Aspen 


24.5 15.0 4.6 1.4 3 


38.5 


74.8 


1.2 
16.4 


White oaks 
Red oaks 
Basswood 


Elm 


20.4 


162.8 


12.8 3.9 4.5 1.1 


19.2 


37.1 30.3 20.7 


16.7 


1.4 
0 


0 
0 


1.2 
0 


0 
Vou 


6.0 


8.6 Bal. 3.3 
3.5 


10.2 


6.0 
19.2 


Other commercial hardwoods 
Noncommercial hardwoods 


1.2 


&9 


4.1 


26.4 2,871.6 


564.5 577.4 438.8 329.8 228.6 151.2 76.9 122.7 


355.3 


Total hardwoods 


2.5 


39.8 4,738.7 


966.8 927.9 705.8 489.7 336.6 232.6 120.6 204.2 


714.6 


Total, all species 


4.0 4.8 5.7 7.3 8.9 12.4 11.9 21.1 2.5 


4.1 


4.9 


SE 


Table 43.--Net volume of live trees on timberland by species and diameter class, Northern Unit, New Hampshire, 1997 


(In millions of cubic feet) 


Diameter class (inches at breast height) 


Species group 


11.0- 13.0- 15.0- 17.0- 19.0- 21.0- 
12.9 14.9 16.9 18.9 20.9 28.9 29.0+ 


10.9 


9.8 


136.7 92.4 61.2 18.6 9.4 5.0 


135.6 


Balsam fir 
Tamarack 


oO 


N 


Aon 


4 3 4 

371 10. 

4 21 42. 
95.1 39.9 426.1 12.0 
58.3 


2 
4 
18.7 


w 


1.9 


i 


ONO 


(a9. 
7 
4 
9 
5 


White spruce 

Red spruce 

Northern white-cedar 
Hemlock 


Red pine 
White pine 


1.6 


at 


Other softwoods 


304.5 282.4 239.2 178.0 129.6 88.6 Bed 128.0 44.1 1,698.0 6.1 


246.2 


Total softwoods 


tA 635.1 10.2 
tf 
8 
8 
0 


130.2 116.3 75.0 dei 38.5 32.3 61.3 
106.6 1 36. 24.1 10.4 12.2 
6 3 
7 6 1.0 
42. 4 


79.8 
Wat 


43.0 
72.3 


Yellow birch 
Paper birch 


Sugar maple 
Beech 


Red maple 


il 


2.5 


8.7 


White ash 


0 


2.3 
32.2 


CBT 
26.8 


Black ash 
Aspen 


33.0 


30.7 


12.5 


1.6 
29.8 


9 
26.7 


White oaks 


Red oaks 


37.8 


34.7 


13.8 


1.3 


6s) 


1.4 


8 


Basswood 


Elm 


6.2 


3.1 


4.2 Uist 


8.8 


3.0 


6.0 
9.4 


4.8 
12.8 


Other commercial hardwoods 
Noncommercial hardwoods 


Se 


39.4 2,871.4 4.3 


479.5 546.2 492.4 384.4 242.2 154.0 96.3 138.8 


298.2 


Total hardwoods 


3.4 


83.5 4,569.4 


784.0 828.6 731.6 562.3 371.8 242.6 153.8 266.7 


544.4 


Total, all species 


10.0 12.7 13.1 31.1 3.4 


fae 


4.0 4.3 5.0 5.8 


4.8 


SE 


Le 9°0£ s*£l 8° el 9°6 62 0°9 0°S Cae) iY) 2°s EES 


2 6°2se'y 2°82 £'2dL 990L 6802 O'SOE BLSy L199 2°48 ©9906-9649 satoads }]e ‘)e301 
”Y £°66S‘2 2°02 0°S6 8°99 97621 67902 2°20 £50 YBES 22S OME Spoompsey 12301 

Yee | 27:9ce 0: on Lh 0° 8° 72 9°S £°9 9° 9°6 spoompsey 19430 
Biss 2 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° bt 0° 9" 9° wa 
139009Y a 0° 0° 9°1 0° ra 0° 0° 0° 9° poomsseg 
@102 = 9:24ci'y) 0: Ss"? 6°s Oil aO:8ly — aG5Gl nv 0ew 6 0cn ie Sce  25 OL seo pay 
9°08 =A‘ 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 8" 0° 0° 0° Z seo 934M 
O:Z) 2502 10: 0° a 9°¢ Ouch.» reer eines, — 2°eG), "iy © Gace uadsy 
Oise = 1010. | «0: 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 8° S*2 Heke 0°Y yse 9e18 
bike Gohl 7G g°¢ 0° 6°L Orch Mowieee GO GOLF CLO) = evi yse 9314M 
£1 67082 =9"L L°S L"8 6:Sem ece Mery = AN) = 6recRy Oe. | 9 Ee yoaeg 
Wil 7 2965 ~ (0° £°2 dae 8°Y Org) ace "0°29: “9766 9: G01: — “9702 youig Jaded 
9-0l. »a2Oze = 12:9 Oxee, Mano Mdewye. W ees0e © F9nco Veeco «= i291. ensGe Foci You tg Mo} 129A 
£°6 Wizes; = ie" FOL = 9°9. ro). | O°Se tee 408s = “ecieh evel c98 a\dew pay 
S'2L 086” "4 O77 eee g"2s once eG Seo. *9re6 = yr0R = “97s a)dew ue6ns 
£°9 9°ES2'L  S*E C22. 96k. S92 =P 00l. hG¥h 67GGe" | £°OSS> = eRe” ony ces SPOOM} JOS #301 

0569 ee" 0" rt 2°2 (3063 6"1 ”°Y 0°2 6 o"Y 92 Sp0oM} 40S J2430 
yl = "L640" "9L = 6°9 E7Gh. Woe: = ao.ec. * Aye * 26"ce. § | eaeze Ie oL 490 ]UaH 
E69 9, © 0: Zo 0° 0° 8° SL 6"1 S*2 S*2 Zab Jepao-23 14M UJa43JON 
Vi9l ACC Lye. IG-E 9rcG. 58h = 0-6e. = ereh. 1 SSS) 6S) 66h 2 0,6bs serie auid a3 14M 
2295. Sls. 0" 0° 94 6°9 £°2 6" g°2 01 0° 0° auid pay 
90) Saczels! 150: 6°2 92 OS = G2 Verne ey n6,0/.) s Osl cha eel bel mry2e0) aonsds pay 
602 = 8'l 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° S° €"1 aonids 49e]8 
Vi20n eee 0: 0° 0° 0° 0° 9s SLL 8" S*6 972 aonids 2314M 
ssf SEL SiO 0° 0° Lab O° 8° £1 Ly 9°2 6°2 yoesewe 
L°6 L°l6s =O" 0° 0° 6" 9°9 2i9e e6h,  S23SEl e821 9-991 41} wesjeg 

40:62 96:02" GtOce Eels utGeOk endl. = a6rel © (6501 1658 6°9 
“0°12 = -0°6L_ = -O"ZL OSL -0" -0" -0" -0" -0" 
a se000}9 fb -O'LL  —-0°6 OZ 0°S oibies Ce: 


(2yBLay yseeug ye sayouL) sse]}9 sajowelg 


(}328} 9LGnd Jo suolL}) LW UT) 


CB6l ‘astysdwey MAN ‘LUN UJeYyI4ON ‘Sse]9 sazoWeLp pue satoads Aq pue}Jaquil} UO Saad} 490}S-BULMOIB JO WN]OA JON--"%y 271qGe1 


78 


9.8 
14.5 
6.1 
10.3 
9.0 
uoL 
23.1 
47.0 


325.9 
1,671.9 
600.9 
311.4 
130.5 
160.8 


4.2 
41.8 
6.7 
0 
10.9 
20 


4.2 
4.5 
21.9 
2.2 
126.3 
59.1 
8.5 
6.0 
3.4 


205 
4.7 
30.2 
1.6 
56.4 
31.0 
8.7 
1.8 
4.3 
1.5 


5.0 
12.1 
1.6 
86.6 
33.2 
8.7 
4.3 


28.0 


1.2 
3.7 


9.4 
18.8 
1.2 
127.4 
50.2 
14.1 


18.6 
3.8 
42.6 
4.2 
63.7 
33.0 


177.0 


1.8 


(In millions of cubic feet) 
59.9 
6.1 
69.4 
2.8 
2.1 
235.1 
109.2 


Diameter class (inches at breast height) 
12.9 


90.8 
2.2 
6.9 

77.2 
2.8 

33.9 
4.1 

271.9 
127.8 


10.9 


136.7 
1.2 
4.8 

85.8 
Fr 
30.9 
3.1 
5.3 
303.7 
77.6 


13 


1.9 
19.2 


135.4 
1.1 
58.6 
2.4 
20.9 
4.6 
245.4 
42.5 


Table 45.--Net volume of growing-stock trees on timberland by species and diameter class, Northern Unit, New Hampshire, 1997 
Species group 


White spruce 

Red spruce 

Northern white-cedar 

Hemlock 

Other softwoods 
Total softwoods 


Red pine 
Sugar maple 


Balsam fir 
Tamarack 
White pine 
Red maple 
Yellow birch 
Paper birch 
Beech 
White ash 
Black ash 
White oaks 
Red oaks 


Aspen 


14.8 


203.1 


8.7 


‘Oo w+ 


Basswood 


Elm 


4.4 
3.5 


46.2 


325 


33.2 2,649.5 
4,321.4 


31.0 


(a 


122.6 
248.9 
13.8 


2.3 
82.2 
138.6 
13.6 


1.7 


137.6 
224.2 
10.6 


1.8 
216.1 
343.6 

7.4 


7.9 
5.9 


338.9 
516.0 


6.0 
5.1 


680.2 


445.1 


2.7 
533.9 
805.8 

4.3 


460.1 
763.9 
4.0 


525.1 
5.0 


279.7 


Other hardwoods 
Total hardwoods 
Total, all species 


SE 


Table 46.--Net volume of growing-stock trees on timberland by species and 
stand-size class, Northern Unit, New Hampshire, 1983 


Species group 


Balsam fir 

Tamarack 

White spruce 

Black spruce 

Red spruce 

Red pine 

White pine 

Northern white-cedar 
Hemlock 

Other softwoods 


Total softwoods 


Sugar maple 
Red maple 
Yellow birch 
Paper birch 
Beech 

White ash 
Black ash 
Aspen 

White oaks 
Red oaks 
Basswood 
Elm 

Other hardwoods 


Total hardwoods 


Total, all species 


SE 


62.5 
4.6 

.2 

6.7 
1,290.3 
1,979.5 


8.0 


(In millions of cubic feet) 


Stand-size class 


All 
Pole- Sapling and Non- Classes 
timber seedling stocked 
449.8 4.3 0 591.1 
8.4 262 -0 13.8 
554 -0 0 Sal, 
-8 1.0 0 1.8 
349.1 4.6 0 a1225 
of -0 ~ 30 18.3 
132.6 3.9 -0 341.3 
4.9 -0 0 11.6 
54.7 -0 -0 197.9 
Miz2 ler, -0 27.4 
1,047.3 17.2 0 1,753.6 
187.7 3.4 -0 479.8 
309.0 net -0 532.1 
143.0 2.2 0 376.7 
278.0 4 0 396.2 
52.9 8 0 280.9 
46.5 2.2 -0 116.5 
6.3 .0 0 10.0 
147.3 0 205.3 
8 0 0 lei 
95.0 0 -0 157.6 
-0 -0 -0 4.6 
1.9 .0 -0 2.1 
23.2 6.5 0 36.4 
1,291.7 V2 -0 2,599.3 
2,339.0 34.4 0 4,352.9 
6.4 32.8 0 2.7 


80 


SE 


ath 
38.5 
42.4 
70.9 
10.6 
58.7 
16.4 
49.7 
14.4 
65.0 


6.3 


12.5 

9.3 
10.6 
11.4 
14.3 
25.1 
38.6 
17.0 
80.6 
20.8 
68.7 
53.8 
22.7 


4.4 


CET 6 


Table 47.--Net volume of growing-stock trees on timberland by species and 


stand-size class, Northern Unit, New Hampshire, 1997 


(In millions of cubic feet) 


Stand-size class 


All 
Species group A lasees SE 
Saw- Pole- Sapling and Non- 
timber timber seedling stocked 

Balsam fir 138.7 297.3 19.7 .0 455.7 9.8 
Tamarack 4.8 2.5 aU .0 Ufee) 47.0 
White spruce 25.2 8.1 oe) :0 33.8 43.6 
Red spruce 191.7 167.4 10.2 .0 369.3 10.7 
Red pine 14.9 6.2 -0 -0 (A574 42.3 
White pine 313.9 93.0 7.8 -0 414.7 12.0 
Northern white-cedar 10.8 a 2.4 .0 13.3 59.6 
Hemlock 269.7 55.8 3 -0 325.9 14.5 
Other softwoods 18.3 12.4 .0 .0 30.6 56.2 

Total softwoods 988.1 642.9 40.9 .0 1,671.9 6.1 
Sugar maple 385.7 203.9 11.4 -0 600.9 10.3 
Red maple 260.2 219.2 7.3 0 486.8 7.6 
Yellow birch 246.8 111.9 4.0 .0 362.7 8.8 
Paper birch 156.2 164.2 13.1 -0 333.5 9.0 
Beech 221.7 83.5 6.2 .0 311.4 11.1 
White ash 86.8 38.9 4.8 -0 130.5 23.1 
Black ash 1.5 4.1 -0 -0 5.6 47.0 
Aspen 61.2 90.6 8.9 .0 160.8 16.3 
White oaks (hoe) 2.9 -0 -0 10.3 57.9 
Red oaks 128.3 2.5 2.3 .0 203.1 14.8 
Basswood 8.0 1.4 20 .0 9.5 54.9 
Elm = 8 20 -0 Wee. 46.2 
Other hardwoods 26.9 4.9 1.3 -0 33.1 31.2 

Total hardwoods 1,591.1 999.0 59.4 .0 2,649.5 4.4 
Total, all species 2,579.2 1,641.8 100.3 .0 4,321.4 3.5 
SE 6.4 7.4 22.0 -0 3.5 


Table 48.--Net volume of growing-stock trees on timberland by forest type and 


stand-size class, Northern Unit, New Hampshire, 1997 


Forest type 


Red pine 

White pine 

White pine/hemlock 
Hemlock 


White/red pine group 
Balsam fir 
Red spruce 
Red spruce/balsam fir 
White spruce 
Spruce/fir group 
Pitch pine 
Loblolly/shortleaf group 
Wh. pine/no.red oak/wh. ash 
Oak/pine group 
Post, black, or bear oak 
White oak/red oak/hickory 
Northern red oak 
Red maple/central hardwood 
Mixed central hardwoods 


Oak/hickory group 


Black ash/Amer. elm/red maple 


Red maple( lowland) 


Elm/ash/red maple group 


Sugar maple/beech/yellow birch 


Black Cherry 
Red maple/northern hardwoods 
Mixed northern hardwoods 
Northern hardwoods group 
Aspen 
Paper birch 
Gray birch 
Aspen/birch group 
All forest types 


SE 


(In millions of cubic feet) 


Stand-size class 


ALL 
Saw- Pole- Sapling and Non- Classes 
timber timber seedling stocked 
-0 4.8 0 .0 4.8 
180.0 20.4 -0 -0 200.4 
149.4 9.7 -0 -0 159.1 
179.1 10.3 0 -0 189.4 
508.6 45.2 -0 -0 553.7 
48.9 229.7 24.1 -0 302.7 
32.6 20.2 4.6 -0 57.4 
63.4 184.4 1 a) 247.9 
30.5 -0 0 0 30.5 
LICeISE) 434.3 28.8 -0 638.5 
22.9 11.8 -0 0 34.7 
22.9 11.8 -0 0 34.7 
61.7 26.9 -0 -0 88.6 
61.7 26.9 0 -0 88.6 
-0 -0 9 -0 9 
6.0 9.4 -0 20 15.4 
86.3 Set 20 .0 123.4 
4.2 20 -0 -0 4.2 
61.9 81.6 -0 -0 143.5 
158.4 128.1 9 0 287.4 
14.2 BL -0 .0 14.9 
553: 20 .0 .0 53 
19.5 Gh 20 -0 20.2 
1,170.9 574.0 25:2 =O AON 
14.8 -0 223 -0 USSU 
232.4 197.8 21.8 -0 452.1 
92.8 76.1 1223. -0 181.2 
1,510.9 848.0 61.6 -0 2,420.5 
43.7 50.2 5.6 0 99.5 
78.1 96.8 225 -0 177.4 
-0 -0 9 0 ae) 
121.8 147.0 9.0 -0 277.8 
2, D092 641-8 100.3 SOP 374252074 
6.4 7.4 22.0 .0 3-5 


82 


SE 


Percent of growing-stock volume by forest-type group 
Northern Unit, New Hampshire, 1997 


Spruce/fir 
14.8% 


Northern hardwoods 
56.0% _ Aspen/birch 


6.4% 


White /red pine 
12.8% 


— Oak/hickory 
Other | 6.7% 


Le gv 2b 99 G2 0° 9°62 9°99 S*02 9° 9L 2°82 as 


Lue 6°2S£'% 9°66 L°S6e’2 "4h 0° 8°OZL 0°26 L°62 G°GL2 ¢£°9l2 saloads }7e *]e}0) 
ey) £°66S'2 £°26¢ CHES LOU 0° 9°SEL o*se SL 2°Sbt L°¢9 SpoompJey ]e}0) 
Zee 9°9¢ 0°S 8°sl B°s 0° 9°2 9° 0° 9°2 O°L Spoompsey J9430 
B°Ees bod Ca 21 0° Oe C: 0° 0° 0° 0° w)3 
2°89 9°4 0° 9°4 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° Os 0° poomsseg 
8°02 9°LSL 9° 8°S7 0° 0° 9°£6 0°8 0° (Ae 9°6 seo pay 
9°08 bev 0° (aa 0° 0° 8° 0° 0° 0° 0° seo 93144 
O°LL ¢° S02 6°90L 6°29 0° 0° 6°6 9°¢ 0° 9°SL 9°9 uadsy 
9°8E O°OL 9° 8°2 0° 0° 0° 0° 0: 6°S 9° yse 9e]4 
2°S2 S*9OLL 9°S 2°20L 0° 0; Ls 6°9 0° 9° Ls yse 33144 
£° 9 6°082 O*L £° G2 0% 0° 2°¢ 6° 0° 0° 0° yo0eq 
Ja 2°96 2°26l 9° GEL 0° 0° L°S 6°L 0° 9°84 6°2l youiq saded 
9°OL L°9LE 2°0¢ L°92¢ 0° 0° Le 0° 0° 6°9L £2 YItlq MO}]9A 
£°6 L“2es £°94 2°96 9°S 0° L°OL 9°SL S*L VASA ¢*82 a\dew pay 
S"2L 8°6L4 9°8 9° 994 0° 0° 0°2 0° 8°2 bf} a)dew se6ns 
£°9 9°EG2"_L "202 0°8SS o°¢ 0° ¢°GS¢ 0°%S 9°l2 £°099 2°el2 SPOOM}JOS 1230) 
0°S9 9° l2 0° 0° 0° 0° rae | 0° 2°S2 0° S SPOOM}jOS J94310 
va 6°26L 2°s L°62L 0° 0° 8°9 L£ 0° 2°6 6°94 90 | WS H 
2°64 O°LL 9°49 2*L 0° 0° 0° 0° OF 0°9 0° Jeped-3} 14M UJOYIION 
9°OL £" Lye 6°22 9°68 ial 0° L*22 G°S 6°L 8°0¢ L°22L auid 33144 
2°8S £"sl 0° 2-2 0° 0° LZ LAS 0° 0° Zev auld pay 
9°OL G°2Ls 0°99 G°¥8L 0° 0° b°L 9°¢ 0° 9°9S2 6°02 aonids pay 
6°02 8°L 0° 0° 0° 0° (hs 0° 0° 8°L 0° aonids y9e)g 
GACY. 2°L¢ 0°S vie 0° 0: 0: 6° 0° G*62 0° aonids 33144 
S*8e B°SL S 0° OF 0° baa | 0° 0° Beeb 0° yoesewe | 
2°6 L°L6S £°86 8°B4L S*L 0° bad S° 0° 2° 9c L°S at} wes)eg 
yosig spoompsey ajdew pas ssaudAd Auoyoiy auid jyeayqsoys = sly auld pau 
Juedsy usayzJON /yse/w}3 /wn6/yeO = / 480 280 =~ /A) 101907 /aansds /33.4M 
qs ye ol dnou6 saiseds 


dnou6 adAj- sau04 


(3224 ILqgnd Jo suoL}) LW UT) 


E86, ‘autysdwey Man ‘31UM Usay.ION ‘dnosB adA}-3ses0} pue satseds Aq pue)Jaequil}? UO Saas} 4903S-BULMOJB JO OUN]OA J@N--"64 21921 


84 


c*¢ 6°l2 0°9 9°9S 0° 9° Le 2*e4 6°2S 6°<b 9° LL as 
Gee yLes'y §=68 lz s°029'2 2°02 0° 9° 182 9°88 2°9¢ S°8£9 2°¢Ss satoads }]e ‘)e301 
Va] G°679'2 6" YBL 2°L76'L 6° LL 0° 0" Lee 8°9F S*2 £°OLl 29k SPOOMpJeYy }230) 
2°Le at 6°¢ 7°02 Ws 0° ¢* 9° 0° 8° 9°9 SpoompJey J9430 
2°99 2° 0° 0° 0° 0° es S° 0° L° he wy3 
6° 49S S°6 0° 9°6 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° L° poomsseg 
8° yl L° £02 L“b £°84 oe 0° S"L2b L°9L ce 0° 2°SL SEO poy 
6°15 £°OL 0° es 0° 0° L°OL 0° 0° 0° 0° SEO 92LUM 
£°9OL 8° O91 £°8y S°89 0° 0° 9L a] 0° 9°LL 2°4L uedsy 
0°l9 9S La O*L 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° B°e Cx yse 49e)8 
L°¢2 S*OfL 6 OOLL 0° 0° 95 Te 0° 0° SZ Yyse 331UM 
L°LL 9° LLE <° 6°622 0° Ox £°Sb vs 0° 0° 9°SL 490g 
0°6 Geese L°88 L°Sol 0° 0° 6° L°9 Ox Ue) 6°9OL yoJiq Jaded 
8°38 2°29 9° £2 2°Sle 0° 0° v5 0° 0° 9°4L 0°6 YOtlq MO)}9A 
9 8°984 £°9l L°see o°OL 0° 6°L? 9:9 Wats 6°92 TES, a}dew pay 
£°OL 6°009 6°< S°98S 8° 0° "°9 cn 0° L°L L°2 a)dew sens 
L°9 6 1L9'L 6°26 2°819 Fae 0° 9°99 8° LS bad& 2°82S S°6L9 SPOOM}}OS LOL 
2°95 9°0E 0° 0° 0° 0° 9° 0° L°O0¢ 0° 0° SPOOM}}OS J24IO 
s°¥L 6°S2e 9°<1 2°S2l s*L 0° SOL Ls 0° S°8 6°6S1 90 WOH 
9°6S £°sh we S"2 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 6°6 9° JEPsI-9P LYM UJOYIION 
O°2L L919 0-2 0°S2 VE 0° 8° 6k 8°S7 L°2 9°SS 2° 602 auld 33144 
£-27 2° le 0° L°9 0° 0° 0°9 0° 0° 0° 6°38 auid pay 
2°O0L £°69E TASC 2°0SL 0° 0° 6°2 0° 0° O°S9L £°S2 aonids pay 
9289, 8° ee 9°83 (BIS 0° 0° Cx 0° 0° 952? We eonuds 3314mM 
0°L4 SZ 0° 95 0° 0° 0° 8° 0° Lad 97 yoevewe | 
8°6 2°SS9 b°s8s S°OLL vie 0° S° IY) 0° L° 782 2° bb Jat} wes)eg 

yo4tq  spoompuey ajdew pas ssaudAd Auoyoly auid $&3).40Ys Jy auld pau 
fJuadsy useyqJON /yse/w)}3 /wn6/yeo =—/4e0 / 180 /A\\0)907 /eonsds = /23 LYM 

ES je}0L dnou6 satoads 


dnos6 adA}- sau04 


(3384 9Lgnd 4o suol)) LW UT) 


266, ‘aitysdwey MaN ‘31UN UsayzJ4ON ‘dnouB adAj-ysas0} pue saioads Aq pue)Jaquil} UO Saad} 4903S-BULMOUB JO OWN}OA AaN--"0S a)qe1 


85 


(tay) 9°0£ 6°<b 2°eh 9°OL Vie: 6°S L°S L252 as 


Le? L°ooL’2 9°L9 Sadée, £° eel 6°96L G° 262 8°2L4 2° 2S 2°822 satoads })e ‘)e}01 
99 O"SOL'L £°82 2° 9701 8°69 O°ZLL S*L8L S°9L2 9° Lee 0° Spoompjey 1230) 

S°87 8°SL 0° 0° 0°2 SL S*L 9°9 a4 0° Spoompsey 49430 
2-9 0°9 0° Ok Ol 9°49 0° O*L UP 0° poomsseg 
9°8L 2° 70L Tk: 9°9 S*L 6°02 L°9OL 2°62 6° L2 0° Sye0 pow 
S°89 b°2 bY 0° raat 0° 0° Ss cary 0° seo 3314M 
0°72 9° bl 0° 6°2 9°¢ 2*¢ 6° LL 2°92 9°22 0° uadsy 
8° 4E g°249 £°6 LS S*L vee Gl £°Sb 9° Le 0° yse 3314M 
8°4L O*2el 0° (a A pa 2 S°9L BLE 6°82 2°04 0° y9eeq 
2°Sh S°28 0° 0° 0° 0" Leh G*le 6°94 0° yduiq Jaded 
S*LL S021 8°L G°S2 2°8L £° Lb b“be 7°9¢ 8°6£ 0° YOsttG MO]}9A 
S*LL S°9S1L 0° 259 Gaz O°ZL 8°S2 271s £°89 0° ajdew pay 
£°2el 9° 782 2°g 2°0S £°92 2°82 L°27 9°LS 7°08 0° 2)dew sens 
bd L° 266 L°6£ L°Sbl S°2eS 6°62 O°9LL £°Bsl 9° 902 2°822 SPOOM}}OS }&}01 

9°49 9°8l 0° L°2 S*I S*L 29 6° ene L°2 SPOOM}JOS JO4IO 
£°Sl S992 6°¢ G*02 L°82 6°S2 2°" 2°24 9°94 8°24 190 ]WeH 
8° 4S Lod. 0° 0° 0° Z*L 8° 0° 8°L 95 Jepss-9} LYM UJayzJON 
8°2L 9° 62k 2°s¢ 9°18 9°OL o°s¢ 2°e4 2°1S 2°2e S°82 auld 23144 
S°SY 6°<h 0° (Srv) 0° 0° L“L B°¢ vie £°2 auld pay 
L°el 0°961 0° 0° £2y, 2°bb L°2b L°se 9°09 0°S9 aonuds pay 
b°L9 0°72 0° 6°¢ Cac 0° 9°e 9-¢ £°S 8°S aonuds 2314M 
8°2S s°4 0° 0° 0° 0° L°b 0° ol 8" L yoeseue | 
O°LL £°Ssl 0° 0° 0° i] s°8 OL L°2s 9°9L Jty wesyeg 

+0°62 6°82 6°02 6°8L 69L 6°4¥L 6°2L 6°0L 
-0°L2 -O°6L -O°L1L -O°SL -O°EL -O°LL -0°6 
as eral dnou6 satsads 


(2y6lLay yseasq ye sayoUuL) sse}9 Jaqowelg 


(38284 ILqnd Jo suoL}]LW UT) 


266, ‘a4ttysdwey May ‘}LUM UsayzsON ‘sse]9 
Jajzowetp pue salsads Aq pue}Jsaquil} UO Saau} JaqULyMeS JO UOLZJOd HO]MeS a4} UL 490}3S-BULMOIB JO aUIN}OA JON--"°1G a]GeL 


86 


Sawtimber volume on timberland, for selected species and 
percent change, Northern Unit of New Hampshire, 1983 and 1997 
(Volume increased by 11.5 percent for all species) 


© 


0.5 


Sugar meple RR ea rommmmmmmmmarrme, ~ 277 
Hemlock ummm *227 
Spree = | 16% 
Yellow birch Ce ee -9% 
Balsam fir Senta aera -23% E 1983 
Red maple wi -5% aa 1997 
Beech Ee Tae eT 0% 
Red oaks SSEEgERes or 468% 
Paper birch age -3% 
Aspen ie +16% 
A 


1.5 


Billions of Board feet 


ay) 9" LE O"vL ae a 2°6 0's 0°9 0°S 2"8 as 


"4 9°60£'6 bbe 2°908 8° 984 £"0L6 7" 6LE'L 2°098'L 8°68S'2 6°LL2'L setoads })e ‘]e,01 
8°9 2°€56'% 9° 201 9°ELy 2°062 0°0SS 6°28 9°602"L 8° 65S‘ 0° Spoompsey ]@301 

coy 2&4 0" 69 0°S 0" L’¢ Z°8 0°02 0" spoompuey J9430 
em cy 0" 0° 0° 0" 0" 0° cy 0 wi 
6°92 L°6 "9 Pty 0° GZ 0" 8°S 0" 0" poomsseg 
9° 6L L*20¢ 0" £°22 e"aL 6°0S GS" ol £°£9 4" LL 0° syeo pay 
0°00L s°¢ 0" 0" 0° 0" 0" c"¢ 0" 0" syeo 93.144 
L"42 Oo" ZE¢ 0" 0" 2°"9 "OL 6°99 5°66 0°64 0" uadsy 
0°00L 6°2 0" 0° 0" 0" 0" 0" 6°2 0" yse joe) 
e"le 6°90€ L"¢¢ ool 0° L°1¢ L°8s G46 G29 0" yse 93144 
0*9L 4" 269 92 Usage 2°04 "LLL G*2eb 2°66L Z2°8Zl 0° yooeg 
2°9L £" E94 0" 4°6 beer 9°8l 9°99 5°96 L"192 0° youiq sade 
0°2L 4°" S88 £°92 G*l6 1°99 5°26 €" 921 6" L£2 2°0%2 0" Yyo4stq MO} 129A 
b°<b 0° 282 L°6 Ley 9°62 4°18 O"8El L“S6L 0°062 0° ajdew pay 
b's 7" OOL‘L 0°02 L"S6L Lee L°¢€b 6° 98L L“S02 9°842 0° @)dew seins 
GZ 6°SSE'¥ cst 9° 26£ 9° 461 2° 09£ Gc" lly 9°059 0°0S0'L 6° Lb2'L SPOOM} JOS 18301 

8°16 2°29 0" 8°S L“OL 2°sl 4°g elt Gd c"¢ SP0oM}JOS 49430 
6°4L 9°229 0" 9° LL 2°2E 9°89 5°06 4" ESL 8° LLL c"28 90 ]WaH 
2°19 0°42 0" 2's 0" 0" G2 G"s 2°S 2°S Jepas-93 14M Usoy JON 
9° LL o'8y2'L G*8L G* 882 1°06 9°8SL L°L6L 6° 94L 0°6L2 2°O€b autd 33144 
2°09 8°S8 0" 0" 2"€2 6°€E 6°0L Z’¢ O'LL O"€ auld pay 
8°2Zl O"LL2‘L 0° Gc" 0°6£ (7 €°92L 4" L6L €* L0£ 9° LSY aonids pay 
Boy €°28 0" 0° 0" 0" 0° s"st 0°0S 8° L2 vonuds 3314M 
2°G¢ ALE 0" 0: 0" L's 2"4 s"¢ 6°4 L°9L yoeueuie | 
0*2L 8° 116 0" 0" 0° 8°Y OLE €"60L 6°92E 2°S0S Jy wes)eg 

+0°62 6°82 6°02 6°8l 6°91 6°4L 6°2L 6°OL 
sesse}9 -0°L2 -0°6L -O°LL -0°SL -O"EL -O"LL -0°6 


dnouB satseds 


nv (]yBLay yseouq Je sayouL) ssej}9 sazoweLG 


(]904 pueoq jo suoL})] LW UL) 


€86| ‘autysdwey MoN ‘21UN UsaYyJJON “Sse]9 Ja}oWeLp pue satoveds Aq pue}4EqUIL] UO S89a4} JOqUILIMES $0 OUN]OA JON--"2G a}GeL 


88 


6°4 9°LE 2°71 6°El OFLL cs 0°9 2°sS 2°8 ES 
6°4 Z2°08f'OL 4° 2S¢ £°66L'L 2°£s9 8° 266 O°e24'L C°OLL‘2 Gs" L29'2 2°926 satoads }]e ‘)e301 
2°9 s°80S'S 2°SSL 9° 19S e° Sse 0°28 4° 618 2° 2ee"L 9° LS9'L 0° Spoompsey }&301 

S°0S 9°69 0° 0° L°6 9°S "2 0°92 2°02 0° SpoompJey 42430 
2°89 2°4¢ 0° 0° 0° 9°92 0° 6°S 6'L 0° poomsseg 
9°81 9°OLS OLE g°ZE 8°83 2°20 0°S8 9°S41L 0°80L 0° syeo pay 
1H) S°94 £°0E 0° cs 0° 0° 6°2 8°S 0° syeo 33 14M 
6°S2 G"L6g 0° 2°St bebe £°22 2°49 9° LL 0°92L 0° uadsy 
2°Z¢ 6°0SE 0°SS bade 9°6 S°24 c°4E lee: 8°¥0L 0" yse 314M 
9°SL 0°£69 0° 8°6£ 8°S4 £°<6 S°09L L“ 9 G*602 0° yoeeg 
6°49 ¢°0SY 0° 0° 0° 0" 6°£9 2°21 8°842 0° youiq sede 
Pave £°608 £°8 6°92 1°26 9°08 9° 6EL 2°S9L 8°002 0° YO4tq MO} 3A 
"LL 9° 8YL 0° 0°82 9°2E 1°08 Gc" 92 8°842 SG" 9E2 0° a)dew pay 
cz 2°86‘ L°Le 9°92 6°82 L°9EL 2°661 9°9%2 6°06£ 0° a)dew seins 
aL 2°128'9 2°96L 9° 159 6° 122 8°OLY 9°£6S L622 6°626 2°96 SPOOM}}OS ]&301 

0°29 2°88 0° 2Z°0L sl 6°2 9°2 0°6 L“OL 9°0L SPOOM}4$0S 42430 
6°SL 9°2EL'L ¢°02 6°SLL 2° 9471 8° 221 2° 791 9° 96L €" 102 9°49L 90 }WSH 
L°9S 0°92 0" 0° 0" ¢"s g°2 0° 22 2°OL Jepad-33 14M UsJa4}JON 
eel 9°289'1 7°OLL 9° 067 6°28 9° GBL 2° 922 o*<s2 9° 9S G*SLL auid 33144 
9°94 G*2Z 0° 6°92 0" 0" 6°S 2°02 Zh 6°6 auid pay 
22 9°616 0" 0° S"92 6°6S 2°%6 0°002 G*SO£ 9° £62 aonids pay 
S°94 Z°OLL 0° 9°LL 6° LL 0" 2°8L 8°OL G°42 cule aonuds 33144 
2°¢S 2°61 0° 0" 0° 0" 0°S 0° 9°9 eZ yoeuewe | 
Z°LL 9° SS) 0° 0° 0° 9°92 £°9% 2°¢8 0°8s2 oO" S%¢ Jty wes)eg 

+0°62 6°82 6°02 6"8L 6°9L 6° 6°2L 6°0L 
-0°12 -0°6L -O°LL -O°SL -O°EL -O'LL -0°6 
= Branle dnos6 saiseds 


(1y6Lay yseauq je sayouL) sse]9 Jajowelg 


(3984 p4eog jo suol}) LW UT) 


266, ‘e4tysdwey MeN ‘LUN UsaYyzJON “Ssse]9 Ja}zoWeLp pue satoeds Aq pue}saquil} UO Saat} JOqWLIMES JO SUN]OA JAN--"EG A]qe1 


89 


Zes'y 209‘ L2- 9796'S 0LL'6- £88" 41 026'LE- 0S2‘Z0L 9258S 924! yy satoads je ‘]e301 
G62‘L- 929'S4- Les'24 226'8- 2¢4'OL yl‘ 4L- 896' 9S 49S¢'05 919'42 spoompuey e201 
6L9- 60S- of 912- 612 LLe- ita Bel Loz Spoompsey 13430 
20L- 0 20L- 0 €S O9L- 0 0 0 w)3 
G22 0 G22 0 62 0 26L 88 601 poomsseg 
Z2L ‘1 282'¢- 6S9'4 99- 682 £4- 0824 BrE'2 2£6'L syeo pay 
202- 9EL- L- 0 0 0 L2- £0L- £¢ seo 334M 
8Sf'L- 200'¢- 899'L 94- Sly £98'L- eyL'¢ 622‘ £16'L uadsy 
9L2- 0L- yyL- 0 0 O9L- 91 91 0 yse 49e)4 
218"L 8LS- 9¢¢'2 0 29 662- 225‘2 6£L'L eon'l yse a31UA 
246'€- 222'9- 62L'2 g9¢'2- Glz’2 GyS‘2- 8297'S £882 G6S'2 yoaeag 
2s2'2- 62S'2- L62 66S'L- cE £09'¢- OzL’S 2gs‘2 €8S'2 youiq sadeq 
126- cec's- 2s9'4 L98"L- GLL"L Le9'2- SLL £59'¢ Los‘¢ Yyostq MO} ]aA 
129'2 9LE'8- S76'OL 984'L- 96S'2 258’ L- SL" LL hy A 962'4 a)dew pay 
zoe". 0SL‘8- 2847'S 90'L- £S4'2 £19- 900‘SL 886'8 210'9 a)dew se6ns 
2£9'S 186'22- £19’¢S¢ £48 - 944'4 ell" LL- 282" LY 12622 LL8’6L SpooM} jos ]e}0) 
20% Zg- 654 0 L2 92- ony 222 291 SPOOM} JOS 19430 
L8s‘¥ 06¢'2- 126'9 GEL - 299 Gec- 626'9 6194 L9g‘2 90 ]WaH 
6Sl Lb- 9LL 0 0 002- LE 892 601 Jepas-3} 14m UJayzJON 
896'9 LLL‘S- 680‘2L GéL- £6S'L cle" L- 090'2L 982’8 Gl2'¢ auld 33144 
G2e- 099- Gee 0 0 Sl2- Oss cS G67 autd poy 
Z8L'L- 6l¢'L- 26L'9 g02- 828 cec’¢- 250'6 999'S L6n’¢ aonids pay 
9LL- 9LL- 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 aonids y9e19 
988 49S- 0sy'L 0 999 88- 228 867 cE aonuds 2314A 
09- 80¢- L472 2- 9S| O£L- oz Loz 6LL yoesewe | 
919'S- £6E'LL- 22'S 822- 26% 029’ LL- €2i'Lb 209'2 12S'6 Ji} wesjeg 
S]SAOWSY y MOU6 JUS JOU L JUsWaII9p Ay] e40W yiMos6 UOLJIIIIy yamosbuy 
JON y1n9 y1n3 sso 
pie dnos6 saisads 


( 


aBueys 4o JUauoduiog 


jaa} 21gnd 4o spuesnoy3 uy) 


266, ‘24Lysduey MaN 


‘Lun Usay{ION ‘aBUeYD Jo JYUaUOdUIOD pue saigads Aq pue}Jaeqwl} UO aWN}OA y90]S-BULMOUB yo abueyo jou jeNuUUe abeJaAy--"4G 2)9e1 


90 


220'S8 026’E/L- 266 '8S2 628'42- LYLE 062'S9- 269'LLE 828' 441 698221 seroads }}e ‘)e8301 
GLL’SE £61 '86- g0g'SSl ZLE'Se- £56'L1 £L0'¢2- 002° LOL s2ze’0s GLE" LLL Spoompsey 1830) 
290'2- 860'L- £96- 868- LOZ 902’L- 04% 7] 96£ Spoompsey 19430 
462- 0 962- 0 0 462- 0 0 0 w73 
2S% 0 2S9 0 0 0 2S9 02- 827 poomsseg 
L169 Gsy'2- 99¢' 41 L92- 0 69L- 262" 91 £86'% 9718'6 SEO poy 
LLL 0 LLL 0 0 0 LLL 0 LLL syeo 331UM 
OLe‘OL 2¢2'¢- 24071 0 619 662'2- 222'Sh GSL’? 99S‘LL uadsy 
692- 692- 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 yse 49e8)9 
90L’2L eSe'L- 6S4'¢1 0 Bez £9¢- 98S'EL 8Ls’4 990'6 yse 22144 
658 '6- 188’SL- 220'9 6149'S- 996 GL8’8- 26261 2ee'9 696 ‘ZL yoaeg 
9E¢'OL- LL9’9L- 912'9 2S9'¢- 084 807'L- 099'0L 062'1 02E'6 youiq sadeg 
200'¢- 9S2'LL- 26291 919'4- gce'y gce8's- 998'6L 222'9 £79'SL Yostq MO} 3A 
Geo OL 62S‘ 4L- £9L'S2 G¢2'4- 409% gZE'2- 2222 680'OL £80‘LL a)dew pay 
g75'02 LLO‘02- 6S¢'04 824'4- 8387'S 242- 0%S'6£ Leet £28'92 a)dew se6ns 
206'67 21L'SL- 989'S2L 2ZUS'L- L89'SL 2L2'24- 266'SSL 205° 46 969'1L9 SPOOM}}OS ]&}01 
6S8'L 0 6581 0 LZ 0 882" 662'1 687 SPOOM}}0S 42430 
80781 126'8- 62e'22 L6%- Ly" £78" L- 681 82 97681 £42'6 90 ]W8H 
408‘ 9¢- gee" 0 0 £ec- 2222 288'L cee Jepad-32 14M UJa4 JON 
612‘ 9E 922'6L- G76'SS 6LS- Gla'9 0s9's- 089'¢s 907’ 6¢ 922° 41 auid 3314A 
L98¢- G60'¢- 992- 0 0 696- 66L 661 0 aud pay 
226'1 288 ‘8L- 976802 24¢- S96‘ 1 420‘OL- G2e'62 coe’ ZL 020'2L aonids pay 
09S" £18" |- £99 0 708'2 022- 68's 280'2 29L"1 eonids 3314M 
O12 22i't- Zee’ 0 G¢9 L\¢- ZL0'L 20S LLS yoesewe | 
9791'6- 819'22- Gs8'2L 99L- 9£L G78 22- 622'S¢ 92821 95822 Jl} wes)eg 
S]CAOWS Y 4y3MoU6 JUSWEISUL JUS IEP Aj L]e0,10W y zMol6 uo t JIIIIY y Mosbul 
JON 11N9 11n9 SsoJ9 
a dnou6 satosads 


aBueyd Jo jUauOdwo) 


(}224} pseog jo spuesnoy) uly) 


2661 ‘2s tysdwey 
MON ‘LU UJaYyzJON ‘aBueYys yo jUaUOdWoD pue salzads Aq pue}sequiL} UO auIN]}OA JaquiLyMes jo aBueyo Yau jenuUe abessay--"S¢ 3)qGeL 


91 


Average annual growth and removals of growing-stock 
volume 
and ratio of growth to removals for selected species 


on timberland, Northern Unit of New Hampshire, 1983-97 
(Ratio of growth/removals for all species is 1.1 : 1) 


Sugar maple 


White pine 


Red maple 


Spruce 


Hemlock 


Balsam fir 


Red oak 


Yellow birch 0.8: 4 —_| Growth 
0.4:4 @ Removals 


Beech 
Ash 
Aspen 


Paper birch 


0 5 10 15 20 
Millions of Cubic feet 


Millions of Acres 


SOUTHERN UNIT 
TABLES 


1500 
1000 


500 


Sawtimber Poletimber Sapling-Seedling 


Southern Unit, area of timberland by stand-size class, 1983 and 1997 


cae Merrimack 
Rockingh 

( Hillsboro ae 
| Cheshire \ Pcie > 


oe 
ae 
Cc 
a 
® 
ae 
=p 
= 
O 
Y) 


Table 56.--Area of timberland by forest type, forest-type group, and stand-size 


class, Southern Unit, New Hampshire, 1983 


Forest type 


Red pine 

White pine 

White pine/hemlock 
Hemlock 


White/red pine group 


Red spruce 
Red spruce/balsam fir 


Spruce/fir group 


Wh. pine/no.red oak/wh. ash 
Other oak/pine 


Oak/pine group 


Post, black, or bear oak 
Chestnut oak 

White oak/red oak/hickory 
Northern red oak 

Scarlet oak 

Red maple/central hardwood 
Mixed central hardwoods 


Oak/hickory group 


Black ash/Amer. elm/red maple 


Red maple( lowland) 
Red maple(upland) 


Elm/ash/red maple group 


Sugar maple/beech/yellow birch 


Black Cherry 
Red maple/northern hardwoods 
Pin cherry/reverting field 
Mixed northern hardwoods 
Northern hardwoods group 
Aspen 
Paper birch 
Gray birch 
Aspen/birch group 
All forest types 


SE 


(In thousands of acres) 


Saw- 
timber 


14.4 


1,061.3 
6.1 


Stand-size class 


Pole- Sapling and Non- 


timber seedling stocked 
-0 .0 0 
63.9 3 .0 
28.3 .0 .0 
25.0 -0 .0 
ANZ! U3 0 
18.7 -0 0 
0 -0 0 
18.7 0 0 
515 -0 -0 
(a3 -0 -0 
64.8 0 .0 
14.5 .0 -0 
Marl .0 -0 
42.8 -0 -0 
64.3 -0 -0 
Ts .0 -0 
es lise -0 
122.1 6.9 -0 
265.3 14.1 
12.6 -0 0 
14.2 2.9 Q 
14.3 -0 0 
41.1 2.9 -0 
157.9 7.0 -0 
.0 6.9 -0 
256.9 523 -0 
-0 25.3 -0 
130.8 tes -0 
545.5 51.8 0 
Sti t.5 -0 
43.4 -0 0 
20 21.9 0 
94.5 29.4 -0 
1,147.1 105.5 0 
5.8 23.4 .0 


94 


ALL 
classes 


SE 


Table 57.--Area of timberland by forest type, forest-type group, and stand-size 


class, Southern Unit, New Hampshire, 1997 


Forest type 


Red pine 

White pine 

White pine/hemlock 
Hemlock 


White/red pine group 


Red spruce 
Red spruce/balsam fir 


Spruce/fir group 


Wh. pine/no.red oak/wh. ash 
Other oak/pine 


Oak/pine group 


Post, black, or bear oak 
White oak/red oak/hickory 
White oak 

Northern red oak 

Red maple/central hardwood 
Mixed central hardwoods 


Oak/hickory group 
Black ash/Amer. elm/red maple 
Red maple( lowland) 

Red maple(upland) 

Elm/ash/red maple group 
Sugar maple/beech/yellow birch 
Black Cherry 
Red maple/northern hardwoods 
Pin cherry/reverting field 
Mixed northern hardwoods 

Northern hardwoods group 
Aspen 
Paper birch 
Gray birch 

Aspen/birch group 
All forest types - 


SE 


(In thousands of acres) 


Stand-size class All 

Saw- Pole- Sapling and Non- ctasecs 
timber timber seedling stocked 

1.8 .0 0 .0 1.8 
266.6 33.0 SIBTA 5.0 313.3 
112.4 29.2 0 .0 141.6 
64.0 40.7 .0 .0 104.7 
444.8 102.9 8.7 520 561.4 
8.2 23.4 .0 0 31.6 
6.8 .0 0 0 6.8 
ee) 23.4 .0 0 38.5 
138.9 28.9 .0 -0 167.8 
atl .0 -0 .0 2.1 
141.0 28.9 -0 -0 169.9 
4.9 -0 .0 .0 4.9 
5 12:7 12.9 .0 -0 64.6 
.0 4.4 -0 -0 4.4 
77.8 48.2 .0 .0 126.0 
10.9 11.3 .0 .0 22.1 
108.2 98.1 AWhet -0 223.4 
253.5 174.9 lienl 0 445.4 
.0 0 6.4 0 6.4 
10.8 18.5 -0 0 29.3 
5 7.6 -0 .0 15.0 
18.3 26.1 6.4 Ag 50.8 
156.8 102.8 6.5 -0 266.0 
0 1.8 .0 20 1.8 
aac: 192.7 14.5 -0 319.2 
5 -0 6.4 -0 6.4 
92.9 92.0 26.9 -0 211.8 
361.5 389.3 54.4 .0 805.3 
10.6 26.1 6.4 0 43.1 
9.1 5.8 14.7 0 29.5 
A) .0 4.6 0 4.6 
AOI 31.9 250 .0 five 
1,253.8 777.3 hiZes 5202, 14825 
4.7 (20 20.4 100.0 1 


95 


SE 


_ 
SEN as 
Ono N 


— 
BY 
oO 


0°9 s°9 8"e ie i bs 9°S 8°4 as 


BL6'EL 25182 666'97 6L£'S2 198801 252051 eS2'S92 828’ 242 satoads 1)e ’)e3}0) 
4BL'S 092" 41 z0¢'22 162'8% 959' LL 999'66 £0S'¥8L 9OL'S9S Spoompsey ]2@}01 

0 22 66 26E 688 889'4 g2c'Sl £62'18 SPOoMpsey ]©1J2uMIOIUON 
911 208 £65'L bzs'¢ 880'9 8618 229'2L 929'94 SPoompsey }eLIVaUIOD Ja430 
0” 92 6s 681 6£¢ c8e L<8’2 982'4 w3 
0 86 LLL GLI 8S2 294 0 2lE'2 poomsseg 
278'1 268'4 620'8 895'6 6E2' LL GyL ‘OL 969" LL B2y7' Ly syeo pay 
6£1 £4S 608 L6L‘L 669'L 24S ‘2 08s‘ ¢2L'¥ syeo 33 14M 
LZ LSS 668 610'2 2£9'2 £84'2 Lil’ Y 99561 uadsy 
0 0 0 gE 0 0 £84 0 yse y9e]4 
Gls 92L'L Ov2'1 9561 826'2 995'% 965'8 9706'02 yse 9314 
829 LS6 L6s‘1 cac'2 o8L'y 60'2 G29’ el 69S5'99 yoaeg 
412 £92 Le2‘2 G20'S 299'S 692'S 092'¢ £85‘¢2 yosiq saded 
BSE OLS 2441 928" 9eL'2 6249'S LeL’OoL 107'62 Youlq MO]]aA 
887’ 229'¢ Gel‘? B56'L1 L£7'62 BL8' Ly 82S'28 G£2'89l a)deu pay 
6S4 682 €22'1 g92'2 £67'¢ Ge's Cle" LL £56" 9S a)dew sens 
¢oL'8 265'E1 £6961 g8S'92 922'L¢ Sos’ Ls Gs2'L8 9799' 902 SPOOM}}OS ]e}0) 
62 99 86 0 0 222 0 258 SPOOM} 40S J24I10 
OsL’2 248'¢ 284'9 G22'6 BBL "SL G89'L2 958'9¢ gc2‘se 90 WAH 
1979'S cle'8 LO'LL Gi2‘2L £1L'91 GcZ"6L 2282 002'¢9 auld a314M 
gf 28¢ 202 S94 29 691 0 0 auid pay 
Glz 0L9 €29'L 668'L 622'4 £9L'S LLE'9 GOL" LZ aonuds pay 
0 0 0 0 0 ge 0 0 aonuds 49e)¢ 
0 0 0 ce 9. c¢ 0 0 yoesewe | 
0 Lub 292 692 798 659'¢ 882'6 029'S¢ Jiy wesjeg 
6'9OL 6" 6°21 601 6'8 6°9 6°” 6°2 

-0°SL -O°E1L -O"LL -0°6 -0'2 -0°S -0'€ -O'L 


dnou6 satosads 


(}yBLay yseeuqg ye sayoUL) sse}9 JazoweLG 


(sae0u} JO spuesnoyy uy) 


266, ‘a4Lysdwey MaN ‘}LUM UsJayyNos ‘sse]9 JazoweLp pue satoads Aq pue}Joquity uo ("Yy"q"p SaYyoUL 4+9°|) Seed} SAL} JO JaqUINN--"gg a]qe1 


96 


i e°2 2°02 L°OoL £°OL 2°8 as 


As bes’ ¥sy'L 962094 8£0'L lgc's £00'S o9e’2 satoads })e ‘)e}0) 
es gso’s00'l 22e'Sl2 6L¢ 206‘t 298'L gos’¢ Spoompsey }&30) 

TE sf 022'201 660'9 0 0 0 0 SPOOMPJEY ]€LIIAUMOIUON 
S° tt 8£0'62 68002 0 0 0 901 Spoompsey }e1IJauoD 13430 
"se 81'S 290‘ 0 0 0 0 w)3 
L°S¥ Lys‘¢ 69L'L 0 0 0 0 poomsseg 
0°6 987’ 2OL 995'84 92 94. 082 2g2't syeo pay 
Ze2k 216°2L gl2'2 0 gc 9¢ gLz syeo a3 14A 
2°L¢ 1262 969'8 0 0 6£ 0 uadsy 
0°£6 L2s ge 0 0 0 0 yse 49e)4 
2°49 ese’ Ly gcs‘2L 2 6£ 261 cll yse 3314M 
Gabe 00¢'26 OLE’ ZL 0 ZL 20L esl yoseg 
Z°¢1 902'24 79861 0 0 0 961 youiq Jsadeq 
2°94 20¢'2S 022‘2L gf 82 Zbb 9E1L youiq MO}}2, 
9°S osy’ Sse 98901 6£ 69S Gly OLL'L ajdew pay 
8°12 £9S'19 ZLE'SL 681 662 OLL 29 a)dew seins 
¢°s S9e' LS 927'S9L 659 Lgy’s LyL’s cse’¢ SPOOM}}OS 301 

9°87 292" Gly 0 0 0 0 SPOOM}JOS 42430 
9°6 9¢S ‘081 987'09 0 gsc 299 9S0°L 90 ]WSH 
2 G28‘ 421 cos ’s8 659 ¢70'¢ 2£9'2 689'2 auid 3314M 
6°LE g0s'L g0¢c'l 0 0 0 0 auld pay 
8°6L 265'24 22S‘9L 0 0 Z 601 eonids pay 
0°00L 8s gf 0 0 0 0 aonids 49219 
9°09 £7 cyl 0 0 0 0 yoesewe) 
4°92 919'0S 2S1'S 0 0 0 0 Ji} wesjeg 

+0°S +0°62 6°82 6°02 6°8lL 
e301 -0°L2 -0°6L -O°LL 
as aoe dnou6 saisads 


(7yBLay yseaiq ye SayouL) sse}9 sajowelg 


(Saau} JO spuesnoy) ul) 


panu!juos--"gg a}qeL 


97 


Vine O°L2 £°Ol £°OL L°8 on) 0"s 6°¢ LES: Sas: 6°< as 


9°2 Lye'20% 422 642'2 6£S'2 £68'S 067'0L 7269’02 816’8S 9889'99 sS09'ZOL 285'941L satoeds })e ‘)e}0) 
ss L6z’eS2 19 628 299 912'2 2ee"4 LEL'6 6S0'12 S2S‘'2y 1L2S‘'22 626'66 spoompsey 230) 

¢"OL 925‘8L 0 0 0 0g 922 2S¢ Z20L'L 0S0’¢ 2097'S 1928 Spoompsey 13430 
9°62 666 0 21 0 0” £9 £Ol 901 40¢ ZL 922 wi3 
2°g¢ 022'1 0 OF: 0 él ¢2 0 Sol cle Gl £84 poomsseg 
62 bze"0S 0 L24 i%4 126 087’L 292'¢ 299'9 L20'6 90S'9L LO’ VL syeo pay 
O'LL 696'8 O0£ ra gl £8 192 62E G70"L 995" G29‘2 096‘z sy20 2214M 
672 [Fells 0 0 dl 8S 94 922 999 ¢o2" 1 G76'¢ 2594 uadsy 
6°49 256 0 0 0 0 0 92 ZLL gcz 6LL LLY yse ye) 
20 2zc'2L 0 29 0 aLL G02 96S 666 289'1 62e"s LzeE's yse 23144 
o"Sl 29S‘2L 0 94 0 oyL LY 918 279i‘ 979'L 66£'¢ G£6'4 yoaeg 
L“OL 6LL‘92 0 SL 9S 69 %6 29 687'L 9979'S beo"2 9L8'OL yoiiq Jaded 
€"Sl ¥SL‘OL = 2 2g 86 28¢ 6S2 og L6L‘L L12'2 961L'S Yo4tq MO}]2A 
9°9 026'18 0 2gl 621 94 692 26L'2 £94'S goc’s, eec’se 980'9¢ a)dew pay 
9°Sl 090'8L <2 88 401 2st 262 £06 26S'L 160’¢ L6L’S Z19'9 a)dew sebns 
9°S LSS‘8¥L OL 026'1 268'1 829'¢ 292'9 L26"0L 6cS8°ZL ELL’y2 €80’SE  £59'94 SPOOM}}OS ]230) 

e"l4 Gb‘ L 0 0 0 0 92 92 LLL 24¢ 2S¢ G02 SPOOM}JOS 12430 
c"ol 690'%7 0 Lvl Gz 089 5s 9L2L 2L¢"2 £06'4 202'9 dze"lb  26£'9L 90 ]UISH 
0's 2LL'98 991 292" 1 Los‘ 6562 L9L"¥ Z21e'2 60E’LL 6£6'¥L LZLL’BL £5222 autd 33144 
"Ly 899'L 0 0 0 61 621 ¢0F Ges Zee aL 2g auld poy 
0°22 LOL’2b oO ol LZ 6l 28 622 862 e247" 049'¢ Lea's aonids pay 
4°26 LZ 0 0 0 0 0 92 62 2 00s eee aonuds 49e)4 
0°00 202 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 202 yoesewe | 
0°S2 91¢'2 0 0 0 0 0 6% 9LL 882 09 G62 ‘1 Ji} wesjeg 

+0°62 6°82 6°02 6°SL 6°9L 6° 6°2L 6°01 6°8 6°9 
sasse]9 -0O"L2 -0°6L -O°LL -0°SL -O°EL -O'LL -0°6 -0°2 -0°S 


as 


y dnou6 saisads 
n (17yBlay yseasq ye sayouL) ssej9 Jazowerg 


(Ssa80u} 40 spuesnoyi UL) 


£861 “‘astysdwey MeN “LUN 
useayznos ‘sse)9 saj}owelp pue saioads Aq puejsaquil} Uo (“*Yy*q"p SaYyoUL +9°G) Saad} 4901S-BULMOJB Jo JaQUINN--"6s5 a)qGeL 


98 


¢*2 6°S2 8°OL 6°01 s°8 9°9 2°49 L°y 2°¢ 2°¢ 2°¢ ES 
G2 £0S‘0Ly 9729 665'7  91S'y £6S5°9 902'2L 229'92 822'2y 699'89 Z58’S0L ZE2’OrL satoads 1]e “7}e201 
6°2 L60‘SS2 o£2 gon’ | £59'1 ¢s0'¢ oLe’s 602'St 2e7'¥2 Sl'2y 282'29 95506 spoompsey }&}01 
£°6 950'6L 0 0 0 92 9¢1 2e2 LEL'L 902'°¢ GSLs 120’8 Spoompsey 42420 
9°2E 686 0 0 0 0 0” 92 6£ 681 6£¢ cog w73 
2°62 €20'L 0 0 0 0 0 86 Ov aL 8S2 2s¢ poomsseg 
eZ G29'ly 9d 049 082 66L'L O18’ L 062'% 0se’2 6846 920'1L 996'6 seo poy 
oO" G02‘9 0 gE 9¢ gLz 20L SOS 999 eSb'L £9S'1 8L7'2 syeo 314M 
6°2L 6058 0 0 6£ 0 LZ LSS 668 6102 6LS‘2 607'2 uadsy 
0°O0L 8s 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 gE 0 0 yse 49e)9 
9° LL coL‘2L 2g 6£ Z6L ell £82 970'L 66L'L 626'L 988'2 Ovy' 7 yse 22144 
(ra sse’St 0 4. ge ¢8l 829 9¢8 004'L 820'2 9o1'¢ Les'9 yoaeg 
0°8 ¢lz‘6L 0 0 0 62 912 222 2£0'2 956'4 90S’S 9769'S youiq sedeg 
L°2L S6Z"LL 0 6¢ Zh 9E1 062 £44 Lila 269'L Lol‘2 29'S YdIiq MO} ]2A 
9°47 2o1'86 0 LLY cee 288 G22‘ 2su’e = =292"9 £94'2L S22’s2 249'6¢ a)dew pay 
Gel L67'9L = OLL 261 OLL 27 6S7 692 290'L 892'2 ¢l2'¢ 4909'S a)dew se6ns 
9°4 LLY’SSL 465 29r‘e 982 09S‘ 96'2 e92’2L Los’zZL 9LS’L2 $90'9E 188'6% SPOOM}}$OS }2301 
8°62 28¢ 0 0 0 0 0 99 86 0 0 222 SPOOM}}$0S 49430 
9°8 600‘SS 0 ose 99S G06 299'1 91¢'¢ LG'S Laine G89‘7L 96602 90 ]WAH 
8°9 6S2'62 465 218'2 L872 G9S‘2 Glas 662'8 ZOL‘OL YL2"LL  =S6L°OL = PLL auld 33144 
6°2E g0e'l 0 0 0 0 ge 28g 202 Vi] 29 691 auld pay 
0°6L c9z'4L 0 0 2 601 G22 62S 98S'L €28'L Lo2‘4 4902'S aonids pay 
0°001 gg 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 gE eonsds 49e)9 
9°09 cyl 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 c¢ 9) ce yoesewe | 
L°92 s00’S 0 0 0 0 0 yan oz 692 798 GyS‘¢ Jiy wes)eg 

+0°62 6°82 6°02 6°8L 6°OL 6°47 6°21 6°0L 6°8 6°9 
-0°L2 -0°61 -O°LL -0°SL -0°EL -O°LL -0°6 -0°2 -0°S 
as Sa a dnou6 saisads 


(2yBLay yseaug je sayouL) sse}9 sajowelg 


(S804) 40 spuesnoy) ul) 


2661 ‘a4tysdwey Man ‘31Un 


usayjnos ‘sse)9 Jajeweip pue satseds Aq pue}sequii} uo (*Yy"q"p SaydUL +9°G) Saas} 4903S-BULMOUB Jo JaquNN--"99 a)qe1 


99 


9°2 4°3 2°91 £°6 Jige g°2 SSL as 
9°2 2°£96'4 G*78z 0°6£ G*S%2 2°829'4 6°€SS'4 8°42 saiseds }}e ’)e01 
c"¢ G°£69'2 BLL o°2e 8° 601 2°1SS'2 L°2897'2 9°69 spoompsey e301 
g°ZL 0°02 0°02 0" 0°02 0" (ne 0° Spoompsey ]e1I4euWOIUON 
2°01 8° 291 9°8 OL Led: L°9SL 9" LSL 2ce Spoompsey }eLIsaWMIOD JaYyIO 
6°Ly L°8 Us 0° ie 0°8 0°s 0° w}3 
8°0¢ £°OL Ss 0° S° 8°6 8°6 0° poomsseg 
cl L199 97°OL cue £°8 2°0S9 5° 46S 2°95 syeo pay 
8°Sl 6°89 g°¢ dis Lg 0°Ss9 0°S9 0° syeo 3314M 
Z20 8°S6 4° 2: 2° 9°S6 9°S6 0° uadsy 
0°00, S° 0° 0° 0° S° S° 0° yse 98/4 
9°<L c’°s¥L G2 8" 7g 6°S¥L O° LL sc" yse 314M 
9° HL 8° L9L 8°2L 24 9°8 0°SSL O° 7SL BoE yoaeg 
6°8 2°06 2°9 dell 0's 0°78 £° 18 bisie youiq sade 
O°sL SLL 0°6 2°94 8°47 8°201 8°20L 0" Yottq MO]]a,A 
c°S ¢° 118 6°9S 7°EL G*sy 4°028 0°6L8 sl a)dew pay 
2°2b G22 c"OL 2°4 £°9 0°291 L°LOL 6" a)dew se6ns 
g°4 9°692'2 2°24 OZ 2°SEL O° 2212 8°120'2 2°SS SPOOM}}$0S 12301 
0°2y e"¢ co 0" 9° 2°¢ 2°¢ 0" SPOOM}}0S 19430 
9°6 £°99S 2°6S 8°47 6°4S S°90S 9°20S 0"Y 490 WAH 
9°9 6°E1S'L 2°82 0°2 2°94 9°S¢4'1 6°06E'1 L°94 auid 3314m 
LS L°¢2 0° 0" 0" L"2 L°¢2 0° auld pay 
2°02 8° 7E1 9°¢ rae 9S ce" lel 8°92 S°9 aonuds pay 
0°00L i: 0° 0° 0° be [? 0° aonids 49e)4 
2°29 Zz 0° 0: 0° vie vis 0° yoesewe | 
L°22 L°22 ° 0° 9° G92 S°92 0° 4iy wesjeg 

yyns yyns yynso 3)qe3das0e 2)qeidas0y poetJJajoid 
VW ua} .0Y yBnoy /passajaid 
as sesse]o 11V dnouB satsads 
S$s®}]9 ved) 


(3994 91gnd Jo sUuOL)]LW UT) 


266, ‘astysdwey MAN ‘LUM UJaYyNOS ‘sse}9 aa43 pue satoads Aq pue}saquil} UO Saas} 1]e 40 AWN]OA ON--"°19 F1G21 


100 


Volume of all live trees on timberland, for selected species and 
percent change, Southern Unit of New Hampshire, 1983 and 1997 


(Volume increased by 8.0 percent for all species) 


White pine |, : : +4% 
Red maple ce x 3 : +18% 
Red oaks +15% 
Hemlock +30% 
Paper birch oe -13% 
Sugar maple ll -19% 711983 
Beech (22. +2% M1997 
Ash +8% 
Spruce ne +24% 
Yellow birch +12% 
-9% 
Aspen 
White oaks | “11% 
| 
0 500 1000 1500 


Millions of Cubic feet 


fae S*l2 L"OL 9°6 Bl L°9 8°49 Z¢ 92: toa Sct as 


£°2 G°96S'9 9°9% L*6£2 8°2SL £° 782 Ve) 0°8SS G*eo) 9° 628 £"8ls 2° ss satoeds }je ')e}0) 
9°¢ 2°0£S'2 6°SL g°e2 9°S¥ L°60L 9°SSL 2°92 2°66 8° 6S ¢° 25S 8°69 spoompsey 1230) 

6°4L 8°92 0° 0° 0° 0° Ue Ox 6 o"2 G2 O°OL SpooMpJey }BLIJoUMOUON 
27 bb L°2yL 0° 0° 0° 0°¢s 2°6 O"LL 6°12 2°S¢ O°se L°¢2 SpoomMpJey JELIJouMlod J2410 
L°92 8° yl 0° bet Ls GL L°2 GS*2 GL ¢°¢ OrL b°L w)3 
Sle 2°9OL 0° 0° 0° Lb*L Ls 0° 0°¢ 6°¢ 9°G bed poomsseg 
Fire, L°9ZS g"L L°82 2°2b 9°L1E L°647 G*82 S*OLL G*2ZOL 2°20L 0°67 syeo poy 
VZt ley Yd o°e cay EX 6°¢ 0°9 £°8 9°SL G°el S*SL L°OL syeo 33 14M 
he 4 O°<oL 0° 0° bol 9°¢ 9°L £°9 2°eb 2°42 ¢°2e 2°02 uadsy 
£°¢8 6°6 0° 0° 0° Ou Ox ORZ 2°2 G*¢ 3° va} yse 498)14 
6°SL 9°L2L 0° 0°S 0° L°9 Gl Crd ele 0°¢2 0°82 8° él yse 32 14M 
2°b B°sOL VE 9°l £°L £"ul £°02 6°S2 L°92 0*¢2 2°62 £°Sl y990q 
6°6 L°Sl2 0° O°L 8°2 8°2 9°49 ec 2b lle 9°02 S°49S ble yosiq seded 
£°4¥L G°66 9° VACA Lad 8°49 2°<b 6°9 Vy 2 8"OL 8°BSL VVAS YIIlQ MO}]SA 
£°9 B°Ly2 3" 8°9L Lb°¥L 9° Le Lb*2¢ LO 0°60L b°b2t 9° 78L 2°O0£l a)dew pay 
6°2L 9°Sle L°6 S*OL L°8 2° UL cbt 6°S2 2°2e ar Ay L°6¢ 9°¢2 a)dew sebns 
9°S 6°S90'2 9°0E £°S9L 2°60L 2°GZl 0°S22 8° 962 6° See 9° 682 6°092 9° L8L SPOOM}jOS ]&30) 

2°14 9°El 0° (ae 0° 0° Ls 22 9°2 0°” Lv’ 6° SPOOM}JOS J9430 
8°OL 2°94 0° LLL OFZ 2°0¢ G6 G°9S G*¢8 9°) 912 8° Ls 90 |WeH 
Crd L°6S7’L 9°0E 8°?2Sl £°88 O°EeyL 9 9LL ¢g°lb2 6°LL2 6°S8L L°LSL 9°16 auid 334M 
2°89 L°2e 0° 0° 0° O'L 2°9 9°83 L°OL 9°9. 6° 6° auid pay 
8°L2 6°SOL 0° L°L 6°¢ 6° 6°¢ L°8 8°9L B°ZL G*82 6°22 eonuds pay 
L°L6 £°s (le 0% 0° 0° 0° 3" S vj L°2d vial aonuds 49e)4 
g° 22 O°L 0° 0° 0° OR 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° O°L yoesewe | 
8°62 S*OL 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° £"l G°2 £22 bey 6°49 Jt} wesyjeg 

+0°62 6°82 6°02 6°8L 6°9L 6°44 6°2b 6°OL 6°8 6°9 
sasse}9 -O0°L2 -0°6L -O°2LL -O°SL -O°ESL -O"LL -0°6 -0°2 -0°S 
ES dnos6 saisads 


nv (}yBLay yseeuq je SayouL) sse}9 sajowerg 


(}99} JLqnd jo suoL})] LW UT) 


€86L ‘aitysdwey mMaN ‘3LUN UsJaYyjnos ‘sse}9 JajawWweLp pue satoads Aq pueysaqwi} UO Saat} SAL] 1]& JO SUIN]OA JaN--"Z9 FI1GeL 


102 


C4 ave 6°OL L°bb 9°83 2-9 7} 0°” £58 £25 £2 as 
9°2 2°£96'% O°L2L 0°l9¢ 8° 192 9° 862 6°8S7 L°989 0-218 2°628 5° 269 9°027 Satsads }]e ‘)e}01 
s*¢ g°e69'2 L°SE 2°OLL £°£6 2°2ee 2°98L S°0SE 9°8l4 2°6SS 6°897 6°LL2 Spoompsey }e}0] 
8° ZL 0°02 0° 0; 0° 0° 0° 9° van | a2¢ ¢°4 €°OL SPOOMpJeY ]ELIIAWWOSUON 
2°OL 8°29 0° 0° Ol 0°sS a) S°02 Lee 6°8s £°e4 0°S2 SPOOMPJEY ]}ELIISUMIOD 9430 
6°LY L°8 0° 0° 0° 0° + a 91 3° BL aL 8° ws 
8°OE £°OL 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 6°2 S"2 BL 0°2 271 poomsseg 
aa L°L99 2°83 SLY 0°6£ S°69 8°09 6° LLL 7°8El 9°20L ey 2 £°0g SEO poy 
8°SL 6°89 0° 6°2 BL 91 Z2E 0°21 9el o°2L £°6 L°2 SyeO 3214M 
2°21 8° £6 0° 0° 9°2 0° 82 S°SL 6°21 8°92 6°02 9°6 uadsy 
0*O0L S° 0° 0" 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° Si 0° 0° yse 498198 
971 S*84L 84 92 GS" LL 2°9 9° OL 2°82 6°42 9°92 G*L2 6°4L yse 331UM 
9° 471 8° LIL 0° 2°6 L°S Ser 4 8°22 S°22 a 9°92 6°S2 2°Lb yoeeq 
6°8 2° 061 0° 0° 0° 65s 0°2 L°6L O°LY 6°09 L°6¢ L°6L yduig Jade 
O°sl B° LLL £°2 6°2 2°s s°S OvLL S*LL £°¢2 9°8L 0°21 o°vL YOtlq MO) ]9A 
s°s £° 218 LZ: ele 0°22 8°27 L°9% 8°<8 2°921 2° S02 L°68L 9°?LL a)dew pay 
2°Lb S*2eLl 2°6L 6°<b 9°S S59 £°yl L°02 8°22 0°es TCC O°9L @)dew sens 
8°49 9°692'2 £°16 2°9S2 S°891L 2°S9L L°el2 9° See 9°8Ee 6° 692 9°822 Sel SPOOM}}OS ]&}0] 
0°27 8°s 0° 0° 0° 0° 9° eb S*L 0° 0° 4° SPOOM}JOS J94I0 
9°6 £°99S 0° 6°42 £°le L°24 s°£9 £°S8 S"LOL 9°06 £°¢8 0°%S 90 ]WSH 
99 6°ELS'L £°L6 9° Le? o°s¥L 7°Sll 2° 26L SLlL2 8° S6L £°2¥L 9°OLL 9°6S auid 3314A 
Zs L°“£2 0° 0° 0° 0° ol O° LL aE £°S Se Si autd pay 
2°02 8° VEL 0° 0° (425 £°s 8°6 SOL 9° LE 6°22 6°82 6°21 aonids pay 
0°OOL L° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° L° aonids 49e)g 
2°29 AS 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° st Fe Ls yoesewe, 
L°L2 L°22 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° Sie 6°47 g"¢ b°sS 6°6 Jt} wes)eg 

+0°62 6°82 6°02 6°8L 6°9L 6°¥L 6° el 6°OL 6°38 6°9 
-0°L2 -0°6L -O°2L1 -O°SL -O°EL -O°LL -0°6 -0°2 S0nS 
as Sioa dnos6 satsads 
n (346Lay yseasq je sayoUL) sse}9 sajowelg 
(3984 91qnd $o suol})LW UT) 
2661 


‘astysdwey MeN ‘}1UN UsaYjNOS ‘sse]}2 JajeweLp pue satoads Aq pue}saquil} UO Saas} SAL} 40 OWN]OA JAaN--"¢E9 a)GeL 


103 


S*2 6°92 bbb £°OL £°8 9°9 L°s 6°¢ Be 9°¢ 0°” as 


IG 9°9SL'y L°LE £°902 2°91 £°LS2 9° OSE 2°8LS 2° 189 0°982 Laces 9°899 satgads }]e ‘18301 
98 g°Sy2'2 92 S575 ASS: S°L6 O°9LL £° See 9°L9¢ S°60S 0°<0S L°20¢ SpoompJjey }e30) 

O°LL L°9EL 0° 0° 0° he 3 LL 2°38 2°6L 9° Ge 9°1E S°%2 Spoompjey 49430 
0°82 6°LL 0° L°h 0° Ss*L el 2°2 S*L oO" Ze [Ag wy4 
L°<¢ 9° YL 0° 0° 0° L°L Ls 0° o*¢s be L°s 9b poomsseg 
Dik: S°2ess 0° 8°S2 9" Lb L°9¢ 2°89 0°92 2°80L 2° SOL 9°96 6°£4 syeo poy 
9° Lb ILL o*s £°L (Ae 8°2 0°9 ah 8°7L Geb 9°4L Lek SEO 93 L4M 
S*e2 0°76 0° 0° b°L 6°2 91 LES 6°2L L°e2 6°0£ 2°9OL uadsy 
£°¢8 6°6 0° O° 0° 0° 0° 0°2 22 se 3° 9°L yse 49e)4 
a°OL 9° eel 0° 9°49 0° 9°S 9°9 9OL 6°02 L°e2 £°92 2°6L yse 93144 
2°Sb 0°92L 0° ee 0° L°9 6°4L Le 9" le £°02 g°"972 9°<L y9e0q 
9°OL 0° £02 0° 9° B°2 9°? L°2 S47 L°92 2°89 L°LS 0° %E yosiq Jaded 
9°49 2°48 aL ol 22 6°s 2°bb 9S S*2el b°Sb 9°SL £°Sb Yottq MO]}9A 
s°9 8° S£9 0° L°6 6°8 B°LL 9°42 £25 L°S6 9° LGL 9° LOL S°Z0L a)deuw pay 
6° 8° eel 7% "9 2"9 G°2 2°6 6"l2 9°62 G°6£ 9° le O'Le a)dew sens 
9°¢ £°606'L 1°42 o°2sL 8°20L 8° SIL £°ybe 8° c82 9°6LE S°9l2 L°622 S*L¥b SPOOM}JOS 12301 

£97 "bb 0° 0° 0° 0° Le aL 9°2 2°¢ cee SG" SPOOM}JOS J94I0 
6°OL L° 70% 0° 9°OL L°OL 0°82 ZL 22 6°49S 8°08 9°19 £°S9 9°$4 190 WH 
Sed e°Sve"L L472 9°O¥L 6°28 6°SEL 9°991 2°802 L°802 9°6LL £°82l b°bl auld 33144 
0°0S L°Le Oh 0° 0° 0°L 29 0°8 L°OL 9-9 6° GS: auid pay 
2e £°96 0° bb 6° 6° i GEL 2°sb £°lb 6°92 £°02 sonids pay 
2°06 L°S 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 3° Si ls L°2 cal aonids 49e)9 
0°O0L 9° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 9° yoeuewe | 
SLE O°SL 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° £*l Ge s*¢ L°9 6°¢ Aly wes)eg 

+0°62 6°82 6°02 6°8L 6°9L 6°47 6°2L 6°0L 6°83 6°9 
-O°L2 -0°6L -O°LL -O°SL -O°SL -O°LL -0°6 -0°2 -0°S 
as ag dnow6 saisads 


nv (7yBLay yseasq ye sayoul) ssej}9 sazowelg 


(3224 91qnd }o suoL}] LW UT) 


£861 ‘autysdwey Man ‘31UM UseYyynos ‘sse]9 uajoWelp pue saloeds Aq pue)}Jaquil, UO Saad} 4903S-BULMOJB JO aUIN}OA AaN--"49 31921 


104 


Lise 2°92 S*LL O° LL 6°8 99 8°97 a) vets vat 7 as 


Zid 2°829'7 2°S8 9° 6SE 8°£72 L°sl2 8°0£7 S°699 2°29l 2° 862 9°6L9 0°20% satdads }]e ‘]e30) 
9°¢ 2°1SS‘2 0°62 8°06 S°98 £°eeb 2°9L1 o°ses S° 999 L°OSS L°SS7 8° 192 SpoompJjey }&301 

6°OL L° 7S 0° 0° 0° 8°¢ L°S 2°6L 6*le 2°8s 2° Ly yi LA SpoomMpJey J2430 
9°24 0°8 0° 0° 0° 0° £°b 91 8° 8° L Zt (Ls w)3 
L°Le 8°6 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 6°2 ese 8° L 0°2 O"L Ppoomsseg 
952! 2°0S9 2°8 9°lE 0°6£ £°8Y 0°09 O°LLL £°9<h <£°20L 9° el 0°0s S80 poy 
O°9oL 0°S9 0° 62 g°L 9.2L ae 9° Lb 9°OL 8° LL L°6 6°9 Sye0 3314M 
L°Lt 7°£6 0° 0° 9°? 0° 8°2 S°SlL 6°LL 8°42 9°02 £°6 uadsy 
O°OOL S° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° S° 0° 0° yse 49e19 
9°<L 6°S¥L 8°47 92 S*LL LY, 2°OL 8°l2 £° 492 L°92 L“b2 8°47 yse 314M 
2°91 O°SSL 0° e"s o°e £°l 8°22 O°L2 S°62 6°42 8°92 SOL yoeeg 
0°6 0° 78L O% 0° 0° 6°L orl 2°sh L°6¢ 2°09 2°8e 6°8L ydsiq Jaded 
Ss" 8°20 0° L°2 2°S s°S 6°6 £°OL S°02 L°St O°LL 2°<b Yottq MO}}2A 
S°sS 7°028 0° £°62 £°ll B°9E 9°07 S°9L L°beb 9° 9702 6°81 8°60L a)dew pay 
B°ZL o°29L S°SL O°LL 9°S £°9 £°9L 2°6L S°02 O°es 9" L2 9°SL @)dew sebns 
o°s o-2Z2L‘2 1°9S 9°892 £°ZSb 8°SSL L°9S2 S° 72k 2°LtE L°8%2 S° 722 2°07 SPOOM}JOS 18301 

S°0% 2*< 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° <b S*L 0° 0° We SPOOM}}OS J94I0 
0°OL S°90S 0° S°£2 2°9L 9°9¢ 2°0S Wee 8°06 B°S2 0°28 ess 90 | We H 
5, 9°Sey’L 1°9S L°S22 S°8tl 6°<bl L°26L S*9Ll2 S981 8°07 8° ZOL £°8s autd 2314M 
2°1S L°£2 0° 0° 0° 0° 9° O° LL 9°¢ £°S 9° Si auid pay 
9°02 £°Lel 0° 0° (4a4 £°S 8°6 £° 7b OLE 2°22 2°82 8° ZL aonids pay 
0°O0L L° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° L* aonids 49e)9 
L529 Ls 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° <* £= L° yoesewe | 
Juhe S°92 0° 0° O° 0° 0° te 3 v}sey) B°¢ L°sS 8°6 Jt} wes)eg 

+0°62 6°82 6°02 6°8L 6°9OL 6°41 6*el 6°0L 6°38 6°9 
sasse}2 -O°L2 -0°6L -O°LL -0°SL -O°EL -O°LL -0°6 -0°2 -0°S 
as iv dnou6 satseds 


(7YBLay yseauq ye sayouL) sse)9 sajoweLG 


(3384 9Lqnd jo suol))] LW UT) 


2661 ‘astysdwey MaN “}LUM UJaYjNos ‘sse}9 Ja}aWweLp pue satodeds Aq pue}Jequil} UO Sedu} 490}S-BULMOUB jo aUIN]}OA JaN--"S9 A)qeL 


105 


Table 66.--Net volume of growing-stock trees on timberland by species and 


Species group 


Balsam fir 
Tamarack 

Black spruce 
Red spruce 

Red pine 

White pine 
Hemlock 

Other softwoods 


Total softwoods 


Sugar maple 
Red maple 
Yellow birch 
Paper birch 
Beech 

White ash 
Black ash 
Aspen 

White oaks 
Red oaks 
Basswood 
Elm 

Other hardwoods 


Total hardwoods 


Total, all species 


SE 


stand-size class, Southern Unit, New Hampshire, 1983 


(In millions of cubic feet) 


Stand-size class 


All 
3 classes 
Pole- Sapling and Non- 

timber seedling stocked 
8.4 SU 0 15.0 
-0 -6 0 -6 
-5 -0 .0 Dat 
51-8 1.4 0 96.3 
1.8 -8 0 31.1 
344.3 19.0 -0 1,345.8 
117.0 o2 0 404.1 
5.9 -0 0 US 
529.8 23.1 -0 1,909.3 
88.3 -6 -0 182.8 
385.3 3.8 -0 635.8 
41.7 -0 -0 84.7 
146.4 -0 -0 203.0 
45.3 -0 -0 126.0 
79.0 .0 -0 122.4 
9.1 -0 -0 9.9 
66.9 22 -0 94.0 
37.4 6 -0 71.6 
290.5 3.8 -0 552.5 
935 -0 -0 14.4 
2.0 -0 -0 11.9 
68.0 6 -0 136.1 
1,269.4 9.5 -0 2,245.3 
1,799.2 32.6 -0 4,154.6 
6.6 29.9 0 2.5 


106 


SE 


31.5 
100.0 
90.7 
22.4 
50.0 
oe 
10.9 
44.3 


5.6 


13.9 

6.5 
14.6 
10.4 
15.2 
16.4 
83.3 
22.5 
17.4 

7.4 
33.1 
28.0 
11.0 


3.6 


2.5 


Table 67.--Net volume of growing-stock trees on timberland by species and 
stand-size class, Southern Unit, New Hampshire, 1997 


(In millions of cubic feet) 


Stand-size class 


ALL 
Species group aes SE 
Saw- Pole- Sapling and Non- 
timber timber seedling stocked 

Balsam fir 12.9 13.2 3 -0 26.5 27.4 
Tamarack 5 A .0 .0 uz, 62.7 
Black spruce -0 -0 1 .0 1 100.0 
Red spruce 59.4 69.3 2.5 -0 131.3 20.6 
Red pine 16.3 6.3 aE) 0 23.1 51.7 
White pine 1,243.7 184.7 UEC 0 1,435.6 6.7 
Hemlock 364.4 139.0 Zant .0 506.5 10.0 
Other softwoods 21 25 -6 -0 3.2 40.5 

Total softwoods 1,699.4 413.2 14.4 .0 2,127.0 5.0 
Sugar maple 113.9 47.4 of .0 162.0 17.8 
Red maple 501.3 305.5 13.7 .0 820.4 57:5 
Yellow birch 57.0 43.1 2.7 .0 102.8 13.5 
Paper birch 98.8 85.0 ae -0 184.0 9.0 
Beech 105.6 48.5 1.0 .0 155.0 14.7 
White ash 83.4 60.6 2.0 -0 145.9 13.6 
Black ash .0 2 -0 .0 ae) 100.0 
Aspen 31.0 61.1 1.3 .0 93.4 17.7 
White oaks 43.7 21.3 .0 .0 65.0 16.0 
Red oaks 418.5 226.3 5.9 -0 650.7 7.4 
Basswood 4.3 525 .0 .0 9.8 Sel 
Elm 6.6 1.0 4 -0 8.0 42.4 
Other hardwoods 99.8 50.2 4.1 -0 154.1 10.9 

Total hardwoods 1,563.8 956.0 31.9 .0 25551.-7 3.6 
Total, all species 3,263.2 1,369.2 46.3 .0 4,678.7 2.7 
SE 5.2 8.0 27.9 .0 2af 


107 


Table 68.--Net volume of growing-stock trees on timberland by forest type and 
stand-size class, Southern Unit, New Hampshire, 1997 


(In millions of cubic feet) 


Stand-size class 


ALL 
Forest type SE 
Saw- Pole- Sapling and Non- el aeece 
timber timber seedling stocked 

Red pine 11.3 0 -0 -0 Wes) 100.0 
White pine 745.7 56.5 6.2 0 808.4 13.1 
White pine/hemlock 323.7 63.9 0 -0 387.6 19.9 
Hemlock 175/25 65.0 0 -0 240.5 26.7 

White/red pine group 1,256.2 185.4 6.2 -0 1,447.8 8.8 
Red spruce 17.4 53.6 -0 0 alist 44.8 
Red spruce/balsam fir 9.8 -0 -0 -0 9.8 100.0 

Spruce/fir group 27.5 53.6 -0 ; -0 80.9 41.2 
Wh. pine/no.red oak/wh. ash 441.4 38.9 -0 -0 480.3 19.5 
Other oak/pine 7.6 -0 -0 -0 7.6 100.0 

Oak/pine group 449.0 38.9 -0 0 487.9 19.3 
Post, black, or bear oak 9.9 -0 -0 -0 9.9 100.0 
White oak/red oak/hickory 134.4 Ue -0 -0 151.9 32.0 
White oak 20 2.5 -0 0 225 100.0 
Northern red oak = 173.8 98.0 -0 -0 271.8 21.7 
Red maple/central hardwood 26.5 21.9 -0 -0 48.4 52.8 
Mixed central hardwoods 230.7 172.6 7.5 -0 410.8 16.5 

Oak/hickory group 575.4 312.4 (5 .0 895.3 10.9 
Black ash/Amer. elm/red maple -0 -0 252 -0 222 100.0 
Red maple( lowland) 10.2 16.5 -0 -0 26.6 48.3 
Red maple(upland) 15.6 12.9 -0 0 28.4 50.6 

Elm/ash/red maple group Fae 29.3 2.2 0 57.2 33.9 
Sugar maple/beech/yellow birch 379.4 195.7 Hie: -0 576.7 15.2 
Black Cherry 0 2.3 0 0 2:3 100.0 
Red maple/northern hardwoods 269.8 350.8 een -0 627.7 13.4 
Mixed northern hardwoods 244.4 161.9 15.8 0 422.2 18.0 

Northern hardwoods group 893.6 710.7 24.6 300 a1,62859 7.7 
Aspen AS a7 31.7 6 -0 46.0 39.8 
Paper birch 22.3 Ur 4.6 -0 34.1 5555 
Gray birch -0 -0 a5 -0 =5 100.0 

Aspen/birch group 36.0 38.9 Sah -0 80.6 32.7 
All forest types 3726322, 1,369.2 46.3 -0 4,678.7 Zeit 
SE 5.2 8.0 27.9 -0 2.7 


108 


Percent of growing-stock volume by forest-type group 
Southern Unit, New Hampshire, 1997 


y _ White /red pine 
A 30.9% 
y 
Northern hardwoods __/ 
% | 
‘ 
X 
na ‘. Oak/hickory 
Other _ i 
7.9% / | 19.1% 
Spruce/fir | Oak/pine 


1.7% 10.4% 


S"e S°9e wad? 8°2eS 0° S"el 6°%2 0° 9°¢S 2°OL as 


G*2 9°9SL'y =F" 08L GLLo‘L = 8°22 0° 9° 489 £°642 0° 2°6 9° L9E'L saioeds }}e ’)e}0) 
9°¢ €°Sy2'2 LYE L°96L"L  £°S2 0° 8°BLS £°l6 0° L9 9°2l2 spoompJjey )e}0) 

O°LL L°9EL y°¢ G°G2 2°L 0° 6°lE b*L 0° 0° 0°€2 SpoompJjey Jo4I0 
0°82 6° LL 0° Gz 0° 0° 6°2 9° 0° 0° L°S wy 
oe 3 3 9° FL 0° o°?L 0° 0° °° 0° 0° 0° 6°L poomsseg 
Pee 4 G°2SS £°Sh L°SEL On 0° 0° 70¢ 9°8E 0° at 2°8S syeo poy 
O° LL LL Ta £°8 0° 0° G°94 L°9 0° 0° + Ter 4) | syeo 39} 14M 
S*22 0°46 6°94 2°OL 0° 0° 9°38 6°L 0° 0° 9°22 uadsy 
£°¢8 6°6 0° £°6 0° 0° 9° (Os 0° On 0° yse 9e8)4 
9°OL 9°?el O*L £°¢6 0° 0° 9°L 8°2 0° He ecZt yse 914M 
2°Sh 0°92L L*L £*60L 0° 0° 9°6 bal 0° 0° 2°s yI009q 
9°OL 0°02 9° 6 2°60L 0° 0° 0°6L 6°OL Ov Li g°e2 yosig Jaded 
9°¥L 2°98 O°L 2°92 oS 0° 9°¢ ¢° 0° cS Loe YItiq MO]]9A 
s°9 8°S¢9 L°22 £* 06 L°¢2 0° 6°62 9°92 0° g°2 2°16 a)dew pay 
6°Sl 8°28L 0°9 6°2SL 0° 0° 8°9 ZU 0° bl S*6 2)dew seins 
9°S £°606'L S°SY 9° SLY G*2 0° 8°S9L O°SsL 0° b“¢¢ 8°880'L SPOOM}j}OS 1&0) 

£°9Y £"bb 0° 0° 0° 0° G*L Ze 0° 0° baz SPOOM}}OS JO4IO 
6°01 L° 90% 6°83 A ¢* 0° 8°24 8°E2 0° 9° 0°002 90 |WeH 
G2 e°sye’L 9°82 G° 2492 Cue 0° £°OLb 9° 621 0° 0° 9°928 auld 33144 
0°0S L°LEe 0° 5 0° 0° 9° B°L 0° 0° ¢£°82 autd poy 
9° ee £°96 9°9 8°9E 0° 0° rage) 0° 0° 9°82 2°02 aonuds pay 
2°06 L°S 0° S 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 9°49 aonuds 49e)¢ 
0°OOL 9° 0° 9° 0° 0° 0" 0° 0° 0° 0° yoesewe | 
GLEe o°sl + da 0°2 0° 0° a 0° 0° 0°49 Lb? Jty wesy)eg 

yosiq spoomp.iey ajdew pas ssaudAo AsoyoLy auid yeayquoys sly auid pau 
/uadsy useyiJON /yse/w)}3 /wn6/yeo = /e0 180 = /A 101907 /aansds /241UM 
ES je 01 dnou6B satsads 


dnou6 adAj}- se404 


(3884 O1qgno jo suol)) LW UT) 


€B6L ‘e4tysdwey MaN “31UM UJaYyjnos ‘“dnouB adA}-}seu0} pue satoads Aq pue}saquil} UO SaaJ} 390}3S-BULMOUB JO aUIN}OA 1AaN--"69 A]gGeL 


110 


ase 2°ee Des 6°S¢ 0° 6°OL £°6L 0° oly 8°8 as 


L52 2°829'7 9°08 6°829'L = 2° Zs 0° £°S68 6° 284 0° 6°08 8° 2979" 1 setoads })e ‘)e}01 
9°¢ 2°LSS’2 6°0S o°so2'L 2°94 0° G*802 8°89L 0° sol c° 255 spoompsey 1&0) 
6°OL L°9SL 0°2 0°98 "4 0° ale o°2 0° cde Vas spoompiey 42430 
9°24 0°8 he ra je 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0°9 w)3 
L°LE 8°6 6 £°9 0° 0° ch 0° 0° 0° tar poomsseg 
4°) 2°0S9 2°S 9° BLL ¢° 0° L°28¢ 2°19 0° c"L 9°18 syeo pay 
0°91 0°S9 al 9°2 0° 0° 2°94 2¢ 0° 0° 6°2L syeo a31yM 
LEB 4°S6 e"sl 9°65 4° 0° ere 6°97 0° 0° 9°92 uadsy 
0°O0L S" 0° S" 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° yse 9e)¢ 
9°E1 6°S¥L S° S°26 0° 0° BLL 9°49 0° 0° 2°S yse 9214 
2°47 0°SSL 8 6° SOL 0° 0° £"S¢ Cue 0° 0° 6°2L yooeg 
0°6 0°98 £°8 9°SOL ke 0° 2°82 0's 0° 2°¢ 9°2¢ yduiq Jaded 
Gel 8° 201 c* 2°28 (ie 0° 0°8 9°2 0° 9° L°6 Yo4tq MO} ]3A 
c°s 47° 028 Gel o°LLy 6°04 0° e°24L o°<9 0° O° LL L°2e1 a)dew pay 
8° ZL 0°291 0° 0°91 (de 0° a ¢*l 0° 0° 2°6 a)dew sebns 
0°S OZ2L’2 9°62 6°S24 9°01 0° 8°98L O°6LE 0° 9°99 9°060'L SPOOM}}$0OS }2301 
S°0% 2°¢ 0° 9° 0° 0° 9° S" 0° 0° "1 SPOOM}}OS J24I0 
O°OL S°90S CaM 9° 6S Soul 0° L°6s G°84 0° 2°¢ 6°Sl2 90 WOH 
29 9°Se9'L O°S2 S*922 L°6 0° 9° 9S 2°892 0° Z°L g°22l auid 3314 
271s LAEz S° Z°2 0° 0° Sut Ss 0° 0° L“8L auid pay 
9°02 e" lel 6°% 2°19 0° 0° 2°8 8° 0° G°9S 2°61 aonuds pay 
0°00L Us Ue 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0" aonids 49e)9 
2°29 De 0° le 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° S" Oevewe | 
9°12 S92 0° 6°SL rao 0° Lae ty 0° 9°¢ 9°4 Jiy wes)eg 
yd41q  spoompuey a)jdew pas ssaudAd Auyoyaiy auid 423) 40Ys Ji} auld pau 
/uedsy useyiJoN /yse/w}3 /unb/yeQ = /4e0 / 480 /A\0)907 /aonids = /33 LUM 
EIS ]e}0] dnouB satsads 


dnou6 adAj-3sa404 


(}8a} 9Lqnd Jo suoL)] LW UT) 


266, ‘a4dtysdwey MeN ‘LUN UsaYy3Nos ‘dnouB adA}-yses0}4 pue saldeds Aq pue)}sequil} UO Saeed} 490}S-BULMOUB 40 aUIN]OA JaN--"O/ A]qGe1 


ie ee ne ~ 


111 


ie S°92 9 LL 9° LL 6°8 s°9 6°47 Ce? 9°9 as 


g°¢ 920902 eerde 9° 608 8°612 9°L%2 2°625 S*L9S s*£09 "802 satoads }]e ‘12301 
2°s 2°920'L = -L"¥2 ra S*L 6° £01 78% 9° 122 L"22e 0° Spoompsey ]e30) 

9°81 2°65 0° 1, 10; 0° 2°¢ £4 S*Sl LOL 0° SpoompJey J2430 
2°29 ovs 0° 0° 0° 0° bau £"1 9° 0° wa 
19% 0"Y 0° 0° 0° 0" 0° £"2 9°1 0° poomsseg 
9°8 279s v2 o°2s 2°s¢ O°LY 97°0S 6°68 £"00L 0° syeo pay 
6°12 6°62 0° S*2 Ss" a) 9°2 2°6 Led 0° syeo 2314M 
she 2°0S 0° 0° 272 0" £"2 S*2k Leh 0° uedsy 
9°21 1°69 Ly ge 8°6 o"Y 9°8 G*22 6°21 0° yse 2314M 
9°81 O°Ld 0° SY S*2 2°9 L"6L O°L Le 0° yoaeg 
1°91 o"Ls 0° 0° 0° 9°1 8°S 8°47 8°82 0° youiq Jaded 
s"8L Ley 0° 8"1 8"Y Ly 7°83 £"8 L"SL 0° Yo4tq MO} 19, 
L°6 6°SS2 0° 6°42 L747 E"Ls 6°E5 0°29 1°68 0° ajdew pay 
S*E2 9°S2 2°s1 £°6 8° £°S 0°21 6°SL L"SL 0° @)dew Je6ns 
9°S y'\8S'L © S"2s S*2s2 £°94L L-e4 2° 1E2 1"062 9°92 "802 SPOOM}4OS ]e30] 

9°94 92 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° LL €" 0° SPOOM}}0S 419430 
S*LL 2°62E 0° 6°12 S*Sl 8° Es L"9Y 2°69 0°62 2759 90 13H 
ey B°Syl’L  S*2s S*OL2 8°82! LSOL 8°41 S*£61 £°291 78Ll auid 314M 
S"9S 9°61 0° 0° 0° 0° 71 7°01 Ls S"Y auid pay 
2°£2 279d 0° 0° 0°2 6% 6°8 8°2h 0°22 78h aonids pay 
0°00 2° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 2" yoesewe | 
6°9E L"OL 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° Le g°£ 2°¢ Jiy wesjeg 

40°62 6°82 6°02 6°81 6°91 6°41 6°21 6°0L 
Sere -0'12 -0°61 -O"L1 -0"SL -0°E1 -O"LL -0°6 


dnoi6B saisads 


mW (]yBlLay yseeuq }e SayouL) ssejo Jajzoweig 


(30a) JIqgnd Jo suoL)]LW UT) 


266) ‘a4utysdwey MeN “3LUM UseYy Nos ‘ssej}9 
Jajawelp pue saidads Aq puejsaqui} UO saat} JaquLyMes Jo UOLJ4Od BoyMeS ay} UL 490}3S-BULMOJB JO aWN]OA JaN--"|2 21921 


112 


Sawtimber volume on timberland, for selected species and 
percent change, Southern Unit of New Hampshire, 1983 and 1997 


White pine 
Red oaks 
Hemlock 

Red maple 

Sugar maple 
Ash 

Beech 
Spruce 
Paper birch 
Yellow birch 
Aspen 


White oaks 


(Volume increased by 25.4 percent for all species) 


+16% 


| 1983 
Hi 1997 


0 1 2 3 4 5 6 


Billions of board feet 


i] O°l2 9° Lb 7°OL 9°83 s°9 27s 6k. b°d as 


oy L°982’0L  0°6SL 9°920'1 £° 199 2° L8b'L 2°6SS'L B°LOL‘’2 0°9£9'2 £°S16 saigads })]e ‘)e3}0) 
£°S Osdes'S eZ 9S L"0S2 2°S¥L 9° 16¢ 2°19 6°£%6 e°28c'l 0° spoompsey 1230) 

g°LL L"LSL 0° 0" 0" 9° 2L L°s¢ o'ss 9°22 0° Spoompijey 13430 
9°¢¢ 6°2 0° s°S 0" 0°9 9°9 2°8 0°9 0° w)3 
o's 2°Zb 0" 0" 0" 0°S 6°2 0° 4°6 0° poomsseg 
0°6 L°0%2"L 0" o°S2L 9°LS 9° 091 9° L6L 8° SOs 2° 10% 0° syeo pay 
9°12 9° SSL 9°SL 22 cs 8° LL s"0¢ 9°82 9°95 0° syeo 3314M 
£°92 €" LOL 0" 0° 8°S 6°47 29 L" 92 8°64 0° uadsy 
c°28 yigy 0° 0° 0" 0° 0° 0°6 2°8 0° yse 49e)9 
L°22z 0°622 0° 0°02 0" 9°92 8°82 2°12 S28 0° yse 3314M 
o's 8° 422 0° 2Z°2l 0" G82 S09 9°16 9°18 0° yooeg 
2°8L L°6L 0° 9°2 2°0L G6 2°bL £°9S ¢"SOL 0° yosiq Jaded 
cl 8° LSL 9°S s°9 9°83 O'S 2°84 2°02 9°14 0° Yyotiq MO}]2A 
0°OL 0°S28 0° 2°24 2°6£ 6°92 2° LOL 8°0L2 ¢° 9S¢ 0° a)dew pay 
b°st g° oss cel 2°82 S°92 L"o¢ G°6£ 6°98 2°80L 0° a)dew se6ns 
£°9 b°99S'9 ss € "42h 2°92L 9° 10S 8° S82 0° 266 8° ZL2Z'L 2°ES2'L £°SL6 SPOOM}JOS 1230) 

2°94 (iis 0° 0" 0" 0" 6°2 "°9 G6 sel SPOOM}40S J2430 
¢"2 9°2SL'L 0" 2°0S 9° 4) o°S2L 9°<9L 9°8L2 8° 205 2°Ll2 90 ]WOH 
6'L 1°600‘S ¢" 421 G°6LL L°209 0°69 6°6LL 6°S16 9°28 6° 16S auld 33144 
6°€S 2° 92L 0° 0" 0° 0°S £°62 L"S¢ ¢°0% 9°41 auid pay 
6°92 6" LL2 0° “9 0°02 6°4 £"OL 9° 4S 2°99 9°99 aonids pay 
0°00 La 0" 0° 0° 0° 0" 6°¢ Cac cL aonuds 49e19 
o°ss G22 0° 0° 0° 0° (ale 9°S 0°6 8°21 diy wesjeg 

+0°62 6°82 6°02 6°83 6°9L 6° 6°2L 6°0L 
sasse]9 -0°12 -0°6L -O°LL -0°SL -O°S1 -O'LL -0°6 
as iW dnoiu6 saiseds 


(3y6Lay yseauq ye sayouL) sse}9 Jaqzowelg 


(3204 pseoq }o suoL)]1W UT) 


CB6L ‘aslysdwey MaN ‘31UM UJaYyjNos ‘sse]9 JajZaWeLp pue saLoads Aq pue}JaqUIL} UO SaaJ} UaqUIL|MeS JO AaUIN]OA JAN--°2/ 219281 


114 


0°? 6°92 BLL 6° LL L°6 2°9 0°sS £27 So, as 


0°” 0°S68’2L S°LYY” 2°S59'1 9°OSL'L O° LE2"L 9° 868'L G°g4l'2 2°196'2 L°228 salsads })e ‘)eI01 
9° DAINSS S*9EL 2°£6E g°S8e 0° 40S 2°S22 9 Lye L 6°069'1 0° SpoompJey }2&}0) 

6°8l 2°61 0° 0° 0" O°vL 0°22 £°92 8°18 0° Spoompsey 42430 
c*s9 9°91 0" 0" 0° 0° c°9 "9 he 0° w)3 
g°Ly BLL 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 9°LL 2°9 0" poomsseg 
2°83 6°682'L L°<y 6°891 L221 ¢°<02 £°942 £°994 6°90S 0° syeo pay 
0°€2 L°S4L 0° 9°SL 6°8 1°82 6°2L 2°¢9 G°6£ 0° syeo 33 1UM 
eube 6° 791 0° 0° 2°2b 0° 6°LL 8°89 6°12 0° uadsy 
SLL L°S9¢ 9°G2 SOL ¢"Ls 0°6L 6°04 2°SLL 8°66 0° yse 32144 
2°81 8°9S¢ 0° S"6L o°2L 6°LE 6°76 2°¢8 2°79 0° yoaeag 
c°OL L*022 0° 0° 0° ay) L°0¢ 9° GL ¢°LSh 0° yosiq Jaded 
6°8L S912 0° 8°OL Sz 2°92 9°8¢ 9°8¢ 6°08 0° YOJtq MO} 3A 
0°OL £°6S2'L 0° O° #2L 9°61 2°64 9° LOL 8° 962 0°0SY 0° a)dew pay 
Dace 9°SlE 0°89 6°S G2 S42 2°09 S08 6°22 0° a)dew se6ns 
6°S S72 10°50 G°29e.) 25022 0° 222 B°22b'L 6°109'L ¢°0S2'L L°228 SPOOM}}OS 230) 

2°99 9°OL 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0°S 9°G 0° SPOOM}}OS JA4I0 
o°2L 9° LOv'L 0" 9°01 S°22 2°6S1L ¢°302 2°S62 2°92¢ 9° 9S2 90 ]WSH 
cl 8°908'S 0°SOs 6°L2SL‘L 2°069 G°S%S 6°016 6°S96 2°12 9°6L9 auid 331UM 
L°6S 5°96 0" 0° 0° 0° 672 8°95 £"4L LL aud pay 
8°E2 L"9S¢ 0° 0° 0's 2°22 9°SY £°49 0" EL 0°08 aonuds pay 
0°00 9° 0° 0" 0" 0° 0° 0° 0° 9° yoeuewe | 
0°s¢ Gly 0° 0° 0° 0" 0° 2°41 L"SL UStseee Ji} wes)eg 

+0°62 6°82 6°02 6°SL 6°9L 6°47 6°2L 6°0L 
-0°12 -0°6L -O'2L -O"SL -O°E€1 -O°LL -0°6 
as eee dnos6 satoads 


(1y6Lay yseasq ye sayouL) sse]9 sajowelg 


(3884 pueog yo suol)) LW UT) 


2661 ‘attysdwey mMaN ‘31UM UsaYjNoS ‘sse}9 JajaweLp pue saisveds Aq pue)]Jequil} UO Saat} JaqWLIMES JO SWN}OA JaN--"Sy a)gGeL 


iS 


BYL'LE £96'19- LLL‘’€6 SOL LL- 890'02 Le2’SL- 9£4'Z01 686'19 297'04 satoeds je ‘)8301 
2S¢'02 20¢'82- 699'84 682'S- 6LE'EL 99S" SL- BL6'SS 084'0¢ BLy'S2 spoompisey 12301 
cl2'¢ L68- 991'% 42L- 182 958- G9e'4 29¢'2 £202 Spoompsey 434310 
£19- 42 - 89E- | 0 0 Lly- 7] 0 gy w}3 
ole 59- Gey 2g- 0” 0 924 6£¢ 28 poomsseg 
L26‘2 LL0’6- 286 LL 94L- ¢389'1 L28'L- OLE’ 2L g0¢'9 800°9 syeo pay 
LLL Log" L- 2gc‘l €2L- G9E gSL- B44" 626 6LS syeo 3314 
98L'L L98- 290'2 421 - Way) 899'L- 95's 681 ‘2 6LL‘b uadsy 
zo’ 0%6'L- 242'¢ 28- 26 GSe'L- 269'4 922'2 912'2 yse 83144 
465'2 G92" L- 618'¢ GlZ- 22" 6£S- 9Le’¢ 9222 0601 yoseg 
Ly2'L- £99'L- 224 29S- 284 L2y"2- 926'2 969’ 1 O22" yosiq Jaded 
6%6 06L- BELL Gl¢e- Gol 6SL‘L- 898'L 008 290'L Yyouiq Mo}}aA 
¢82's 268'8- 22U‘Lb L2y'2- 082'S G87 '2- 60£'91 299'6 299'9 a)dew pay 
ByL'L G26'L- ¢10'¢ 2£9- GsL'L 9LS- 2£0’¢ £52" €82'L a)dew seins 
L62‘0L GS9‘¢¢- 999' 74 418'S- 889'9 988'4- 8LS'84 60S’ LE 600'2L SPOOM}}OS 1230) 
04- 6£- 0 0 42 9¢- LL L OL SPOOM}J$0S 13410 
9SL'4 226'4- LEL’6 BcL‘¢- 6£L'L ¢ly'|- £0921 GlS‘9 g20'9 90 ]WaH 
29¢'9 £19'92- Glo‘s¢ 262'2- Gle’sS 22S'2- 02S’2E 950’¢2 4946 auid 2314 
62L‘L- 6Le'L- 061 2L- ce 0 222 961 ze auld pay 
cle'l 6L2- Zs‘ G92- LS LSS- 662'2 90S‘1L S62 aonuds pay 
2l2- €SL- 92L- 0 0 GSL- LE Le 0 aonuds 49e14 
cL 0 7) 0 ¢) 0 0 0 0 yoesewe | 
ese 912- 229 Z0L- LS 841 - 928 971 289 diy wesjeg 
S]CAOUDY 4y3Mol6 JUSUWSISUL JUSWEID0p Ay L)e 4JOW yiMos6 UO LjJaIIOW yiMouBbul 
JON 179 y1N9 ssojy 
sei dnou6 satsads 


abueyd Jo JUaUCdUIOD 


(1824 91qnd Jo spuesnoyy uy) 


2661 ‘as tysduey may 


"JLuM Usayynos ‘aBueyd jo JUauodWOD pue saiovads Aq pue}sequi} UO aWIN}OA 490}3S-BuULMOIB Jo aBueYys yauU jeNUUe abeJaAy--"y/ 3)qGe1 


116 


6718S OSS LéL- 629'6%E £19'2s- Ges‘ 2¢ 092'92- 980'LZ¢ 205‘ 461 €8S'9LL setoads }]e ‘)e30) 
878'06 SLE’ 6S- LOL‘OSL 22t‘bt- 269'8L 699'SL- g92'8SL 9112'S 167° 701 SpoomMpiey ]e}0) 
1098 €S0'L- 969'6 0 228'1 826- GsZ‘8 220'2 829'9 Spoompsey J3430 
£19'2- 602’L- 904'L- 0 0 904'L- 0 0 0 w}3 
byl 1 0 Lol L 0 0 0 byl‘ L Log’L 0%4 poomsseg 
8860S 8S0'42- 290'SS 222- G09‘2 Gl8'2- 68S'SS Lec’oz g02'S¢ syeo pay 
LSS S62 ‘2- 9475'S 08s- 884 0 ecy’¢ 665'1 6£0'2 syeo 33LUM 
gs9'4 8S2'2- 468'9 L69- 212 2£6'L- 0016 S282 Gl2'9 uadsy 
B9L'y £90'S- Le2'6 0 0 GS6'L- 98L‘ LL 299'4 92S'9 yse 2214M 
22L'9 6£1‘2- 016’8 ¢2e'L- 9479" | 6S8- 677'6 26L'¢ 2569'S yoaeg 
260'S 29S‘ L- 859'9 94S- 022 £6S'L- 2258 9LL*L 198'9 yosiq sadeq 
629'4 22S- 9S1L'S 69S- 022‘ LYL‘L- G6S'S 9981 eels Yo4tq MO} ]2A 
276'61L £69'4L- L979" 9¢ 209'S- L929 £84'2- G9 9¢ 967'OL 698 SZ a)dew pay 
oss’9 256'¢- 282'OL Gel‘ L- 090'% 864- 024'8 £92'¢ 902'S a)dew se6ns 
Los’29 2i2’2eL- 8LS‘66L 94S‘ \2- ¢o8'SL 06S‘0L- Lz8’2Lz2 822'0%L 260'22 SPOOM}}OS ]&}01 
892- GyL- ¢2L- 0 0 22L- 4 4 0 SPOOM}}OS 42430 
9g¢'2 2Zee'9L- 919'¢2 918‘OL- 062'2 6l£'¢- 225'S¢ 08e’sL 96991 90 ]W8H 
168'6S 026’ Z0L- LLe’29L 281 ‘6- L299 ¢S¢'S- G26‘ S9L L99’SLL £92'0S autd 3314M 
£40'S- 826'S- cg8g 60£- 0 0 96L'L G80‘ 601 aulid pay 
L22‘S G62- 99S'9 L72'L- 221 62£'L- £10°6 L88’y eoL'y aonids pay 
68S- 069- LOL 0 0 0 LOL 0 LOL eonuds 49e)g 
202 L0%- £09 0 0 £0%- 900‘L 212 062 Jt} wesjeg 
S]CAOWS Y yaMou6b JUSsWeISUL JUSUSIDEp Aj L]b,40W y Mos6 UOLJBIIDY y MosBbuy 
9N 11Nn9 1n9 ssoj9 
bh dnow6 satoads 


MAN ‘}1UN UJay3nos ‘aBueY Jo YUaUOdWOD pUue saldads Aq pue)}Jaquil} UO aWN}OA JequLyMes jo aBueys au 


aBueyd jo JUaUOodWO) 


(1894 Ppueog Jo spuesnoy} ul) 


2661 ‘24 tysdwey 


yenuue aBesaay--"¢/ a)qel 


117 


Average annual growth and removals of growing-stock volume 
and ratio of growth to removals for selected species 
on timberland, Southern Unit of New Hampshire, 1983-97 


(Ratio of growth/removals for all species is 1.5 : 1) 


i ] 
White a = = — || 
ea 


Red maple aay 19:1 
neon a 1.3: 1 


Hemlock 18:1 
Beech 3104 


Ash _ 16724 Ea Growth 
Sugar maple 16:1 e Removals 
Aspen OIA 1 
White oak Aedes 


Spruce 'Z 3.8: 1 


Yellow birch i. 601 


Balsam fir I 23:1 


Millions of Cubic feet 


COUNTY TABLES 


Grafton 
Carroll 


Spelman Tn 
os \ 


Merrimack x Strafford 


) 


- iaockinanam 
Ze) 


Sullivan 


( Hillsboro 
| ice 


9° 09L'S 9°916 g°E2e'y £°8 9°84L 2°85 9°80S'4 jeqo1 


9°£68'2 6°SS9 2°1¢2'2 0" 0° 2°68 G*87L'2 3LUN UsayyNos 
0° ¥9¢ 8°29 L"L82 0" 0° 0° L"L8z ueAL}]NS 
L"9¢2 b° Ld 6°8S1L 0° 0° 0° 6°8SL psojjesis 
6° 94% 0°2E1 O'ELE 0" 0° 8°82 2° 982 weybu lt 4904 
1°86 4°26 2°S0S 0° 0° 9°LE L°9l¥ OeuL J4aW 
6°09 €"291 9° 86£ 0° 0° 2°Sh o" ses yBnos0qs}] tH 
8°2S4 8°22 O"SlE 0" 0° 2°8 2°99E as tysayg 
8°9S2 9° LS 9" G02 0" 0° Gy 6° 002 deuy 249 
8°948'2 2°092 L°98S'2 £°8 9°84 0°69 2°09£'2 }LUN UJay3JON 
9°960'L 2°SEl 5° 196 0°2 0°66 9°65 L"L28 uo} 4e49 
9° 2SL‘L 0°44 9° 80L'L ¢°9 9°64 £°Sl L°2¢0'L soo) 
2°26S cle 2°91 0° 0" c°9L 0°20S }}o44e9 
pue} pue) }ses0} saIO;4 3S9J0} 3S9JO} pue ] Joquil | 
sasse}o }S9IOJUON yeqoL Sod J9410 PeAdJISoy ueqJwn-J9410 
Ajuno3 
Vv a a 
sse]9 puey 


(seuoe Jo spuesnoy3 uy) 


2661 ‘attysdwey MaN “sse)9 pue}, pue ‘Ajuno9 Aq eave pue) JeN--"9/ F1921 


120 


en) es L°8 2°94 2°8 2°12 6°SL 2°0S £9 3s 
L'L 9°80S'4 2°OLY'2 9°22 9°92 2°89 2°2h 9°SL2 ¢°2z 9°S2S 78301 
GL G*8y7L'2 S"LLS'L 6°29¢ S*2L o's 2°901L 0°821 ¢°22 0° }LuM UsaYy3Nos 

2°¢ L° 182 9° 681 c°S4 9°S 0° 0° L°24 0° 0° ueAL]]NS 
2°s 6°8S1 L°SsL G°6l 0° 0° 0° £9 0° 0° Psosseuys 
9 2° 982 6°61 2°8¢ 0: 0° G°22 L°492 0° 0° wey6u lt 4304 
¢°2 L°9l% L*e2e £18 8°47 0°S 6°22 £°92 2°0L 0° OCW L 3 
0°” Oo" ses 8°922 9°28 L°2 0° S°OL 0° 0°s 0° y6nos0gs}} LH 
6°2 2°99E 2°22 8°06 0° 0° £°6E 2°9 2°9 0° au Lysay 
ce 6° 002 8° LLL 2°9 0° 0° 0° 9°22 0° 0° deu 29g 
Pall 2°09£'2 1°668 S°99E 6°Sl 2°2S9 O°LL 9°18 0° 9°S2S }LUN UsJa42JON 

9°¢ L128 2°994 2°92 0° 9°2L 6°OL 6°0L 0° 2°Ll2 U0} se 
22 L*2¢0°L 9°922 L"SEL 6°El 9°95 L°9 1°99 0° 2°9St $009 
pes 0°20S 8° 222 L"SOL 0° S°S 0° 9°OL 0° 27S }]044e9 

JENpLALpuyT ayesodio9 Jowuej Aitysnpul yediotunw 3384S jeuspeos 3S9d04 
sdiysueuso 3S9404 pue Ajuno3 “OSLW ]SUOLeEN 
as acer Ajuno9 


sse}9 diyssoumo 
(sauae 40 spuesnoy} ul) 


266, ‘astysdwey May ‘sse)9 diysuaumo pue Ajunos Aq pue}soquil} jo eouy--"Zy a)qeL 


121 


LL s*¥L HES 6°92 0° 8°83 2°St 0°9S Babb 2-2 as 
Fa 9°80S'y 4°52 6100212 S522 0° L°26S 2°02 s*SL L°OLY L*0s2 e304 
c"l Geyl’2 add £°S08 8°0S 0° 9° S44 6°69L 0° cet 9° L9S }1UN UsaYy3Nos 
2°¢ L*L8z £"OL o°Ssl 0: 0° 9°2E 9°9 0" 6°2L L°L9 ueAL}]NS 
2°s 6°8SL Z¢ 8°29 cL 0° £°62 9°0£ 0° 8°9 S°6L psojjeiys 
L°9 2° 982 B° LL 0°<9 271 0° 0°s8 £°02 0° 0° 8°98 weyBu | 4904 
£°2 L924 £°92 9° SLL 2°79 0" 2°28 £°84 0" 9°49 L°seb yoewl Jay 
0°” o"<ee £°¢ 9° OLL c*ZL 0° 8°88 6°2s 0° s*l S*42L yBnosogs)}) 1H 
6°2 2°99E seth £° 291 9°21 0° 8°48 6°LL 0° L°9 £°99 as lysay9 
c"¢ 6°002 9°4 2°19 0° 0° 6°99 cel 0° 19 b°od deuy]2g 
22 2°09f'2 2°08 9° S621 c*L2 0° 8° LSL £°s¢ ssl 9 LE 2°88 31UN Ut94zJON 
9°¢ L"L28 9°6S L" LOS (os 0° g°Sy Leu 0° G"ELh S°06 uo} $e49 
2°2 L°2£0'L 8° Z0L £°<59 cl 0° c°9 0° 0° 2°2S2 9°6 soo) 
Ls 0°20S O°sl 2° “92 oO" 0° S" LOL G°22 s*SL £°S 8°88 } 04489 

YyIdlq spoompJey 3)dew pou ssoudAo Asoyxo Ly ou id $€9)74OYS diy auid pol 
/uadsy UJayzJON  /yse/wyy = /wnB/e0 / 180 /1e®0 /4119)907 = /aanuds /2214A 
ds ye ol Ajunoy 


dnou6 adA}-1sa04 


(sause Jo spuesnoy ul) 


2661 ‘astysdwey may ‘dnos6 adAj-jsas0} pue Ajunoos Aq puejysaquiiy jo easy--"gy ajqeL 


122 


Table 79.--Area of timberland by county and stand-size class, New Hampshire, 1997 


(In thousands of acres) 


Stand-size class 


ALL 
County 
: classes 
Saw- Pole- Sapling and Non- 

timber timber seedling stocked 
Carroll 319.0 147.7 35.3 -0 502.0 
Coos 383.6 476.8 172.8 3.9 1,037.1 
Grafton 389.5 362.8 68.8 -0 821.1 
Northern Unit 1,092.2 987.2 276.8 3.9 2,360.2 
Belknap 126.2 65.9 8.8 -0 200.9 
Cheshire 238.2 117.4 10.6 -0 366.2 
Hillsborough 259.1 110.6 13.2 -0 _ 383.0 
Merrimack 236.1 213.7 19.3 5.0 474.1 
Rockingham 164.4 92.4 27.3 -0 284.2 
Strafford 103.5 40.9 14.5 -0 158.9 
Sullivan 126.3 136.4 18.5 -0 281.1 
Southern Unit 1,253.8 777.3 112.3 5.0 2,148.5 
Total 2,346.0 1,764.5 389.1 8.9 4,508.6 
SE 3.6 4.6 10.9 71.3 ev 


123 


SE 


Table 80.--Area of timberland by county and stocking class of growing-stock trees, 


County 


Carroll 
Coos 
Grafton 


Northern Unit 


Belknap 
Cheshire 
Hillsborough 
Merrimack 
Rockingham 
Strafford 
Sullivan 


Southern Unit 


Total 


SE 


New Hampshire, 1997 


(In thousands of acres) 


Stocking class 


Poorly Moderately Fully 
Nonstocked stocked stocked stocked 


5.2 74.5 124.7 266.7 
56.9 272.2 349.5 338.9 
5.4 97.6 284.1 382.5 
67.5 444.3 758.3 988.1 
-0 31.1 91.3 78.6 
-0 37.8 115.9 193.7 
-0 34.1 151.6 186.5 
5.0 55.5 199.1 204.1 
9.9 23.8 123.9 109.7 
1.6 38.6 61.6 53.5 
5 25.8 110.9 130.0 
18.0 246.6 854.4 956.1 
85.5 690.8 1,612.8 1,944.3 
25.0 8.2 4.9 4.3 


124 


Over- 
stocked 


30.8 
19.7 
51.4 


102.0 


All 


classes 


502. 
1,037. 
821. 


2,360. 


200. 
366. 
383. 
474. 
284. 
158. 
281. 


0 
1 


= 


- ON - ON DO 


SE 


ee s°s8l [is] ; L°62 0° 8°6 9 LL 6°25 eel 0°s8 


3s 
2°2 0°000‘'6 ¥°8s¢ 9°690'9 = Wd 0° 2°28L'l 9°9LS L°4¢ 9° 6L2 s*L00‘2 e830) 
id 2°329'% 9°08 6°829'1L 2°2s 0° ¢£° G68 6° 189 0° 6°08 8297" LUN UJEY4ZNOS 
ser L°29S 2°S 2°00¢ 0° 0° 9°29 9°¢cl 0° L°7¢ S*OSlL UBAL}]NS 
9°6 2°2ee 2°9 S*82L 0°S 0: £°ey 0°"6 0° 8°6 9°SY P4AOJJEIIS 
8°83 9° 109 c‘8 9° SEL 2°OL 0° 6°OLL 2°s¢ On 0° 2°8e2 weybulys04y 
8°s 0°200'1 9°8E L°S¥7¢ 9°38 0° £°S8yL 9° 921 0° Cre: 2°Se¢e OCW LIIOW 
9°9 L°L26 0° 8°S92 6°02 0° 8°26L 9° LOL 0° 6°2 ¢* lee yBnosogs)} LH 
8°S £°978 9° OL 0°09E 8°2l 0° 2°86L 6°l2 0° Jarl O°9OLL ad lysay) 
8°6 6°207 6°9 L°£6 0° 0° 6°82 9°94 0° S*¥7L L“SOL deu 2g 
ie 3 9° Lec'y 8°22 G*027'2 2°02 0° 9° 182 9°88 L°9¢ G*8e9 2°¢SS LUA, UJSYIION 
2°S 0°6S9'L S*90L L°£86 0° 0° 9°16 2°S2 0° £°96L 6°SS2 uojJedH 
9°S L°96S‘L L691 2°026 2°9 0° 0°3 0° 0° 2°024 9°LE soo) 
bez £°90L'L 2-2 2° LS G*el 0° O°ssL 6°29 2°9¢ S*L2 9°992 }]044e89 
yodsig spoompuey a)dew pau ssaudAo Asoya ty aud 483) }40YS ty auid pay 
/uadsy UsayzJON = =/yse/w}3 = /winB/ye0 / 80 /e0 /A\0)907 /aonids /22 LUM 
3s j&}0L Ajuno9 


dnou6 adAj-1sa 404 
(3984 91qnd jo suoL)]LW UT) 


266, ‘astysdwey man ‘dnos6 adA}-}sas0} pue Ajunod Aq pue}saquil} UO Saas} 490}3S-BULMOJB 40 OUIN]}OA IAeN--"1g a)geL 


125 


Table 82.--Net volume of growing-stock trees on timberland by county and 
stand-size class, New Hampshire, 1997 


(In millions of cubic feet) 


Stand-size class 


All 
COUN classes 
Saw- Pole- Sapling and Non- 

timber timber seedling stocked 
Carroll 876.6 220.4 9.3 -0 1,106.3 
Coos 734.0 772.4 49.8 -0 1,556.1 
Grafton 968.6 649.1 41.2 -0 1,659.0 
Northern Unit 2,579.2 1,641.8 100.3 -0 4,321.4 
Belknap 299.8 96.9 6.3 -0 402.9 
Cheshire 614.7 229.0 2.6 .0 846.3 
Hillsborough 705.2 206.7 9.2 .0 921.1 
Merrimack 639.7 359.3 8.0 -0 1,007.0 
Rockingham 421.3 175.4 5.0 -0 601.6 
Strafford 270.6 56.8 5-3 20 332.7 
Sullivan 311.9 245.2 10.0 -0 567.1 
Southern Unit 3,263.2 1,369.2 46.3 -0 +,678.7 
Total 5,842.4 3.01120 146.6 -0 9,000.0 
SE 4.1 555 17.5 -0 2.2 


126 


SE 


Les S°22 eS. 0° 9¢ 0° LLL L°6L £°69 o°SL 2°8 ES 
les L°s22*e2 LOL 6°S9L'6 ¢°OSL 0° L°SS8'2 G°8S6‘L 9°16 2°ee4'L ¢°s0s'9 yeI01 
oy 0°S68’2L S*O8L L°650'4 Z2°90L 0° 2°291'2 S°£69'L 0° 8°2Z6L L°o2s’? }LUN UsaYyyNos 
Z°LL 9°994'| OZ 8°SlZ 0° 0° 9° 22L 0°2s 0° L*2OL 2°69 ueAL]]NS 
O°vL Z°S00'L 2°2 9° 29¢ S°6 0° £°l6 2° 29k 0° G*cs O°2S1L psojpeuys 
6°0L 8°422'1 S*SlL 9°S1¢ 6°S 0" 2°9OLY e°Sll 0° 0° 9° 008 weyBul 4204 
cg 2°S9L'2 2°46 6°£08 LL 0° 8°49E G*L8¢ 0° £°6 L°220‘L OCW L Ia 
9°8 9°GS9'2 0° 9° 669 G*gs 0° g° 224 9°0S¢ 0° 2 SUSE yBnos0qs)}]!H 
L°6 S*S82‘2 g°2e 6°988 6°4E 0° L°8gs 2° 4962 0° ¢°8 8° 684 au Lysey9 
7OL S°9f0'L 82 O"¥L2 0° 0° L°96L 2°6S1L 0° fese £°0L4 deuy}99 
6°% Z°O8f‘0L s*S8Es 2°92L'S 2°94 0° G°269 0°S92 9°16 9°0%2'L 2°82" }1UN UsJaYzJON 
g°2 6°S68°E 2°602 L"6s¢'2 0° 0° 0°96L 8°29 0° 8° 62E 9° SG) uo}JeI5 
0°38 c°802’¢ 8°szs 0°288'L Ls 0° 6°2 0° 0° 2°28 6°SLL soo9 
G6 e°SGl2'¢ 0° 9°864'1 1°92 0° 9°884 2° 26L 9°16 6°25 8°SL6 }}044e9 

youiq spoompuey ajdew pas ssaudAo Asoyo1y auld 4283) 404s diy auid pau 
/uadsy UsayzJON = =/yse/w}3 = /winB/e0 /€0 /e0 /A4\10)907 /aonsds /22LUM 
3s ]e301 Ayuno9 


dnou6 adAj-3seu04 


(3884 pueog Jo suol})1W UT) 


266, ‘e4tysdwey man ‘dnouB adAj-3sas0} pue AjuNod Aq pue}Jaquil} UO Saad} JaqULyMeS JO aUN]OA JeN--"¢g 21921 


127 


Table 84.--Net volume of sawtimber trees on timberland by county and stand-size 
class, New Hampshire, 1997 


(In millions of board feet) 


Stand-size class 


ALL 
County SR OS a ae he EE SS OA a Te ae SE 
z classes 
Saw- Pole- Sapling and Non- 
timber timber seedling stocked 
Carroll 2,932.6 326.0 Wed -0 3,275.8 9.5 
Coos 2,000.1 1,114.4 93.9 .0 3,208.5 8.0 
Grafton 2,821.3 980.5 94.0 -0 3,895.9 7.8 
Northern Unit 7,754.1 2,420.9 205.2 -0 10,380.2 4.9 
Belknap 892.6 132.1 9.8 .0 1,034.5 16.4 
Cheshire 1,870.0 408.8 6.7 -0 2,285.5 9.1 
Hillsborough 2,320.4 319.9 15.1 -0 2,655.4 8.6 
Merrimack 2,103.5 619.8 19.9 .0 2,743.2 8.5 
Rockingham 1,374.5 339.1 V2 -0 1,724.8 10.9 
Strafford 887.1 114.1 4.0 -0 1,005.2 14.0 
Sullivan 954.3 468.2 23.9 0 1,446.4 Wille 
Southern Unit 10,402.3 2,402.0 90.6 -0 12,895.0 4.0 
Total 18,156.4 4,822.9 295.8 -0 PEACE 3.1 
SE 4.4 6.2 24.9 -0 Sia 


128 


0°2 ¢°8 0°” cs 2°8 2°2 3s 
o*2 Zyl 2Z¢ 9e2'L 4915'S 278'LE £904 22L‘62¢ 18301 
L"9 292'42 24 cv 97602 9L2 699'L2 ueAL}]NS 
9°) 602'¢1 9S 9SL 2Li't 09 992" LL possess 
L°8 ¢£9'¢2 6£1 BL 28S‘ oss €SL‘Lz weybul 4904 
"4 269'6E LOL Gof 859'2 £15 0%6'S¢ OeW L IIa 
6°S 9S4'¢¢ 281 6S2 ese'2 962 Lo”’O¢ yBnos0qs}} LH 
9°S 628" 9¢ 26 992 002‘2 922 gco’2ze as tysay9 
2°9 G8L’ ZL 69 €l2 029‘ 62 LL'SL deuy)2¢ 
L°s 208'89 oz OLlEe’L 019'9 clo 286'6S uojJeI5 
9°47 cle" bd 099 90L'L S708 2gb't 0€2'6S $009 
2°8 6£6'S4 SLL 189 954'¢ LLY 922° 14 }]O4ue9 

sqniys sBul )paes sButjdes $3084} peap Jaquil | 
2]QeA)]eS 
33 sqnsys pue Ajuno9 
S990dJ} 1230] 
Jaquit}-UON 


(suo, AJjp $0 spuesnoy} ul) 


2661 ‘a4tysdwey MaN ’]eLJazeW yo sse}9 pue AjuNod Aq ‘puejsaquil} Uo sqnuys pue saau} 7}]e JO SsewOlg--"cGg ajqel 


129 


die 6°S rae c"2 L°2 2°2 ES 
22 2262E 24582 681L'29 280'2L Gze’22 687861 7e301 
9°9 699'L2 c0L'2 0£6'¢ c8L B92" 1 98721 ueAL]]NS 
4°8 OL" LL 298 942'2 04 600‘L cie'2 psojjes3s 
2°83 €SL‘L2 9LS'L G20'9 968 2781 95621 weyBbul 4904 
9°4 0%6'S¢ 6L9'¢ 169'9 Bsc 9470'S 929'L2 yOew L IaH 
2°9 LOv’0¢ BLy'L 986'S ¢s2'1 9g2'2 0£0'6L yBnosoqs} 71H 
2°S gco'2¢ 09L’2 2S1'9 27‘ be2"2 27861 a4 Lyseay9 
6°L LL'SL CLL‘2 212'2 £15 972" 1 62S'8 deuy 29 
°S 286'6S G0s’s 9Se'LL OLL‘2 2£0'S L26'S¢ uojjeI5 
0°S 0£2'6S 6£2'9 GOL LL 9E1'2 126'4 £92'S¢ $009 
L°6 922‘ 14 1092 0£6'2 OLY’ L gey'¢ 078 'S2 } Ose 

so3od} 1])NI $}004 pue abet 104 soysuelg 4903S 
dwinis BuLMos5 

as Jaquiz e301 Ayunog 


$394} 4907S BuLMosy 


(suo, Aup jo spuesnoy} ut) 


266, ‘a4tysduiey mMaN ‘’}UaUoduIOD pue ‘Jaquiiy Jo sse}9 “Ayunoo Aq “pueysaquil} UO saquily 1}]e Jo sseuloLg--"9g a)}qeL 


*U.S. GPO:-2000-550-321/20004 


130 


Frieswyk, Thomas S.; Widmann Richard H. 2000. Forest statistics for New 
Hampshire: 1983 and 1997. Resour. Bull. NE-146. Newtown Square, PA: U.S. 
Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Northeastern Research Station. 130 p. 


A statistical report on the fifth forest inventory of New Hampshire (1996-1998). 
Findings are displayed in 86 tables containing estimates of forest area, numbers of 
trees, timber volume, growth, change, and biomass. Data are presented at three 
levels: state, county, and region. 


Keywords: Forest survey, inventory, area, volume, growth, change, biomass. 


CRA 
ue Printed on Recycled Paper 


ae Headquarters 


Headquarters of the Northeastern Research Station is in Newtown Square, 
Pennsylvania. Field laboratories are maintained at: 


Amherst, Massachusetts, in cooperation with the University of Massachusetts 
Burlington, Vermont, in cooperation with the University of Vermont 

Delaware, Ohio | 

Durham, New Hampshire, in cooperation with the University of New Hampshire 
Hamden, Connecticut, in cooperation with Yale University 

Morgantown, West Virginia, in cooperation with West Virginia University 
Parsons, West Virginia 

Princeton, West Virginia 


Syracuse, New York, in cooperation with the State University of New York, 
College of Environmental Sciences and Forestry at Syracuse University 


Warren, Pennsylvania 


The U. S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) prohibits discrimination in all its programs and 
activities on the basis of race, color, national origin, gender, religion, age, disability, political 
beliefs, sexual orientation, and marital or family status. (Not all prohibited bases apply to all 
programs.) Persons with disabilities who require alternative means for communication of 
program information (Braille, large print, audiotape, etc.) should contact the USDA's TARGET 
Center at (202)720-2600 (voice and TDD). 


~ To file a complaint of discrimination, write USDA, Director, Office of Civil Rights, Room 326-W, 


Whitten Building, 14th and Independence Avenue SW, Washington, DC 20250-9410, or call 
(202)720-5964 (voice and TDD). USDA is an equal opportunity provider and employer. 


“Caring for the Land and Serving People Through Research”