Skip to main content

Full text of "Forest wildlife habitat statistics for New Hampshire, 1983"

See other formats


Historic, archived document 


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


ees 


F W6 RDUF Be aa FOLK 


)) Deparment o Forest Wildlife Habitat 
Forest Service Statistics for 
EEO ae New Hampshire—1983 
one Robert T. Brooks 
UAS Thomas S. Frieswyk 
ae Anne M. Malley 


is 


Abstract 


This is a statistical report on the first forest wildlife habitat survey of New 
Hampshire conducted in 1982-83 by the Forest Inventory, Analysis, and Economics 
Unit, Northeastern Forest Experiment Station, U.S. Department of Agriculture, 
Broomall, Pennsylvania. Results are displayed in 58 tables covering forest 
area, ownership, land pattern, mast potential, standing dead and cavity trees, 
and understory woody-stemmed vegetation. Data are presented at county and/or 
unit and state levels of resolution. 


The Authors 


Robert T. Brooks, Research Wildlife Biologist; Thomas S. Frieswyk, Forester; 
and Anne M. Malley, Statistical Assistant, Forest Inventory, Analysis, and 
Economics Unit, Northeastern Forest Experiment Station, USDA Forest Service, 
Broomall, PA. 


Manuscript received for publication 16 July 1986 


Foreword 


The fourth inventory of New Hampshire was under the overall direction of Joseph 
E. Barnard, Project Leader of the Forest Inventory and Analysis Unit. John R. 
Peters assisted in the development and administration of the operating plan and 
had supervisory responsibility for the inventory process. Charles T. Scott was 
responsible for the design of the inventory and sample selection. David J. 
Alerich supervised the aerial-photo interpretation and data collection. He was 
assisted by Thomas B. Hartman, Joseh G. Reddan, and Karen J. Sykes. Numerous 
temporary employees assisted with field data collection. 


David R. Dickson and Thomas S. Frieswyk applied FINSYS (Forest INventory 
SYStem), a generalized data processing system, to the specific needs of the New 
Hampshire inventory and produced summary tables for the state, geographic 
sampling units, and counties. Thomas W. Birch and Thomas S. Frieswyk were 
instrumental in assuring that the area estimates were consistent with the three 
previous inventories. Anne M. Malley assisted in various data processing 
capacities and prepared and balanced the tables in this report. Margaret 
Little, Carol McAfee, J. Roger Trettel, and Karen Sykes performed a variety of 
data editing and compilation tasks. 


Carmela M. Hyland was responsible for administrative and secretarial services. 
Marie Pennestri typed the text for this report. 


Northeastern Forest Experiment Station 
370 Reed Road 
Broomall, PA 19008 


January 1987 


Forest Wildlife Habitat Statistics for 
New Hampshire--1983 


Contents Page 


MN EOGUC LOM erste sl etal elelelclelelala) «lols! elal «(cl sicleis)eeil 
Example Application. ..ecceccccecseseeeed 
Fe MLSENES - occa dcoo sco neo no Osco sao 500 5d 
Reliability of the Estimates.....sccceel 
lbilirercsneiies. (Gileeclo no oGoododDUIU OO doOd Couol/ 
Ap pendacrrieeitele «/sielcleiclelsicie sles cielo stele ciele's esi 
Dehinabson (Of elermsia cleo. oe ocr cia ce 
MAGE ab ON ADCS) siaiaicle! cl slcielalele craic) orale 
Tables of Resource Statistics....17 
Siecive siereteterexcisteteleteierciers eieclerarave,« hey ii} 
NOEN EMU breicisis\c ele olcleierele olelereus SO 
Souchern UNDE © <615 cue.s Chere cremicnciee 48 
COINS Gag aaboGbanGOGoo oUCOCo Dd!) 
Tree Species of New Hampshire.100 
Shrub, Vine, and Occasional 
Tree Species of New 
Hampshire ..ccccceccccesceoees 102 
Relative Density and Frequency 
and Importance Values of 
Lesser Woody Stems by 
Geographic Unit and Species, 
New Hampshire, 1983.........104 
Metric Equivalents of Units Used 
Eripel na seateCp Orb icl sic clsiel= slelele =) ero Of, 


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 forest inventories of all 
states to provide up-to-date information 
on the forest resource of the Nation. 
The initial inventory of New Hampshire's 
forest resources was conducted in 1948 
(Larson et al. 1954). Succeeding 
inventories were carried out in 1960 
(Ferguson and Jensen 1963), 1973 
(Kingsley 1976), and 1983 (this 
report)--the first year for which 
Wildlife habitat resources data were 
collected. 


This fourth inventory was a cooperative 
effort of the New Hampshire Department 
of Resources and Economic Development, 
the USDA Soil Conservation Service, the 


White Mountain National Forest, and the 
Northeastern Forest Experiment Station. 
The Forest Inventory, Analysis, and 
Economics Unit of the Northeastern 
Forest Experiment Station conducted the 
inventory on all forest land, developed 
the resource tables, and prepared this 
report. 


Photo interpreters systematically 
plotted 15,950 points on new aerial 
photographs and classified these points 
according to land use. Points 
determined to be timberland were further 
stratified into cubic-foot volume 
classes. A subsample of 697 of the 
photo points was randomly chosen to be 
established on the ground. Data from 
the ground plots were edited and 
summarized using the FINSYS computer 
system. 


The 1983 survey of New Hampshire's 
forest resources involved several 
associated studies and considerable 
analysis. Reports on forest resources, 
(i.e. area, number of trees, and 
volume), biomass, ownership, primary 
forest products industry, and habitat 
resources will be published. 


For additional data summaries or 
information, contact the Forest 
Inventory, Analysis, and Economics Unit, 
USDA Forest Service, 370 Reed Road, 
Broomall, PA 19008 (phone 215-461-3037) . 


This report is New Hampshire's first in 
a continuing series of state-by-state 
Wildlife habitat resource bulletins. 
The format used was chosen to 
expeditiously report on the Forest 
Inventory and Analysis habitat survey. 
It is our intent to write additional 
publications(s) that will include 
detailed analyses and interpretation of 
the habitat survey. 


Forest Inventory reports are produced at 
a scale appropriate for regional (i.e. 
large county or multi-county and larger 
areas) applications. The information in 
the publications is useful to resource 
professionals concerned with planning 
and forming policy for extensive areas 
of forest land. The use of the 


information for site specific 
applications would be as background 
standards for comparison to the site 
conditions. 


E le VAN licata 


This habitat report, used in conjunction 
with the timber (Frieswyk and Malley 
1985) and ownership reports, provides a 
detailed description of the forest land 
of New Hampshire. From these reports, a 
user can select tables that collectively 
describe a specific habitat resource. 


The following example describes the 
condition of regional white-tailed deer 
(Qdocoileus virginianus) habitat by 
county (Fig. 1). The example 
illustrates the use of Forest Inventory 
information to evaluate a specific 
habitat. The process can be duplicated 
for other wildlife species by using 
tabular data that represent components 
of a species habitat. 


In this example, the percentage of total 
land area in forest/nonforest and number 
of edge indices are measures of forest 
landscape diversity. Nonforest lands, 
particularly agricultural lands, can be 
an important component of deer habitat. 
As this survey is of forested land, it 
would be inappropriate to characterize 
nonforest land resources. Users of this 
report are advised to secure 
supplemental, comparable information on 
nonforest lands for a more complete 
habitat evaluation. Generally, the 
greater the diversity of land use, the 
better the habitat conditions for deer. 
The percentage of timberland in 
sawtimber, conifer forest types is a 
measure of winter range availability. 
The percentage of timberland in 
sapling/seedling forest cover is related 
to the availability of foraging 

habitat. The percentage of timberland 
in forest stands of 100 acres or less is 
a measure of the diversity of 
forest-land cover. This 

habitat component, as with previous 
landscape diversity measures, is a 
double-edged sword. A small level of 
diversity implies extensive forest cover 
offering little variety of habitat 


conditions, whereas a high level of 
diversity indicates excessive forest 
fragmentation resulting in a 
deterioration in cover value and 
impediments to travel to parts of an 
animal's home range. Mast tree and 
sapling, seedling, and shrub densities 
are measures of potential forage 
resources. 


The following is a comparison of New 
Hampshire geographic unit white-tailed 
deer habitat conditions with overall 
state and adjacent Vermont and Maine 
(Fig. 2) habitat conditions; 


Northern Unit 


#Forest area is a greater than 
the state, much greater than 
adjacent Vermont, and equivalent to 
adjacent Maine. 


*Landscape diversity is less than 
the state and northern Vermont, but 
greater than western Maine. 


*Winter range area is slightly less 
than the state and equivalent to 
adjacent regions of Vermont and 
Maine. 


*Foraging range area is equivalent 
to the state and less than adjacent 
Vermont or Maine. 


*#Small acreage stand area is less 
than the state, equivalent to 
northern Vermont, and greater than 
western Maine. 


*#Mast potential is less than the 
state, slightly greater than 
adjacent Maine, and much greater 
than adjacent Vermont. 


#Browse potential is slightly 
greater than the state with 
equivalent use, greater than 
northern Vermont and slightly less 
than western Maine, but with less 
use than either region. 


The Northern unit of New Hampshire has 
slightly poorer white-tailed deer 
habitat conditions than the 


9°OI 6°41 US UG 7° OT T°6 T°S €°OT 6° OT TeIOL 
Ue 0°0 6°€ G°L £°0¢ 9° 0°0 0°0O Sieyj}0 pue sefoeds eTqeuotjsenh 
€°er Gail €°8S 6°ST O°L 0°8 G°6 T°? pesmoiq ATIUenberzuyT 
9°6 6° 471 €°CT 7°8 8°9 w=) L°Or O°?cr pesmoiq ATuoUMIOD 
a oa G*°0Z 7° CI 7° 61 9°OT 6°T 9°91 T° 41 pesmoiq AT Tpeoy 
asn aSMOIg peATesgO YIM JUsd.Ied — [eT qUejod ssmoig 
6°S T°9 0°9 We 0°9 0°9 €°S L°y TeIOL 
L°0 T°0 7°0 o°T 9°0 7°T L°0 T°O Si9y}O pue seyoeds eT qeuozjsond 
8°0 8°0 O°T 8°0 8°0 7°0 O°T 9°0 pesmoiqg ATJuenbesjzuy 
GS 6°? G°e Gey) €°€ e°E L°? 6°7 pesmoig ATUoUMOD 
Gil C°C T°T 8°0 €°T T°T O°T T°T pesmoiq AT Tpeoy 
pue[iequt} e1l0e jed swaqs qniys pue ‘Sut[ pees ‘3uyt{Tdes puesnouj — [Tet juejod ssmoig 
C° LC B°e 7° 87 7° 9€ 0°€? 8°6E G°G?é L°CE pil) 
G*L 8°L T°€l T°€ G°9 7°S G°TT L°8 yooog 
pueTieqmt} er9e aod saveiq - [eTIUSjOod JAseY 
9°06 S°L6 o°49 0°O0T L° 76 e° 18 €° 76 L°96 Serse OOT UeyA SSeT spuejs 
LQ) 8°47 L°6 T°6 €°or all €°s L°9 BUTT pees /Zut {deg 
O°9E €°ry 6°62 8° Ly 7°17 8°0S 9°EC 0°O0€ sedk azezqpuoo “‘requTqAMes 
Bore pueTAequUT] JuedI1eg 
c°8S C° 6E G°79 S°78 1°79 6°97 W° LE 6°78 —qnayg pue —3Se10q wns 
6°26 6° 8S c° LOT W- VET 9° 70T 8° col 6°6S G°9TT TeIOL 
(Z PTGeL) SseoTpuy eSpe jo i1equny 
8°sI G°eT O°1d 9°92 G° LT 7°07 6°OT O°SsT pueT 3Se10FUON 
c°18 G°98 0°6L VEL G°¢8 9°SL 1°68 0°S8 pueT 3Se104 
(I 21981) Bere Te}0R JUsDIeg 
aTug Ajun0D Ajuno9 Ajunop Ajunog Ajuno9 Ajuno9 Ayunog queuodmos 
uzeyANos UPATT TNS paoszzeazas wey su TyxD0y YORUTAIO O10qSTTTH ai zyseyy deuyleg 7e37qeH 


€861 ‘e1tysdwey men ‘3 fTuN OTYyderZ003 pue AjuNOD Aq ‘3e9TGeY JZep peTTeI—e7TYM FO 
UOTITPpuoD 2YyQ oqTAISep AT2ATIOETTOO Jeu ‘soeTqe} sdAnos yAIM ‘squeUuOdMOD AeITqeY peq.DeTes——°][ eINnsTy 


L°OT 8° OT 0° OT 9° TT 6°8 TeIOL 
Wee We 0° OT SiG 6° OT Si94yjO pue seafoods oT qeuoyT json) 
0°8 €°? 7° OT 6°S 0°0 pesmorq AT JUeNnbsrzuy 
8°8 €°8 T°8 6°8 8°S pesmoig ATuoUMOD 
L°8t L°1?@ G*scT 7°GZ 0°12 pesmoig ATT peoy 
(setqe 7 Aqunod pue tun *Z] eTqGe],) BSN BssMOIq peATOSqO YIFM JUs0Ied — TeTJUeVOd ssmorg 
7° L 6°8 6°9 T°?! 1°9 TeIOL 
C°0 €°0 Z°0 €°0 €°0 Si9yjO pue sopfoods oTqeuoT json 
6°0 O°T 8°0 Gel Col pesmoiq AT Uenberzuy 
G°? 9°S n° 7°8 6°72 pesmoag ATuouM0D 
CY ik 6°T G*T G°? 9°T pesmorq AT Tpeoy 
(seTqeq Aqunod pue jyun *7{T eTqey) 
pueTiequy}, etoe ied sweqs qnays pue ‘S8uy; [poss ‘B3upt{des puesnoyy — [TeTqUejod ssmoag 
T° ZT (Ll 6 |l 0°0 8°ET PFO 
7°6 Comal 0° OT 6°S £°€? yooog 
(seTqe7 Ajunod pue yun ‘9 oTqGey,) pueTasquyq else aed seer - [eT uejod AseW 
SIL 8°S9 0°?S L°vl WAS /L Sort9e QO, uey SsseT spurqjs 
L£°9 8°9 O°L G°8 G5, BuytT{ pees /SuyTdes 
1°62 8°72 9°02 G°1z 0°62 sedky azezpuod ‘roquyqmes 
(seTqez Ajunod pue jfun ‘¢ ‘y seTqey,) Bele pueTAsquTy Jueortsg 
n° 7H G°97 L°SE 6°81 (GENK -qnayg pue —jsei0qg wng 
6° VL L°oy 7°19 G°67¢ 8°er TeIOL 
Se0Tpuy espo jo azAequny 
€°eT 8°L €° Or T°9 9°9 pueT  JSsrTOJUON 
L°98 f° 76 L°68 6° €6 7° €6 pueT 4S9104 
Bore [POR Jusod19g 
si tug } yun Ajuno) AQuno) AjunoD jusuodu0s 
TIV uray ION uojyejay soo TTos11e9 3e3TQey 


penuytquopj--*] eansty 


8°7T G°te 9°92 T°9T TBI0], 
9°7C c°9 O°Ez Hee si9y.0 pue sopfoeds oTqeuoyzyson) 
8° CI GS’°6l 9°CE Geral pesmoiq ATJUeNnbeazuy 
6° TT 6°91 8°72 6°71 pesmoaq ATuUowUOD 
6°?T C~9E ° 92 G° Le pasmoiq ATTpeoy 
asn oSMOIq peATesqo y FM JUso1ed — TeTJuejod ssmorag 
c°8 T°6 8°9 8°9 TeIoL 
Z°0 €°0 9°0 Z°0 sieyqoO pue safoods aTqeuoyz sent 
9°T 9°0 G*T 8°0 pesmoig ATJuenbeazuy 
o°y T°S G°Ee Iv pesmoiq ATuoWwMOD 
OT Lat Gel 9°T pesmorq AT TPeoy 
pueTiequtq o1oe aed swaqs qnays pue ‘38utTposs ‘Suytdes puesnoy. -— TepFjuajod asmojg 
LEG T°? 8°S O°T pile) 
L°sS 7° OT iy 2} Gy) yoood 
pueTioqut, o10e aod sa0a1q - [TeyTQuejod yseyW 
€°98 7° 8E L°€6 1°S9 sere OOT ueya sseT spueqs 
O°zI z°8 8°6 9° TT BuytT pees /Sut {des 
(Sy) G°1?é O°ZT (AS 44 soedAq iszypTUuoOD ‘1r9quyzAMes 
Role pueTAequyy, Jueo109g 
8°72 e° LT G°€9 G° 8h -qnayg pue —3se10q wns 
€°S7 0°82 7°06 C°CL TeIOL 
SooTpuy o8pyq 
1°72 6°9 9°?? €°77 pueT 3Se10JUON 
6°SL 1°€6 UP alede LL MG/L pueT 389104 
Bore [e}0Q JUI.I0g 
Aeg uze3seM 37un aFun 


oose9 uzey nos Urey ION quouodwmos 
aaa 3e971qQeH 
ouTey quowi9, 


(Z861) eUTeW pue (€86T) JuOMIeA Quooefpe 10F ATUN oFYderaB0es Aq QeITQeY 1I9ep 
PETTeI-SATYUM JO UOTIT_puod sy oqTAoSep ATeATIOeETTOO JWeYI squouodMOD YeqITqey peyoeTes—-°7 oeansTy 


state overall due to the predominant 
forest cover, low landscape diversity, 
and lesser mast potential. Adjacent 
northern Vermont habitat offers more 
landscape diversity, but this is 
slightly offset by a lesser mast and 
browse potential and greater browse 
use. Adjacent western Maine has 
generally poorer habitat conditions as 
it is even more extensively forested 
with lesser mast potential and excessive 
browse use on an equivalent browse 
resource. 


Southern Unit 


#Forest area is slightly less than 
the state and greater than adjacent 
southern Vermont and the Casco Bay 
unit of Maine. 


*The landscape is more diverse than 
the state, and adjacent Maine but 
less than southern Vermont. 


#Winter range is more abundant than 
the state and adjacent Vermont and 
slightly less than adjacent Maine. 


*Foraging range area is equivalent 
to the state and less than adjacent 
regions of Maine and Vermont. 


#Mast potential is greater than the 
state and southern Vermont due to 
increased oak density and 
equivalent to adjacent Maine. 


*Browse resource potential is less 
than the state and adjacent regions 
of Vermont and Maine and with 
greater observed use in all 
comparisons. 


The southern unit has white-tailed deer 
habitat conditions equivalent to those 
for the state but there should be a 
concern for the fragmentation of forest 
acreage. The unit has slightly better 
habitat conditions than adjacent 
southern Vermont because of the greater 
mast resource potential and much lesser 
use of the browse resource. The unit 
has slightly poorer habitat conditions 
than the adjacent Casco Bay unit of 


Maine because of less browse resource 
potential and a more fragmented forest. 


This white-tailed deer habitat 
evaluation could be completed for other 
Wildlife species. It should work best 
for species with broad habitat 
requirements (eurytopic) and with large 
home ranges as these limits are most 
comparable to the Forest Inventory. 


In addition to a synthesis of various 
habitat information for species specific 
habitat evaluation, the survey is very 
useful as a benchmark report on the 
status of individual habitat components 
useful to a variety of wildlife. This 
information will gain value after the 
subsequent (1990's) resurvey of the 
State's forest resources. At that time, 
trends can be identified that will be 
useful for managing and improving New 
Hampshire's wildlife habitat resources. 


Highlights 


* New Hampshire, with 4,987.2 thousand 
acres of forest land, is 87 percent 
forested. Forest land has increased 
only slightly since 1960. The three 
northern counties of New Hampshire are 
more heavily forested than the seven 
southern counties. 


# Land use patterns are considerably 
more diverse in southern New Hampshire 
than the north, and the southeastern 
corner of the state has the most 
diverse landscape. 


# Private ownership of forest land 
predominates (86 percent) public 
ownership throughout the state. 


* Sawtimber stands dominate, covering 61 
percent of the forest area, and the 
Northern Hardwood group is the 
predominant forest type group (42 
percent). 


® Forest stands of less than 50 acres 
are more common (67 percent) than 
larger stands. 


# Northern red oak is the most common 
mast-producing tree, followed closely 
by American beech. 


# Balsam fir is the most common standing 
dead tree in New Hampshire's forest 
while yellow birch is the most common 
standing dead tree with observed 
cavities. Of both live and dead 
trees, red maple is the most often 
tallied species with an observed 
cavity. 


* Brambles are the most common 
understory woody-stemmed species. For 
all understory woody-stemmed species, 
browse use is generally light to none. 


Reliabilit etheo Reb imat 


The data in this report were based on a 
carefully designed sample of forest 
conditions throughout New Hampshire. 
The data are estimates and the 
reliability of the estimating procedure 
can be judged by two important 
statistical measures: accuracy and 
precision. Among statisticians, 
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 mainly interested in the accuracy 
of the inventory, but in most instances 
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 
resources of New Hampshire. If 
questions arise, the data are reviewed 
and reanalyzed to resolve the 
differences. Also, great care is taken 
to keep all sources of procedural error 
to a minimum by 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. 


The following example illustrates how to 
use reported sampling errors. There are 
an estimated 102.9 million standing dead 
trees in New Hampshire (Table 8). The 
reported sampling error is 5.7 percent 
or 5,862.8 thousand trees. If we assume 
that the estimates of this statistic are 
normally distributed, this means that if 
there were no errors in procedure and we 
repeated the survey in the same way, the 
odds are 2 to 1 (66 percent probability) 
that the resulting estimate of standing 
dead trees in the State would be 97.0 to 
108.7 million trees, or 102.9 + 5.9 
million trees. Similarly there is a 95 
percent probability (19 to 1) that the 
estimate would be 91.1 to 114.6, or 
102.9 + 11.7 million trees. 


Estimates are most precise or reliable 
at the state level, followed by unit 
estimates, and then county estimates. 
For example, where the state level 
sampling error on the number of standing 
dead trees is 5.7 percent, the same 
value for the Northern unit is 7.9 
percent (Table 16), the Southern unit is 
7.1 percent (Table 24), and county 
values range from 11.0 percent (Coos 
County, Table 39) to 25.3 percent 
(Strafford County, Table 54). Thus, 
county estimates are often considerably 
less reliable than unit or state 
estimates. In general, as the size of 
the estimate decreases in relation to 
the total, the sampling error, expressed 
as a percentage of the estimate, 
increases. 


Lit Cited 


Brooks, Robert T.; Scott, Charles T. 
Quantifying land-use edge from aerial 
photographs. Wildlife Society 
Bulletin. 11:389-391; 1983. 


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


Frieswyk, Thomas S.; Malley, Anne M. 
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; 1985. 100 p. 


Kingsley, Neal P. The forest resource 
of New Hampshire. Resour. Bull. 
NE-43. Broomall, PA: U.S. Department 
of Agriculture, Forest Service, 
Northeastern Forest Experiment 
Station; 1976. T71ip. 


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


Appendix 
Definition of Terms 


al: il IE - Land with 
herbaceous plant cover, both grasses 
and/or forbs, including cropland, 
pasture land, and natural grass lands. 


Aquatic edge. An edge condition created 


when a terrestrial land use abuts a 
lake, pond, river, stream, or major 
wetland. 


Bog/Marsh/Swamp. Land that has less 
than 16.7 percent stocking with live 
trees; and which characteristically 
supports low, generally herbaceous or 
shrubby vegetation, and which is 
intermittently covered with water during 
all seasons; includes tidal areas that 
are covered with salty or brackish water 
during high tides. 


Browse. Forage resource; defined here 
as current twig growth of woody-stemmed 
plants occurring between 1 and 8 feet in 
height. 


B en la Classification 
of each woody-stemmed species based on 
observed selection by white-tailed deer 
during winters in Maine (provided by 
Maine Department of Inland Fisheries and 
Wildlife). Local preference may vary 
greatly from this classification. 


Browse utilization class. Four levels 
of browse use; none, light (1-10 percent 
available), moderate (11-40 percent), 
and heavy (greater than 40 percent). 


Cavity. A hollowed out space in a tree, 
either natural or faunal caused; 
frequently used as a nesting site or 
temporary refuge by many species of 
Wildlife. 


Commercial species. Tree species 


presently or prospectively suitable for 
industrial wood products. Excludes 
species of typically small size, poor 
form, or inferior quality, such as 
hawthorn and sumac. 


Condition class. Classification of 
trees based on live or dead and 
condition of top of the tree (i.e. 
intact, broken, dead). 


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 of harvest, and 
maintained orchards. 


Cull tree. A live tree predominantly 
rotten or of rough form (see 
Growing-stock trees). 


Cultural land. Land with human 
development as the major land cover; 
includes industrial, commercial, and 
residential land uses. 


Diameter at breast height (d.b.h.). The 


diameter outside bark of a standing tree 
measured at 4-1/2 feet above the ground. 


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


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


Forest industry lands. Lands owned by 
companies or individuals operating 
primary wood-using plants. 


Forest land. Land at least 10 percent 
stocked with trees of any size or that 
formerly had such tree cover and is not 
currently developed for nonforest use. 
The minimum area for classification of 
forest land is 1 acre. 


Forest type. A classification of forest 
land by species that form a plurality of 
live tree basal area stocking. 


Forest-type group. A combination of 
forest types that share closely 
associated species or site 
requirements. The many forest types in 
New Hampshire were combined into the 
following major forest-type groups (the 
descriptions apply to forests in New 
Hampshire): 


a. White/red pine--forests in 
which white pine, hemlock, or red pine, 
singly or in combination, make up a 
plurality of the stocking; common 
associates include red maple, red 
spruce, balsam fir, northern red oak, 
paper birch, and aspen. 


b.- Spruce/fir--forests in which 
red spruce, northern white-cedar, balsam 
fir, white spruce, black spruce, or 
tamarack, singly or in combination, make 
up a plurality of the stocking; common 
associates include paper birch, red 
maple, aspen, white pine, hemlock, 
yellow birch, and sugar maple. 


ec. Hard pine--forests in which 
pitch pine makes up a plurality of the 
stocking; gray birch is an associate of 
this rare type group. 


d. Qak/pine--forests in which 
northern red oak or white ash, singly or 
in combination, make up a plurality of 
the stocking but where white pine 
contributes 25 to 50 percent of the 
stocking; beech and red spruce are 
associates. 


e. QOak/hickory--forests in which 
upland oaks, red maple (when associated 
with central hardwoods), or hawthorn, 
singly or in combination, make up a 
plurality of the stocking and in which 
white pine makes up less than 75 percent 
of the stocking; common associates 
include white pine, paper birch, red 
spruce, beech, hemlock, and balsam fir. 


f. Elm/ash/red maple--forests in 


which black ash, elm, red maple (when 
growing on wet sites), willow, or green 
ash, singly or in combination, make up a 
plurality of the stocking; common 
associates include balsam fir, northern 
white-cedar, aspen, and white ash. 


g- Northern hardwoods--forests in 
which sugar maple, beech, yellow birch, 
red maple (when associated with northern 
hardwoods), pin cherry, or black cherry, 
singly or in combination, make up a 
plurality of the stocking; common 
associates include balsam fir, red 
spruce, paper birch, hemlock, white ash, 
aspen, and white pine. 


h. 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 balsam fir, red 
maple, red spruce, white spruce, and 
white pine. 


Growing=stock trees. Live trees of 


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


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


Harvested cropland. All land from which 


crops were harvested or hay was cut and 
all land in orchards, citrus groves, 
vineyards, and nursery and greenhouse 
products. 


Idle farmland. Former cropland or 
pasture that has not been tended within 
the last 2 years and that has less than 
16.7 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). 


Industrial and commercial land. Supply 


yards, parking lots, factories, etc. 


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 1/8 statute mile wide; and 
lakes, reservoirs, and ponds less than 
40 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 edge. A condition created by 


the juxtaposition of two differing land 
uses. 


Mast. Seed produced by woody-stemmed, 
perennial plants, generally refers to 
soft (fruit) and hard (nuts) mast. 


Mining and waste land. 


gravel pits, dumps. 


Surface mining, 


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


National Forest Jands. Federal lands 


legally designated as National Forests 
or purchase units and other lands 


10 


administered as part of the National 
Forest System by the USDA Forest 
Service. 


Noncommercial forest land. 
Productive-reserved, urban, and 
unproductive forest land. 


Noncensus water. Streams/rivers between 
120 feet and 1/8 mile in width, and 
bodies of water between 1 and 40 acres 
in size. The Bureau of the Census 
classifies such water as land. 


Noncommercial species. Tree species of 
typically small size, poor form, or 
inferior quality that normally do not 
develop into trees suitable for 
industrial 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, 
and highways. 


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


Other cropland. Includes cropland used 
for cover crops; legumes, 
soil-improvement grasses, but not 
harvested and not pastured; cropland on 
which all crops failed; cropland in 
summer fallow and idle cropland. 


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


Pasture land. Includes any pasture land 
other than cropland and woodland 
pasture. Can include lands which had 
applied lime fertilizer, seed, improved 
by irrigation, 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. 


Poletimber stands. 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 poletimber exceeds that 
of sawtimber. 


Poletimber trees. Live trees of 
commercial species meeting regional 
specifications of soundness and form and 
at least 5.0 inches in d.b-h., but 
smaller than sawtimber trees. 


Productive-reserved forest land. Forest 
land sufficiently productive to qualify 
as timberland, but withdrawn from timber 
utilization through statute, 
administrative designation, or exclusive 
use for Christmas tree production. 


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


Rights-of-way. Highways, pipelines, 


powerlines, canals. 


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


Rough trees. (a) The same as rotten 
trees, except that rough trees do not 
meet regional specifications for freedom 
from defect primarily because of 
roughness or poor form, and (b) all live 
trees of noncommercial species. 


Saplings. Live trees 1.0 through 4.9 
inches d.b-h. 


- i - 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 saplings or 
seedlings or both. 


Sawtimber stands. 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 trees. Live trees 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 sawlog or two noncontiguous 
8-foot sawlogs, and meeting regional 
specifications for freedom from defect. 


Seedlings. Live trees less than 1.0 
inch d.b-h. that are expected to 
survive. 


Shrub. Woody-stemmed perennial plant, 
generally with no well-defined main stem 
and less than 12 feet in height at 
maturity; defined by species. 


shrub land. Land with shrub and/or tree 
cover and an obvious herbaceous 
understory; average canopy height of 
less than 25 feet and crown closure of 
less than 70 percent. 


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


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


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


Stand area class. The area, contiguous 
to the plot, that is of the same overall 
stand size and major type group 
(hardwood, softwood, or uniform mixture 
of both). 


Standing dead tree (snag) - woody stem 
greater than 5.0 inches in diameter and 
10 feet in height. 


11 


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


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, measured by basal area 
and/or number of trees in a stand 
compared to the basal area and/or number 
of trees required to fully use the 
growth potential of the land (or the 
stocking standard). In the Eastern 
United States this standard is 75 square 
feet of basal area per acre for trees 
5.0 inches d.b.h. and larger, or its 
equivalent in numbers of trees per acre 
for seedlings and saplings. 


Two categories of stocking are used: 


All live trees - these are used to 
classify forest land, forest types, and 
stand size classes. 


Growing-stock trees - these are 
used to classify stand-size classes. 


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


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 (previously termed 
commercial forest land). 


Tract/multiple family. Multiple 
individual residential units or attached 
units (e.g. apartment buildings, 
condominiums) and immediately adjacent 
managed land. 


Transportation right-of-way. Land 


associated with highways and railroads. 


Trees. Woody plants that have 
well-developed stems and are usually 
more than 12 feet in height at maturity; 
defined by species. 


12 


Unproductive 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. 


Urban forest land. Noncommercial forest 
land within urban areas that is 
completely surrounded by urban 
development (not parks), whether 
commercial, industrial, or residential. 


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


Windbreak/hedgerow. Linear areas, less 
than 120 feet in width; with 


predominantly tree and/or shrub 
vegetation. 


Index to Tables 


The following tables are divided into 
four major sections: (1) State, (2) 
Northern Unit, (3) Southern Unit, and 
(4) County. 


State Tables 


Table No. Page 


1. Land area by land use class and 
county, New Hampshire, 1983......+++..18 


2. Index to land use edge by type 
of land use and county, New 
Hampshire, 1981, 19822 Fc ccccm crates clu 


3. Area of timberland by ownership 
class and geographic unit, New 
Hampshare's 1963s clemelesiele cleleleieleicleinicierie ae 


4, Area of timberland by forest 
type, forest-type group, and stand- 
size class, New Hampshire, 1983...++++23 


5. Area of timberland by stand area 
class and county, New Hampshire, 
IDES Sic Si cs oe w Mrome es ale clove te tele ere eteleenere car 


Table No. 


Gi Number of all live nut- and 
fruit-producing trees on timberland 

by species and diameter class, New 
EBIMOSMlees; IIosSioacqcoddcosesosudogdadsZs) 


The Number of shrubs and saplings on 
timberland by stand-size class, type 

of stem, and mast type, New Hampshire, 
NO OSterererciciararclatererereccfaic’ sstarelercicicvevclers ets cee oO 


8. Number of standing dead trees on 
timberland by species, condition, and 
diameter class, New Hampshire, 1983...27 


9. Number of trees with observed 
cavities on timberland by species and 
condition class, New Hampshire, 

NQSSm se cceccioceee cease sewtls veces cave os 629 


10. Number of shrubs, seedlings, and 
saplings on timberland by species, 
browse preference class, and stand- 

size class, New Hampshire, 1983.......30 


11. Number of shrubs, seedlings, and 
saplings on timberland by species, 
browse preference class, and forest- 
type group, New Hampshire, 1983.......32 


12. Number of shrubs, seedlings, and 
saplings on timberland by species, 
browse preference class, and browse 
utilization class, New Hampshire, 

AGS MenmnNenatersieters eLelrelcVercieveretere stare sisie's c)stoce «Set 


Northern Unit 


13. Area of timberland by forest 
type, forest-type group, and stand- 
size class, Northern Unit, New 
Bempsittreige al GOS eae cicietalcie cicicicieia ciatetee)s/s (511) 
14. Number of all live nut- and 
fruit-producing trees on timberland 

by species and diameter class, 

Northern Unit, New Hampshire, 1983....38 


15. Number of shrubs and saplings 

on timberland by stand-size class, 

type of stem, and mast type, 

Northern Unit, New Hampshire, 1983....39 


Page Table No. Page 


16. Number of standing dead trees on 
timberland by species, condition, and 
diameter class, Northern Unit, New 
Hampshire 19 Osiemeeicisierce selected eel cla cers <0 


17. Number of trees with observed 
cavities on timberland by species 
and condition, Northern Unit, New 
FAIMOTAUEAG WE soscodoccooadco0ancco0 dll 


18. Number of shrubs, seedlings, and 
saplings on timberland by species, 
browse preference class, and stand- 

size class, Northern Unit, New 

Hams hrnrce met OSteraverercioieleisiciel elele) «icreleteler ser eA 


19. Number of shrubs, seedlings, and 
saplings on timberland by species, 
browse preference class, and forest- 
type group, Northern Unit, New 
Hamosnirenn to Osietelereisicrelaiciclotelelotelalclerererel= ret 


20. Number of shrubs, seedlings, and 
saplings on timberland by species, 
browse preference class, and browse 
utilization class, Northern Unit, 

News Hampsharres 19105 sielels olsleiel« cleloreio leis 40 


Southern Unit 


21. Area of timberland by forest 

type, forest-type group, and stand- 

size class, Southern Unit, New 
Eeiosaiees IeBSsactoncsddocdascos dco aay) 


22. Number of all live nut- and 
fruit-producing trees on timberland 

by species and diameter class, 

Southern Unit, New Hampshire, 1983....50 


23. Number of shrubs and saplings on 
timberland by stand-size class, type 

of stem, and mast type, Southern Unit, 
New Hampshirel 9 19GSia eae acne sleecinee ee) 


24. Number of standing dead trees on 
timberland by species, condition, and 
diameter class, Southern Unit, New 
Hampshrcnmnt|Osierera|aleleistsierelsiejole cletstele)cre)e1e5 2 


25. Number of trees with observed 
cavities on timberland by species and 
condition, Southern Unit, New 

Hampshire 1 GOS eilelsisleisia aleieisivicls(esiee<ie <(s55 


13 


Table No. 


26. Number of shrubs, seedlings, and 
saplings on timberland by species, 
browse preference class, and stand- 

size class, Southern Unit, New 
Hampshire) 19 03israiiclelalareilclelerciatreroicreyerenar eo 


27. Number of shrubs, seedlings, and 
saplings on timberland by species, 
browse preference class, and forest- 
type group, Southern Unit, New 
Hampshire mal Oi OSietelelotenstelaietetelteteletenelsieioneiele 0 


28. Number of shrubs, seedlings, and 
saplings on timberland by species, 
browse preference class, and browse 
utilization class, Southern Unit, New 
Hampshire) it 9105) ere clelaleteicrcisie)elniciorercicreicisiaie 510 


County Tables 


29. Number of all live nut- and 
fruit-producing trees on timberland 

by species and diameter class, 

Belknap County, New Hampshire, 1983...61 


30. Number of standing dead trees on 
timberland by species, condition, 

and diameter class, Belknap County, 

New Hampshire, 1983......ccsecccccsess02 


31. Number of shrubs, seedlings, and 
saplings on timberland by species, 
browse preference class, and browse 
utilization class, Belknap County, 

New Hampshire, o983\0c0.0 «ee cieicie cies aieie OS 


32. Number of all live nut- and 
fruit-producing trees on timberland 

by species and diameter class, Carroll 
County, New Hampshire, 1983...........04 


33. Number of standing dead trees on 
timberland by species, condition, 

and diameter class, Carroll County, 

New Hampshire, 1983...ccccccccccccees 05 


34. Number of shrubs, seedlings, and 
saplings on timberland by species, 
browse preference class, and browse 
utilization class, Carroll County, 

New, Hampshire; 11983). <<... «siejeleberain tele eye! 10.0 


14 


Page Table No. pase 


35. Number of all live nut- and 
fruit-producing trees on timberland 

by species and diameter class, 

Cheshire County, New Hampshire, 1983. .68 


36. Number of standing dead trees on 
timberland by species, condition, 

and diameter class, Cheshire County, 

New Hampshire, 1983......ceccceceeees 009 


37. Number of shrubs, seedlings, and 
saplings on timberland by species, 
browse preference class, and browse 
utilization class, Cheshire County, 

New, Hampishiire}, 19103)- = ieielelaneiereiclcterelaletanetoreitO) 


38. Number of all live nut- and 
fruit-producing trees on timberland 

by species and diameter class, Coos 
County, New Hampshire, 1983...........72 


39. Number of standing dead trees on 
timberland by species, condition, 

and diameter class, Coos County, New 
Hampshire, ol GGSiecjerccicicielelsloleisteioieuaianeneneter snes 


40. Number of shrubs, seedlings, and 
saplings on timberland by species, 
browse preference class, and browse 
utilization class, Coos County, New 
EEIoRi Maia, Welsbhagondboocdodsoousodaoooye 


41. Number of all live nut- and 
fruit-producing trees on timberland 

by species and diameter class, 

Grafton County, New Hampshire, 1983...76 


42, Number of standing dead trees on 
timberland. by species, condition, 

and diameter class, Grafton County, 

New Hampshire), 1963%c << elcleicinieloo alalelelers toi 


43. Number of shrubs, seedlings, and 
saplings on timberland by species, 
browse preference class, and browse 
utilization class, Grafton County, 

New Hampshire, 1983... .ceccsuscececne (G0 


44, Number of all live nut- and 
fruit-producing trees on timberland 

by species and diameter class, 

Hillsboro County, New Hampshire, 

VOSS sine cceRinicco cteseiarate er cietobelerate nists tereteberercreesoU 


Table No. Page 


45. Number of standing dead trees on 
timberland by species, condition, 

and diameter class, Hillsboro County, 
New Hampshire, 1983...c.ccecccceccceee Ol 


46. Number of shrubs, seedlings, and 
saplings on timberland by species, 
browse preference class, and browse 
utilization class, Hillsboro County, 
Newetampsniresn 19OSia«icliieislaicisl«le ole sie «OZ 


47. Number of all live nut- and 
fruit-producing trees on timberland 

by species and diameter class, 

Merrimack County, New Hampshire, 

AO Getrteterciercleters) sie evelele\els ole clcvcteie isiejeieie’s o1ele OU 


48. Number of standing dead trees on 
timberland by species, condition, and 
diameter class, Merrimack County, New 
Hampshire GOsitaivicioisic sle)eleleieletereicjolele ele OD 


49. Number of shrubs, seedlings, and 
saplings on timberland by species, 
browse preference class, and browse 
utilization class, Merrimack County, 

New Hampshire, 19835 2.05.0... coaseise 000 


50. Number of all live nut- and 
fruit-producing trees on timberland by 
species and diameter class, Rockingham 
County, New Hampshire, 1983...........88 


51. Number of standing dead trees on 
timberland by species, condition, 

and diameter class, Rockingham County, 
NewoHampshire, 1983)... ccccecccceccc es 009 


52. Number of shrubs, seedlings, and 
saplings on timberland by species, 
browse preference class, and browse 
utilization class, Rockingham County, 
NeweHampshire 99 O3ia 0 sc o/c 6 ole «i clciejs cree 90 


53. Number of all live nut- and 
fruit-producing trees on timberland 

by species and diameter class, 

Strafford County, New Hampshire, 

PPS oso arraleia ou ie VSre)teiie le sane oue Ye. ola’ ois: ofaieleve eteveiere 


54. Number of standing dead trees on 
timberland by species, condition, 

and diameter class, Strafford County, 
NewoHampshare. 1983 iciec « <cics cc cele ies ce 93 


Table No. Page 


55. Number of shrubs, seedlings, and 
saplings on timberland by species, 
browse preference class, and browse 
utilization class, Strafford County, 

New shampish ire s 1983). 60.0 26 ee os ors oso ee OH 


56. Number of all live nut- and 
fruit-producing trees on timberland 

by species and diameter class, 

Sullivan County, New Hampshire, 1983. .96 


57- Number of standing dead trees on 
timberland by species, condition, 

and diameter class, Sullivan County, 
NewsHampshares 1983\< 6c sicic ole sere oo « ono Oil 


58. Number of shrubs, seedlings, and 
saplings on timberland by species, 
browse preference class, and browse 
utilization class, Sullivan County, 

New Hampshire, 1983.....cccescceeeeee 98 


15 


aa weds rr Tr 
re a Zt | ¥ aes i" 

ae | De ee: tenes Te eet Ga Fe rented 
Oe ue ee eG a al serps ini crt va 
Leadaly pad ai) ae eet ee eg 1 
phat ni SWS. Rew fem atte’ aot a wel, 
ae ase, Ue RBs eid aerad- . 
| « ,*) - 
att LES vy mm. . send, ¢ met, hit 


rT e + 4 
wi. j \ £ f 1) 
ri Hi 
| * eh 4 + 1 t ] - 2h) & 
Cw . , ip | 
y t \ h “oe Ww *<s 
7 ne 
rt 
1 A a 


ih woe | a saa 
peay “i 96 +o. ya 


« week a” ee: : {ius 


ERAS. Sau quae Sate | hs 

: oe oe arpa 2 

po eneg anhwed 1 SEAS ry. 
ag 6, sp Sa aie: gat irs 
ame ee ee 
Mir? - o iin Hose aparyi oat 
Midaekbe eran 

ly ge A ee | 

ie (ye iy ia ee ‘ 

eet in oath El a 

| oho 


STATE TABLES 


Z°7S8 2 G*OOT‘T 6° 7ST °T 8° 96S Bore pueT [eIO]L 
f° ECS 9°EIT T°OL G°6€ Jseiozyuou [ejOFJ, 
96°81 29°84 90° CE 19430 
qc £2? 1a}eM snsuad—uoy 
qe El ysoio0jzyuou 19470 
q8° 18 asnoy WojSsNd/eTsuTS 
dee: AT ywe J—-FFTNW/JoeIy, 
q 7 [e yoOL9wMMOD / Te FAIsnpuy 
qi°9 aqyTs uopIeeID0y 
q°~ pueTeqsem/3utupy 
qv’ Le AeM- JO-3Y2 RY 
q8°8 duems /ysieu/s0g 
q 7 pueywsezy 19430 
q 7 pueTwzey OTPL 
9°02 €°CI L°9 9°T eanjzsed posoidwy 
1°? 7°77 8°71 6°" gy puetdoi9 
: pueT “yser0juoN 
0°629*Z 6° 986 8°780‘T €° LSS Wsoe10F TRIOT 
T°S8 f° SZ €°1? 9°8T PeAIesel aAFIONpoIrg 
L°€s 8°sT 0°77 6°ZT 2A FIONpoaduy 
Z°067°Z 6°746 G°TZ0‘T 8°SZS pueTiequty 
:pue,T 3se10g 
aFun 
uz8y7.10N uoyz FeAH) soog TTo11e89 SseToO osn puey 


so10e os uesnoyd uy 
( jo sp ) 


€861T ‘e1tyusdwmey mon SAQuNOD pue sseTO osn pueT Aq Bore pueyT --*] eTqQeI, 


18 


*TeAeT Ajunod 9yj Je pajeUTjse Jou eae sse[D VSN pueT JSeTOFJUOU peTTeIeq 
*sj0oTd pleTy 3Seato0jJuou Fo JequNu ey} UO peseq vie TUN sy AOF soqeuyt ise eee SSPTD OSN puURT JSeTOJUOU peTTejeg 
*oinj[NofFAasy jo snsueg ZgGI :e0An0S 


2) 


a) 


e 
G°GSL°G €°€06°Z G°GvE O° LEC 7° LYY 6°86S O° 19S B°7S7 L°8S7Z Bore pueT [eqO] 
€°89L T°SS G°9% 8° 64 8° sil 0°SOT G* 9€T L° 6% 8° SE qSoerozFUOU TeIOT, 
19410 
af ° CE 90° 9E 90° TOT 59°18 50° LTT afoul 59°7E J0jeM snsusd—uUuoN 
7° 6S qe 9f qyseiojyuou 104390 
IL> (L(G qs 7 esnoy wo snd/eTSuTS 
L°0OS7 q6° 891 AT Fwe J-TATNwW/ oes, 
Viev/l! q’” 71 [Te ForswwWOD/ TeTAAsNpuy 
8°71 q8 v1 a4TS uoTIeAIDAYy 
L°GE q?° 62 pueTejsem/sutum 
1°9 qi9 Aen Jo-3y3 Fy 
L°tL qi 77 duems /ysiew/30g 
7°64 q?° OV pueTwiey 10430 
6°9 qo 9 pueTwieyz TPL 
€°1S L°O€ 6S 0°S G°Y O°L LOE 6°S H°T OeuEIOEe peaoisduy 
€° 971 7°78 O°TT 8°8 (SI 7° OT 8°ST 1°21 8°? pueTdo1p 
: pueT ®4se10JuoN| 
7° 186°" 7° BSE “7 0° 6672 e°L8T 9° 8ZE 6°€67 G° 767 1°SO¥ 6° 612 aso10F TeIOL 
S°Zol 7° LT 8°T 6° 0°” (om o°S 6°E 7° PeAtesetl sATIONpoId 
9°7L 6°81 6°47 |S L°Y [Le I°T 9°47 o°S eat IONporduy 
T°7Z18‘4 (JO UGE-G €° 262 9°S8T 6°6TE 0° 767 e° 84 9°96E €°L1Z pueTioquTy 
:puelT 4sea0g 
set unoo 37un 
uPATT [NS paoyzjzeaqs weysutyI0y YOCUTII OW O10q4STITH eitysey) deuyjteog SSeTO osn puey 


TIv uzey Nos 


(sei0e Jo spuesnoy uz) 


penufquop--"] eTqey 


19 


O€LL 8S04 8202 76ST S3}TyY eBpe jo requny 


60€ 8IT 971 G9 sjojTd ojoyd jo azasquny 
L°u¥ 7°19 G°6¢ 8°er sed. TIV 
G°9 T°6 (Gay) 0°9 oF Jenby 
L°T 9°7Z 6°0 8°T Aem- jo-IyBTI 
AVFTFIN 
6°8 9°CT 9°47 O°1T Aem-Jo0-y3 FI 
uo} ze 310dsuedy, 
L°0 O°T L°0 7°O M0103 poy 
7°0O G°0 €°0O €°0 qTeanqqpno 
— snoosoeqiey/Teinjp[no psy 
1°0 T°0 q? T°0 yTean3pno 
7°0 9°0 7°0 Z°0 snosvoeqioy 
/Teingay[no tise 
— qnays 
€°? T°€ L°0 Bre TeangzTNno 
B°E Erg 6°T 8°Z snooorqiey 
/Teanqpnoyase 
c°? 9°T 8°T 1° qnays 
L* LT On I°# Z°€l 4se105 
-— 4so104 
Fun 
Ue IION Oe BEI) $009 [qToa1e9 adk} e8pe osn puey 


(seioe puesnoy} aed ,sa Ty ospy) 


Z86L ‘1861 Seatysdwey mon SAQUNOD pue ssn puetT jo odAQ Aq ospe asn pueT OF xXepuy—--°7% eTqe], 


20 


°CcO°O UeYy SssoT ‘quUNOMe sdeI7 
°(€86T 33005 pue syo0Ig) Joesueiq suTT e Aq potdmes ydeasoj0yd [Teyiee ue uo uot Tpuod aspqt 
e 


78662 7S7CC VOGT T86I LI8Y 6164 SAS) 0802 B7EC sity espe jo Jequny 
STL 90” 87 ce 79 78 6L c9 9€ sjoTd ojoyd Jo sequny 
6°7L 6°L6 7°8S c° LOT 7° VET 9°¥70I 8°ZOT 6° 6S S°9IT sedAj TV 
Loe: 9°8 o°S L°8 7° OT O°TT 3} G°L Lo) oFaenby 
UG 9°? 8°T 6°0 O°e 8°SC C°? 9°T 7° Aem— JO-3Y3 FA 
AVTT FAN 
T°yT 0°sT 7° OT 7° LT 6° 61 7°8T 7° 62 8°6 9°€T Aem— JO-YBFI 
uotT}e31oOdsuedy, 
L°y B°L S*T 8°?T e°Tt B°L S°?l G°? B°E Mor1e3pey 
8°T 6°C c°0 OS €°S 9°? €°€ T°T G°e€ Teang tno 
—snosodeqioy/ Tein [no F3y 
9°0 Tol 9°0 9°T 7°T Teal 8°T L°0 0°0 TeangqTns 
T°T L°T 9°T 6°T G°Z 1°? O°T O°T 0°? snosvoeqi94 
/Teanz[nd faze 
- qnays 
6°S 9°8 L°? L°8 9°eT 0°6 9° 7T 9°72 T°y peangTno 
L°8 9°7T c°8 T°8t c°1? 0°OT e°L 9°9 L°42 Snosv0eg 194 
/Teinq[nd Fase 
e°S G°L T°S 0°OT 0°OT 9°L G°L 6°9 c°Y CUES 
6°77 6°92 0°12 7°77 8°SE €°ce 8°41 9°61 9° 64 3S e910F 
-— 4sel10g 
sotjunoo 3Tugn 
Ty uaeqanes UPA TT INS piozyzeiqs wey 3uU F004 YORU FIP O10qSTTTH eityseug9 deuyTeq odfk3 e3pe osn puey 


(seroe puesnoy} ied ,si7y 23pq) 


penuyzquoj--"7 eTqeIL, 


2g 


22 


Table 3.--Area of timberland by ownership class 


Ownership 
class 


National Forest 
Other federal 

State 

County and municipal 


Total public 


Forest industry 
Farmer® 


Miscellaneous private: 


Individual 
Corporate 
Other 

Total private 


All ownerships 


* Includes “part-time farmers” (persons 
their land is part of a farm). 


the previous survey. 


and geographic unit, New Hampshire, 1983 


(In thousands of acres) 


Northern Southern 
Unit Unit 
471.7 0 
55) 17.9 
27.6 Bil 655 
I o7/ S3}572 
515.5 152.6 
533.8 124.0 
133.6 239.5 
1,012.8 Vo SV/2o5) 
125.0 124.2 
169.5 109.1 
1,974.7 2,169.3 
2,490.2 DsVvaloe) 


All 
units 


471.7 
18.4 
79.1 
98.9 


668.1 


657.8 
373.1 


2,585.3 
249.2 
278.6 

4,144.0 


4,812.1 


whose occupation is not farmer but who say 
These acres were included in miscellaneous private in 


Table 4.--Area of timberland by forest type, forest-type group, and 
stand-size class, New Hampshire, 1983 


(In thousands of acres) 


Stand-size class 
Forest type and ee All 


forest-type grou 5 P Saplin d 1 
ype & P Sawtimber Poletimber Bias Nonstocked ace 
Red pine 24.2 0 7.0 0 SZ. 
White pine 644.4 92.8 74.5 -0 811.7 
White pine/hemlock 257.9 78.1 14.4 -0 350.4 
Hemlock 140.8 14.5 7.4 -0 162.7 
White/red pine group 1,067.3 185.4 103.3 -0 1,356.0 
Balsam fir 78.2 118.7 a7 -0 206.6 
Red spruce 34.1 Voll Doll -0 115.9 
Red spruce/balsam fir 183.9 ileal 20.4 0 316.4 
White spruce 29.8 0 20 0 29.8 
Tamarack Ae) 8.9 0 0 8.9 
Spruce/fir group 326.0 311.8 39.8 -0 677.6 
Pitch pine 9.4 16.7 15.6 0 41.7 
Hard pine group 9.4 16.7 15.6 0 41.7 
Wh. pine/no. red oak/wh. ash 56.0 29.2 Vo3 -0 92.5 
Other oak/pine 0 7.4 0 10) 7.4 
Oak/pine group 56.0 36.6 Toe) -0 99.9 
Post, black, or bear oak 22.0 0 0 AiO) 22.0 
Chestnut oak Holl 0 -0 0 Holl 
White oak/red oak/hickory 14.6 14.3 0 .0 28.9 
White oak 14.5 0 0 10) 14.5 
Northern red oak 100.2 111.0 9.8 10) 221.0 
Scarlet oak -0 14.2 20 -0 14.2 
Red maple/central hardwoods 7/53) 28.9 -0 -0 36.2 
Mixed central hardwoods 36.6 14.7 -0 0 Dios} 
Oak/hickory group 202.3 183.1 9.8 -0 SY) 5}572 
Black ash/Amer. elm/red maple 8.1 6.7 IN7/55) -0 3253 
Elm/ash/red maple group 8.1 6.7 W585) 0 3253 
Sugar maple/beech/yellow birch 780.6 DY Do? 44.8 20 1,100.6 
Black cherry 10.1 0 7.0 0) N7/ gil 
Red maple/northern hardwoods WINE) 59) 263.4 23303) -0 506.6 
Pin cherry/reverting field 50) 20.1 14.2 0 34.3 
Mixed northern hardwoods 205.6 122.6 16.8 0 345.0 
Northern hardwoods group IL AAIO os? 681.3 106.1 -0 2,003.6 
Aspen 29.4 69.6 17.6 -0 116.6 
Paper birch 18.8 63.0 0 Ae) 81.8 
Gray birch -0 Ae) 7.4 Ale) 7.4 


Aspen/birch group 48.2 132.6 25.0 0 205.8 


All forest types DSS ai355 Vy554.52 324.4 0 4,812.1 


T°718*y 8°S77~ €°728 6° 6€S G*S80°T L°STO‘T 6°00T ST soyquno) TIV 


6°1ZE°Z 8°0S 7° LOT 7° L8T 7° 709 G°879 7°€S9 TeI0OL 

£° 262 0° 9° L WoL T°90T 0°?L 7°66 uBATTINS 
9°C8T S°4T 6°1S 9°7T G*62 G°CY 9°2E pr0F3Ie1IS 
6° 6TE 0° 0° €°L é°60T 9°TIT 8°16 weysuzxo0y 
0° 267 9°12 €°v1 O° TS 0°9orT 0°OST T°6€T yORuU FAL I, 
c°8T7 0° L°8L L£°8L T°LL €° 6 7°68 o104STTTH 
9° 96E L°4t 0°8 €°1? S° 6 7°98 6°TLT srzyseyoD 
€°L17 0° T°L T°Z 0°cor 6°TL C° 6¢ deuxTeg 


J}uQ urey Anos 


2°06 °Z 0°Sé6T 6°9S9 G° CGE T° 1S c°LBE S°*L94 TeIoL 

6°76 0° 6€T €°e te O°elt 8° CET L°LL T°L9 uo jyerg 
G*1Z0‘T 8°97 9° TT? G°€sT €° 191 9°S4Z L°702 s00) 
8°S7S 7°6 O°ceET 0°98 O° LS 6°€9 L°LLI TT0O118) 


Tug ureyzI0N 


so9sseTO TIV Sd19e +00¢ 80108 664 -— OOT 82498 66 - 0S S910 64-07 so10e® 6T - OT solve 6 - T Ayuno) 


(se19e jo spuesnoyj UT) 


€861 ‘eafusdwey mon ‘AQunod pue sseTo eerie pueqs Aq pueTisquyq Jo eery--°G 2eTqQeL 


24 


Z°S €y 91 (4 €I OI 6 8 8 L L (queoied) 
1JOijo Zuy{Tdues 

Ca L979‘ 84T 76 Z10‘T 129 Z0S °Z ONY Sy 960‘8 LY6°ET 7LES€Z €Z1‘6€ ZEv*GG sefoeds [Te ‘ Teo] 
9€ 69S‘T 0 0 0 0 0 0 It 6SI 16 8LZT yse upequnoy 
61 Gey 6 0 1 GG LZ 122 169 GZZ‘T €OL‘T OTY*Z €76‘°Z yeo xe” 
OI 978°8S TV Ley 777 8YI‘T 1Z8‘T 177‘€ 010‘9 L81‘6 G62 ‘91 Z9€ ‘02 yeo pel uieyzI0N 
LS 796 ‘T 0 0 0 0 0 €¢ L61 ELE OTL 629 yeo 4nujseug 
8Y 7G ‘72 0 92 02 94 1€ £6 992 61S 779 69L yeo JeTIeIS 
LT 91S°6 €Z 92 61 6z1 982 72Y 816 L16 704 *Z VS a] yeo 93TuM 
0OT €€ 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 €€ AITIYyIeHoyD 
oI VLL‘°6 0 0 0 0 68 ¢8z LLL CE6‘T BLT‘Z OS‘ AlieyD Yue 
8Y LL6 0 0 0 0 LT 0 0 0 88 ZLL Aiiayo utd 
97 7BI‘€ 0 0 0 0 0 1S €€I 66 6LEST ZZS‘T  weequioydoy uisqyseqg 
1S LE9‘T 0 0Z 0 0 0 0 0 7ST OLE €60‘T etddy 
78 II 0 1Z 4 0 €Z Ly 0 0 0 0 qnuis33ng 
OI 897 ‘°SY O€ gly 092 8Z0‘T G78 ‘T I61‘€ 77754 €19‘Z Z0S ‘TT LSTSST yooog 
VA] 087 ‘€ 0 0 0 977 €8 oI 9€T GS9 716 76 ‘1 A109 FH 
88 8c¢ 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 8CS iepeoper ureqsey 

qUed,IegG = -—------------------- -----------------------— $991} puesnoyy, ----------- -------- —---------------- === 
+6Z 6°82 6°02 6°81 6°91 6° "1 6°71 6°01 6°8 6°9 
1oiie sesselo -0°12 -0°61 -0°L1 -0°ST -0°€T -0°TT -0°6 -0°L -0°S sorecds 


Sut[Tdueg TIv 
(3y43Fey Jseeiq Ye seyoUT) sseToO AsjeuUeTG 


€861 ‘erfusdwey mon ‘sseTo AJejoueTp pue 
sofoeds Aq pue,Tieqmy} uo seeij SupoONpoid-jy~naz pue -JAnu ATT [Te Jo ASequNN--°9 eTqQe] 


25 


26 


Table 7.--Number of shrubs and saplings on timberland by stand-size class, type of stem, 
and mast type, New Hampshire, 1983 


Stand-size class 
and type of stem 


Sawtimber: 
Shrubs 
Saplings 


Total sawtimber 
Poletimber: 
Shrubs 
Saplings 
Total poletimber 
Sapling/seedling: 
Shrubs 
Saplings 
Total sapling/seedling 
Nonstocked: 
Shrubs 
Saplings 


Total nonstocked 


Total, all classes 


(In thousands of stems) 


Mast type 


Unidentified 
Nuts Other seeds Berries SREGESE 
397,505 1,085,939 5,010,158 174,885 
202,155 1,009,066 17,460 (0) 
599,660 2,095,005 5,027,618 174,885 
241,077 1,139,200 4,136,484 102,306 
74,812 901,247 30,242 2,865 
315,889 2,040,447 4,166,726 105,171 
67, 348 688,999 1,854,756 71,254 
18,059 214,962 20,954 0 
85,407 903,961 1,875,710 71,254 
0 0 0 0 
0 0 0 (0) 
0 0) 0 0 
1,000,956 5,039,413 11,070,054 351,310 


Total 
stems 


6,668,487 
1,228,681 


7,897,168 
5,619,067 
1,009,166 
6,628,233 
2,682,357 

253,975 


2,936,332 
0 
0 
0 


17,461,733 


*spoompiey [Te foO1Teumo ouoU SepnTouy | 


(quedsed) 


LG 9 TI IT h 6 61 91 6 Horse Saas 
LkG 1S8‘ZOT G61‘Z9 =: O90 SE ISL°S HBESES 799°0H = LLL €S7‘Z ZE9° LE sefoeds [Te ‘TeIO], 
L 186‘T¥ Z790°6%Z ~~ =120‘Z 797°E LZL‘°EZ G76‘ZI Ss HIE 69L 778 ‘II Spoompiey Teo] 
CZ 768° BEL*Z c8 9¢ 16S ‘2 OcT‘E 0 LI 6ET‘E pSPpoompiey 19420 
62 €ZS‘T Lyl GZI 971 964 OLL 69 0 LOL 8 ic 
18 68 OL 0 OL 0 61 61 0 0 poomsseg 
92 GIS‘T 076 ZE HE 758 G6S 6€ Va] ZIG SYeO poy 
GS 69S 807 0 91 76€ 191 92 0) CEI syeo oaTUM 
1Z Z81‘S 8LS‘E 1Z 691 Bs8E‘€ 709‘T 0 L9Z LEEST uedsy 
Gl IIT 69 0 0 69 94 0 0 94 yse yoeTg 
HE 698 L8S €Z 18 LLY 787 0 0 782 yse 393TUM 
€Z 868‘Z 7761 627 OSS €76 916 18 LOI 882 yooog 
62 161‘Z ZEnST 0 0 ZEn ST 6SZ 0 0 6SL youtq Aea5 
SI 706 ‘4 OSZL‘€ 16 SV 10Z‘€ 7ST ‘I 0 €Z 6Z1‘T yoitq itedeg 
val 161‘8 0€8‘9 88Z 106 Ty¥T‘S 19€‘T 79 8ST 6EI ST YoItq MOTTER 
GI 9719 6EL‘4 06z KAS 776 ‘E L8E‘T 6 8Y O€E ‘T etTdew pey 
97 L76‘T 917‘T L81 OLZ 618 169 l GOI 6€S eTdeu aesnsg 
6 08°09 €El‘EE 686 L847°Z 159‘ 62 LELS LE = E98 784 °T 06L°SZ SPpOOM} FOS [PIO], 
0S Telli Ily 92 GS O€€ 00L 0 GY ¢G9 SPpoOomM}jzos 19430 
€7Z 107 ‘Z 890‘T 7OT 777 O7L 6E1‘T 721 7G £96 yooTwsy 
61 €€9 ZLE 0 0 ZLE 197 0 €Z 8EZ Tepes—97 TYM ulSeYy ION 
€I 106‘7T 778‘ L OS 602 GLS‘9 LLO‘L 7ST 70€ 1z29‘9 autd a3TUM 
cL 0S 7€ 0 0 v7€ oI 0 0 91 autd poy 
oI 680‘ LT 768°9 L91 €LY 7179 LEZ‘Ol ~— ss £6 874 91L‘6 sonids poy 
0OT 781 781 0 0 Z8I 0 0 0 0 eonids yoReTE 
OOT OOT 0 0 0 0 OOT 0 0 OOT eonids 9374M 
19 LL9 79 0 €Z 1¥ €19 0 101 Z1S yorieuey, 
GI 076 ‘EZ 9ZESOT = ZS €86 161‘ST 76S °L 96 62S 696‘9 AITjy wesTeg 
queoteg eee Boost eee eee ee ‘$801] puesnouy, —------- ——————————————— 
se01} 356 6° v1 6°01 ase 6° v1 6°0T 
10119 Tre eles! -0°TT -0°¢ tees ees -0°TT -0°S 


Sut tdues qTeqOL 


soetoods 
doj usyoIg do} 39e34Uly 


€861 ‘oitysdwey mon ‘sseTD JejeMeTp pue ‘uot Tpuod ‘satoeds Aq pueTIequUt, uo s9e1q peep BZutpuejys jo rzequny--°g eTqeI] 


27 


SAT avad 


%c€--COOMLSAOS 


%c+¥--GOOMLSAOS 


%88--COOMOHVH 


%89--COOMOYVH 


dNOH9 S3TISdS ONV 
NOILIGNOD AG SSTLIAVI G3AuSSEO HLIM 
SISH1 JO SYSEWAN 3O NOTINGIYISIO S9SVLINS983d 


28 


*spoompiey Te TOLeMMOoUCU SepnToUT | 


(queoied) 
G 8 8 1Z 9 ZS 8Z L 8 sears AeaTamee 
G €7L°99 BIZ ‘8T G61 ‘9T €70‘Z COS ‘84 129 GcY 60°72 8ZE ‘SZ sofoods [Te ‘TeIOL 
ig 090‘SS G77 ‘ZI UGE WE VAL UL G19°7% 78¢ 86E 6972 ‘61 79€ ‘77 spoompiey [eI0], 
1Z 029‘Z L06 7H €91 Gili/aa 08 0 CCl ITS popoompzey 19430 
€4 ITE 092 Z1Z 8Y 1S 0 0 7€ LT ula 
8Y 184 68 OL 61 86€ 0 0 OZE 8 poomsseg 
07 78E ‘7 9¢cL GG9 101 8729 ‘T 7h 0 OTL 898 syeo poy 
7 762 7 0 HE 8SZ 0 0 We L81 syeo 27TUM 
0€ EC Tec COL 799 1¥ ZZ0°T 0 89 L09 LYE uedsy 
6S ZET 0 0 0 ZET 0 0 0 ZET yse yoeT” 
1@ 0/8 OLZ 77 94 009 0 0 0€Z OLE yse o3T4uM 
ZI 687‘8 LLI‘T 780‘°T €6 BoE SL 0 891 LEOE €O1'? yooog 
VA) 87S 7 LT 7LT 0 GE 0 0 Z8 ZLZ yortq Aeip 
8I 162 ‘°S HCL‘ OZL‘T v7 LES SE 0 7 620‘T 98477 yoitq dtedeg 
€1 0S0‘8 €16‘Z WLL‘Z 6E1 LETS 0 L9 €99°Z L0¥‘Z YoItq MOTTE 
OT LEB‘ LT 797 °7 771°? OvE ELE SST Ty 6€ GGGi7z Ov7L‘L etdeu poy 
GT 940°9 776 988 9¢ VOT ‘S 617 7 G08 ‘T 9478 ‘Z etTdew 1e3ng 
IT €99°TT ELLSS 798°% 606 068°S €v LS 978 ‘7 796‘Z spoom}jos Te IO], 
79 LSE Z0Z Z0Z 0 GGT 0 0 GST 0 Spoomj jos 19430 
ST 008‘T yy 78E 09 9GE‘T 0 7 70S 818 yoo TwoH 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Tepeo-97 YM urSYIION 
LT BEE SY T06‘T 779 ‘T LLZ LE7‘Z 0 €Z €ZL‘T 169 outd o3TYM 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 eutd poy 
67 7607 HCy<T VET ST OzE 0479 0 0 L61 €%¥ sonads poy 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 eonads yorT” 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 esonids 93TY4M 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 yorreuey, 
02 7LO°E TLL‘T 07S ‘T 7SZ ZOE ST €v 0 L4Z Z10‘T Aifj wesTeg 
qus0190g —-------- -- -- - -- ---- ---— —------— ——----—— Sool] puesnouy, —------ -- - - - - - - -— 
soel} doj doj doj do3 do} 2ATT Tn 
i1oii9s Tte peop usyx7o1Ig qoeqUy SATL peed usx701g Zoe UL ON sotoods 
Sut{d 
uyttTdmes TeIOL TeqOL onan 
peog ATT 
€861 S‘eaitusdmey MoN SUOTITpuOCD pue satToeds Aq 


pueTieqUT, uo SeTITAeD PeATEsqoO YITM (°YUrq*p SeyoUT +0°C) seer Jo AJSequNN--°6 eTqeL 


29 


Table 10.--Number of shrubs, seedlings, and saplings on timberland by species, 
browse preference class, and stand-size class, New Hampshire, 1983 


(In millions of stems) 


30 


Species Stand-size class 
and —_ All Percent 
browse Gee ieee Be eriaber Sapling and Non- classes saplings 
preference class seedling stocked 

Canad yew 5} 43} 0 0 0 D558} st 
Northern white-cedar 5.6 0 0 20 5.6 0 
Eastern hemlock SOY oF WAYS 7/ 27.0 20 653.9 18 
Striped maple 1,094.2 429.1 43.1 0 1,566.4 3 
Red maple Lo S72oll OSS enl 292709 0 2,698.1 17 
Mountain maple 639.0 378.4 30.2 Ae) 1,047.6 11 
Apple 4.5 11.8 11.9 0 28.2 45 
Smooth sumac Died 12.5 Ae) 0 15.4 s 
Staghorn sumac 10.8 0 3.0 0 13.8 s 
Mountain ash 42.4 87.2 2.0 0 131.6 s 
Hobblebush viburnum eS io: 268.6 59.7 Ae) 1,446.7 s 
Total readily browsed 4,822.4 2,340.4 469.8 0 7,632.6 

Balsam fir SPAM Gil We S27 oi 106.5 0 2,875.3 17 
Common juniper 90.6 207.4 6.0 0 304.0 s 
White pine 529.4 125.2 36.8 0 691.4 23 
Sugar maple 1,226.3 846.8 195.2 0 2,268.3 7 
Shadbush 264.9 88.0 5.4 0 358.3 s 
Yellow birch 492.5 193.3 91.4 -0 777.2 15 
Black birch 92°25 29.3 -0 0 121.8 25 
Paper birch 339.4 464.5 62.5 0 866.4 17 
Red-Osier dogwood 14.2 88.4 34.6 0 137.2 s 
Hawthorn 24.3 8.7 4.0 0 37.0 0 
American hazelnut 225.0 141.9 30.0 10) 396.9 s 
Beaked hazelnut W/Boll 99.2 SoD 20 309.4 s 
Beech 1,000.3 294.6 90.7 0 1,385.6 11 
White ash 486.3 206.5 15.2 0 708.0 6 
Black ash Dod) 10.2 2.0 0 34.7 17 
Winterberry 39.8 56.0 AiO) 0 95.8 s 
Honeysuckle 110.8 Soil 66.9 0 208.8 Ss 
Mountain holly Ale) 26.4 0 Ae) 26.4 s 
Balsam poplar 10.9 12.2 Ale) 0 23.1 0 
Bigtooth aspen 4.5 19.4 7.8 0 31.7 0 
Quaking aspen 107.2 77.4 UBoll ALO) 260.3 13 
Pin cherry 205.2 72.8 158.6 0 436.6 4 
Black cherry 250.7 126.8 149.0 Ae) 526.5 3 
Chokecherry Moll 127.9 42.6 0 208.2 Ss 
White oak 129.2 52.4 68) 0 183.1 12 
Roses 6.5 0 4.2 0 10.7 s 
Brambles 1,755.8 2,014.1 1,196.6 0 4,966.5 s 
Willows 15.4 27.4 3.1 -0 45.9 23 
Common elderberry 34.8 16.5 126? 0 63.5 Ss 
Red-berried elder 74.7 10) 2.0 ALO) 76.7 s 
American elm 22.4 26.1 303) 0 51.8 14 
Blueberries 1,038.0 954.6 322.2 0 2,314.8 s 
Sweetfern 73.8 43.2 10) 0 117.0 s 
Maple-leaf viburnum 207.5 96.1 25.4 0 329.0 s 
Wild raisin 156.7 46.9 29.4 Ae) 233.0 s 
Small cranberry 3 o¢/ ibs ih A) -0 14.8 s 
Total commonly browsed 10,517.3 8,160.1 2,818.3 0) 21,495.7 


Table 10.—-Continued 
(In millions of stems) 


Species Stand-size class 
and $$ All Percent 
browse Sapling and Non- classes saplings 

preference class SEMIS HOLGENINET seedling stocked 
Tamarack 1.8 4.1 AO) 0 Dad 31 
White spruce 11.8 3a // Ale) 0 SYA) 61 
Black spruce iLo5) 5.4 -0 Ale) 6.9 22 
Red spruce 506.1 451.3 86.6 0) 1,044.0 14 
Pitch pine -0 7.2 0 ale) ok 74 
Speckled alder 149.3 116.8 109.1 0 375.2 s 
Black chokecherry 1.4 1.4 46.6 0 49.4 s 
Gray birch 110.8 82.8 177.1 0 370.7 27 
Lambkill 118.3 Lion 28.4 0 Pi] ots) s 
Labrador tea 0) 0 17.6 0 17.6 s 
Eastern hophornbeam 48.0 34.2 21.4 0 103.6 28 
Red oak 441.1 206.9 225.6 0 873.6 7 
Spiraea 302.9 539.4 356.6 -0 1,198.9 Ss 
Total infrequently browsed 1,693.0 1,564.3 1,069.0 0 4,326.3 
Witch-hazel Dol 165.9 B55) -0 441.1 s 
Gooseberries 1358) 40.5 6.1 0 60.5 s 
Total questionable 236.6 206.4 58.6 0 501.6 
Other species 878.9 688.0 273.7 0 1,840.6 
Total all species 18,148.2 112),959).2 4,689.4 0 35,796.8 
Sampling error Z 

(percent ) 6 10 20 - 4.1 


* classed as shrub species. 


T°€81 0° 0°81 0° LE9 S°*T 7° ET 0° S°98 yeo eaTUM 
7° 802 W°EY €°8S 0° 7°vE 0° 0° Oa 4 1° 6% ArrIYyIeyAoyD 
G°97S €°S72 0° 641 0° T°vl L°Tl 8°79 i T°88I Adieyo yore TE 
9° 9EY oye) 7°982 (Sv 6°92 0° 0° 8°19 B°Ees Aizeyo utd 
£°092 €° LY Y°EL 0° 6°L O°TT 0° T°ZT 9°€0T uedse BSutyenh 
L°Te 0° €°9 0° 6°81 0° O°e 0°? G°T uedse 4300331, 
T°€? 0° e°CT 0° 0° 0° 0° 6° OT 0° aetdod westeg 
7°97 0° B°E 0° 8°S 0° 0° 0° 8°9T ATTOY upejunoy 
8° 802 ae 9° TTT 0° e°L 0° 0° 9°CY L°0¥ eTXONs Avuop 
8°S6 0° €°9L 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° G°61 Ait19q194UTM 
L°4ve 0° 7°L 0° (Gn) 0° 0° c° 91 6°9 yse yoeTE 
0°80Z €°Orl L°887¢ 7°€ G°8s 9° 6I 0° S*OT O° LIZ yse o374M 
9°S8E‘T 8°9 €°9E7°T 0° o°SY (B08 0° 9°S 7°88 yooog 
7° 60€ B°E 6°SE 0° 1°26 G°SS 0° 0°26 T°SZ jnuTezey poyxeog 
6°96E 8°T €° vt 0°92 T°TsS S°OT 0° e°?Ctl O°4S jnuTezey uesfiouly 
O°LE 0° 7°12 0° T°y1 0° 0° 0° G°T uloyIMey 
f° LET 8°Eel 6°6 0°€9 0°r 0° 0° B°LE L°8 poomBop 19}SQ-pey 
7°998 9°9% T°6Lé 0° G°LS G°9 0° 7° 6S72 G°LIé yortq itedeg 
8° T2T 0° 9° HT 0° G°02 0° S°T 0° e°S8 yottq 4OeTd 
C°LLL UG f° 16% 0° 6°12 6°72 0° G°SET 9°€7T Yo MOTTA 
€°8SE 9°H 8° £6 0° O°EeyT a | 0° G°E T°cttl ysnqpeys 
€°897 ‘2 G°SL L°978‘T 0° L°L9 Z°O! 0° Z°02 0°892 etTdew 1e3Zng 
7° 169 6°ET O° VET 0° S°69 G°Ee 8°9 0°? L°Tey eutd o374M 
0°V70€ 0° G°1Z 0° 7° 702 T°02 G°T 0° G°9S tedzunf uomuop 
€£°SL8 ‘7 T°v1é 0°"729 0° 9° CC 6°S 0° T°v8l‘T 8°77 ify wesTeg 
9°ZE9%L S°L9E 6° TYE SY B°S G°ITy L°SL L°SZ 0°S7z8 C°9LS‘T posmoiq AT}peet Teo] 
L£°9447°T L°9¢ 7°70‘ 0° 7° G°Y 0° o°SLT G°e unuang FA YsnqeTqqoH 
9° TET 8°T L°sT 0° 0° 0° 0° 9°0T G°6 yse uyequnoy 
8°eT 0° Ore L°T 0° 0° 0° 0° 1°6 oeuns uz0Yy3eIS 
7° ST 0° 9°7T 0° 7°T 0° 0° 0° y°T oeuns yJOoOUS 
7°82 8°6 7°9 0° 0° 0° 0° 0°? 0°OT etddy 
9°L40*T 9°78 €°99L 0° O°€ 0° 0° L°S61 0° etTdeu upejzunoy 
1°869‘°Z 9° 6ST 0°SS6 T° L°81€ 9°SS L°SZ@ L° 6€Z L°6€6 etTdem poy 
7°99G°T €°87 0°87 ‘T 0° 0°9S 0° 0° 7°06 L°eel etdew pedti3s 
6°€S9 L°8 6°EET 0° 9°? 9°8T 0° 8° TT G°8S yooTWey u1r9zsey 
9°S 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 9°C 0° 1eped-99FYM UI9YIION 
€°SZ 0° 9°8 0° 9°S 0° 0° 0° Til mek epeue) 
yo1 Tq spoompiey etTdem por ALOWITY outd outd ITj autd per sseTo vUeIezoid 
sdnoi3 /uedsy u29yIION /use/uTy /xe80 /%®0 paey /eonads /23TUM asmoiq 
TIv pue 
dnoaz oedhé4-3s0104 sotoods 


(swej3s jo suOT,TT yu uT) 


€86l ray eel mon ‘dnois odéQ-Jse10y pue ‘sseTd sdueIezoid asmoiq 
*satoeds Aq pueTioqut} uo s3uyt{des pue ‘s3uyt{[pses ‘sqnays jo Aequny—-*{] eTqGeI 


32 


T°? 92 6 c9 LI 8e 67 ST OT (quedied ) 
Joiio Buyt{dues 


8°96L‘GE 8°1S9°T 8°6S6°4T T°SVE L°6£0‘E O°S#7S T° 199 6°62S ‘9 7°790‘8 soyoeds [Te [eI], 
9°0478‘T CUE 7° 87H 9°0S 6°T8T 9°06 Z° 02 L°71z 0°SZ8 sejfoods 19430 
9° 10S O°e é° L8T 0° L°40T WORE 0° (SSG €°9GT eTqeuoyjsenb TeRO], 
G°09 0° 8°O€ 0° €° 0° 0° €°EZ There Setiiteqesooy 
T°Ty Ore 7° 9GT 0° 7° OOT WL 0° 0° c° 9ST Tezey—-yortM 
€°97E “y L°L97 L°1S6 6°9LT 0° Z6T €°7S T°OZE G°OTO‘T 1°862°T pesmoiq 
ATJuUenbeszuT TeIOL 
6°861°T 0°64 0° 647 7° EVI 1°87 O°e 6°71 0°9ST £°SOS eoritds 
9°€L8 8°62 9° 821 €°€ O°cL °ES 9°GS?e 0° T°8S€ yeo pod 
9°€OT 0° 6° LS 0° 7°CT 0° 0° 0°Z €°8z weoquioydoy uisqseg 
9°LT 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 9°/T 0° Boq JOpeaqey 
8° LSZ 0° T°Z8 7°? 6°72 L°LT 0°?S 9°9¢ 1°69 TT Fyquey 
L°OLE S°8Z 9°0S S°6 €°1sS 7°OT 6°T? 0°6I S*60T yortq Aeip 
7°64 0° 0° 0° 7°T 0° 0° 0° 0°84 AaIayooyoyD yoepTg 
o°GLE T°@e 9°0ZT €° 81 0° 0° 0° 0°16 c° LOT ieptTe peTyxeds 
e°L 0° Oe 0° S°T 0° L°s 0° 0° eutd yoI Fd 
0°"70‘T €° Sy 9° CGT 0° 7°T 0° 0° €°699 9°CL eonids poy 
6°9 0° G°T 0° 0° 0° 0° 97°C 0° vonids yoerTg 
G°ST 0° B°e 0° 0° 0° 0° Ltt 0° eonids 93 74M 
6°S 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 6°S 0° yoesreuey, 
L°S647 ‘17 7° 786 9°0S0‘6 8° TIT 9°77 TZ €° 762 1°S4Z 7° BSH‘ y G°80Z‘47 pesmoiq ATuouWoD TeI0L 
8°7T 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 8° rT 0° AAAeque1s TTeUg 
0° €€Z 1°72 €°vT 0° G°69 0° 0° c°ES 6°TL ufsfet PTIM 
0°6Z2E G*Y 9° VE 0° 7° TCT c*Y C°EY 0° 8°06 unuingyA jeoT-eTdey 
O° LTT 0° L*6% 0° G°8 0° 7°82 0° 7°O£ U1LOFIIOMS 
8° VTE SZ 8°?S 0°6ST 0° e° 79 L°%6 o° 1S o° 71S L°808 SeTitogonyg 
8°TS 8°12 0° La 0°? 0° 0° S°OT 8°ST 1 oe 
[CMe 0° ~ L°vl 0° 0° 0° 0° 0°? 0° J9pTe pe fitoq—poy 
G°€9 0° €°9€ 0° 9°? 0° 0° 8°6 O°E Arireqisepte uommoy 
6°S*t O°TT 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 7° O€ S°4 SMOTTIM 
6°996°¥4 8° 877 1°6S9‘Z 7° OT 9°77 7°T €°T€ 8°OLT‘T 1° 769 soTquesg 
L°OT 0° 0°? 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° L°8 sosoy 
yoitq spoompiey etdem por AiOYO TY outd outd A}¥Z eutd por SSPTO WUeIezeId 
sdnoi3 /uedsy u19y ION /yse/uTy e120) /x®0 paey /eonids /237UM easmMoiqg 
TIv pue 
dnoa3 edf3-4sS9104 sotoods 


(sue3s JO suO;T,TT}M UT) 


ponuy quop--"T] eTqeL 


34 


Table 12.--Number of shrubs, seedlings, and saplings on timberland by species, 


Species and 
browse preference 
class 


Canada yew 

Northern white-cedar 
Eastern hemlock 
Striped maple 

Red maple 

Mountain maple 
Apple 

Smooth sumac 
Staghorn sumac 
Mountain ash 
Hobblebush viburnum 


Total readily browsed 


Balsam fir 

Common juniper 
White pine 

Sugar maple 
Shadbush 

Yellow birch 
Black birch 

Paper birch 
Red-Osier dogwood 
Hawthorn 

American hazelnut 
Beaked hazelnut 
Beech 

White ash 

Black ash 
Winterberry 
Honeysuckle 
Mountain holly 
Balsam poplar 
Bigtooth aspen 
Quaking aspen 

Pin cherry 

Black cherry 
Chokecherry 

White oak 

Roses 

Brambles 

Willows 

Common elderberry 
Red-berried elder 
American elm 
Blueberries 
Sweetfern 
Maple-leaf viburnum 
Wild raisin 

Small cranberry 


Total commonly browsed 


6,204.5 


2,808.0 
301.0 
677.1 

1,966.3 
311.5 
580.8 
118.8 
673.1 
116.4 

37.0 
347 .6 
191.0 

1,307.8 

567.1 
34.7 
83.4 

203.1 

8.2 
14.4 
21.7 

206.0 

388.6 

499.5 

202.2 

163.2 

722 
4,839.1 
45.9 
46.0 
64.7 
51.8 

2,090.9 
109.7 
306.1 
201.0 

14.8 


19,605.7 


Browse utilization class 


All 
classes 


1,446.7 
7,632.6 


ASV Dos: 
304.0 
691.4 

2,268.3 
358.3 
777.2 
121.8 
866.4 
137.2 

37.0 
396.9 
309.4 

1,385.6 

708.0 
34.7 
95.8 

208.8 
26.4 
23.1 
31.7 

260.3 

436.6 

526.5 

208.2 

183.1 
10.7 

4,966.5 

45.9 
63.5 
76.7 
51.8 

2,314.8 
117.0 
329.0 
233.0 

14.8 


Light Moderate Heavy 
SSS Millon stems) a 

-0 20 20 
0 0 0 
-0 5.9 0 
171.7 81.0 25.6 
229.6 176.3 20.6 
160.6 63.0 18.5 
0 0 0 
0 20 0 
0 0 0 
20 12.2 0 
335.6 80.9 46.6 
897.5 419.3 111.3 
35.7 29.4 2.2 
3.0 0 0 
12.3 2.0 0 
260.6 28.1 13.3 
38.4 0 8.4 
151.0 45.4 0 
3.0 0 0 
146.0 19.9 27.4 
20 20.8 0 
0 0 0 
45.5 3.8 0) 
75.1 0 43.3 
47.0 29.0 1.8 
125.5 15.4 0) 
10) 0 0 
7.8 20 4.6 
5.7 0 0 
1.4 -0 16.8 
0 8.7 0 
10.0 20 -0 
42.6 2.1 9.6 
45.0 3.0 0 
17.3 7.9 1.8 
2.0 4.0 0 
6.7 10.1 3.1 
3.5 <0 -0 
45.1 82.3 ie) 
0 10) 0 
17.5 0 0 
0 10.0 2.0 
-0 0 20 
146.4 59.3 18.2 
1.4 5.9 0 
22.9 -0 0) 
32.0 -0 0 
-0 0 0 
1,350.4 387.1 152.5 


21,495.7 


browse preference class, and browse utilization class, New Hampshire, 1983 


Sampling 
error 


Table 12.--Continued 


Species and Browse utilization class 

browse preference eae Sampling 
class None Light Moderate Heavy Cree ees SREOE 

SSS SSS SS SS SSS SSS SSS Million stems ~---------------------- Percent 
Tamarack 5.9 0 20 0 5.29 76 
White spruce 15.5 0 Ale) 0 15.5 51 
Black spruce 6.9 -0 Ae) Ae) 6.9 81 
Red spruce 1,012.0 8.4 21.6 2.0 1,044.0 18 
Pitch pine oP -0 -0 -0 Vo2 82 
Speckled alder 352.2 14.0 9.0 0 BW So2 30 
Black chokecherry 49.4 0 0) 0 49.4 94 
Gray birch 276.4 36.2 41.7 16.4 SWOod/ 24 
Lambkill 257.8 Alo) 0 -0 257.8 31 
Labrador tea 17.6 0 0 0 17.6 100 
Eastern hophornbeam 103.6 0 0 0 103.6 25 
Red oak 807.2 28.2 35.2 3.0 873.6 23 
Spiraea 1,070.4 79.9 0) 48.6 1,198.9 20 
Total infrequently browsed 3,982.1 166.7 107.5 70.0 4,326.3 10 
Witch-hazel 402.7 9.3 Boil 0 441.1 19 
Gooseberries 60.5 0 0 0 60.5 31 
Total questionable 463.2 9.3 29.1 0 501.6 17 
Other species 1,712.6 83.8 13.7 30.5 1,840.6 13 
Total all species 31,968.1 2,507.7 956.7 364.3 35,/96.8 4.1 

Sampling error 
(percent ) 5 10 15 27 4.1 


3)5) 


NOB TERN ek 
TABLES 


Northern Hardwoods--48% 


Hard Pine--1% 


Aspen/Birch--6% 
Elm/Ash/Red Maple--1% Oak/Hickory--3% 


White/Red Pine--14% 
Spruce/Fir--26% Oak/Pine--1% 


Area of timberland by type group 


36 


Table 13.--Area o 


f timberland by forest type, forest-type group, and 
3 


stand-size class, Northern Unit, New Hampshire, 198 


Forest type and 
forest-type group 


Red pine 
White pine 
White pine/hemlock 
Hemlock 
White/red pine group 
Balsam fir 
Red spruce 
Red spruce/balsam fir 


White spruce 
Tamarack 


Spruce/fir group 
Pitch pine 
Hard pine group 
Wh. pine/no. red oak/wh. ash 
Oak/pine group 
Northern red oak 
Oak/hickory group 
Black ash/Amer. elm/red maple 
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 


Aspen/birch group 


All forest types 


(In thousands of acres) 


Stand-size class 


All 

Sawtimber Poletimber pap taeyand Nonstocked crapece 
seedling 

CB/ 0 7.0 710) 16.7 
108.6 39.1 19.5 0 167.2 
99.1 28.4 70) 0 127.5 
28.9 0 0 Ae) 28.9 
246.3 67.5 26.5 0 340.3 
78.2 118.7 9.7 lO) 206.6 
19.4 60.6 9.7 FAO) 89.7 
183.9 104.8 20.4 0 309.1 
29.8 0 A) 0 29.8 
0 8.9 A0) 50) 8.9 
syLito 3} 293.0 39.8 310) 644.1 
9.4 9.3 8.3 0 27.0 
9.4 9.3 8.3 AA0) 27.0 
20.4 0 PO) 0) 20.4 
20.4 910) Ae) 0 20.4 
29.3 38.7 9.8 -0 77.8 
29.3 38.7 9.8 0 WU ks 
8.1 20 8.6 -0 16.7 
8.1 0) 8.6 0 16.7 
9255) 166.5 38.1 0 797.1 
10.1 0 0 Fue) 10.1 
88.2 139.6 10.0 0 237.8 
FO) 20.1 8.9 0) 29.0 
POor 50.3 9.7 20 31) 5 Al 
766.9 376.5 66.7 70) LSBUO> I 
29.4 47.5 10.1 20 87.0 
18.8 48.0 a A0) 66.8 
48.2 95.5 10.1 Ae) 153.8 
1,439.9 880.5 169.8 0 2,490.2 


= 
Cc 
=) 
Cc 
hee 
® 
£ 
— 
= 
ie) 
Zz 


T°O1 €L LZ Ge 77 LT oI oI 71 GT val (quedted) 
Joiie But{dues 


T°OT G1TZ°SS Ge 99€ £0€ 0Z0‘T Z9L*T €60°€ LOE‘ 4 767 °6 L10°¥1 866‘°0Z sefoeds [Te ‘TeIOL 
9€ 7SS‘T 0 0 0 0 0 0 77 6ST 16 8LZ7‘T yse uypejunoW 
(6 TOL‘8T €T 6% VL O€E 66S €cL Ecce 879 ‘7 ETESS 67L°L yeO pet UTOYIION 
GL IGE 0 91 (0) 0 0 £8 0 0 0 SZ yeo 3o3TUM 
9¢ 790°Y 0 0 0 0 €¢ VET 89E CVL 066 L08‘T Ai1eYO ATT 
£9 G69 0 0 0 0 0 0 0) 0 LY 8479 AII9YyO Utd 
6€ €99 0 0 0 0 0 1S 6L €€ OSE OvT weequioydoy uieyseq 
09 STE ‘T 0 02 0 0 0 0 0 7ST ZOE c48 etddy 
78 7TT 0 12 €¢ 0 €7¢ LY 0 0 0 0 qjnuse33ng 
VT LOL‘ LZ (6 092 9072 069 LITT GS0‘Z €1L9°Z 856° 776 “9 797‘8 yooog 

quedteg ------~---------------~--~_ —-———-——-~-~ S901} pugsnoyy, —------------~----______________________ 
+6Z 6° 8c 6°02 6°8T 6°9T 6°4T 6°CT 6°OT 6°8 6°9 
10119 SesseyTo -0°172 -0°6T -0°LT -0°ST -0°ET -0°TT -0°6 -0°L =05G 


soyfoods 


suttdwues TIV 
(IyZTeY Jseeiq je sesyoUT) sseTO AdQOWeTG 


€861 ‘eatysdwey mon 63TUQ UISYRION ‘sseTO AdjZoMeTpP pue 
sopoods Aq pueTiequy} uo seeiq BuyONpoid—-jrnaz pue -—Jnu sATT [Te Jo JSeqMNN--°y], eTqQeL 


38 


Table 15.--Number of shrubs and saplings on timberland by stand-size class, type of stem, 
and mast type, Northern Unit, New Hampshire, 1983 


Stand-size class 
and type of stem 


Sawtimber: 
Shrubs 
Saplings 


Total sawtimber 

Poletimber: 
Shrubs 
Saplings 

Total poletimber 


Sapling/seedling: 
Shrubs 
Saplings 


Total sapling/seedling 


Nonstocked: 
Shrubs 
Saplings 

Total nonstocked 


Total, all classes 


Nuts 
286,139 
82,129 
368, 268 
128,309 
27,753 
156,062 
67,348 
10,779 


78,127 


oe) 


602,457 


Mast type 


Other seeds 


426,646 
573,575 


1,000,221 
488,149 
590,947 

1,079,096 
376,519 
121,787 


498, 306 


oo 


2,577,623 


(In thousands of stems) 


Berries 


2,802,966 
4,209 
2,807,175 
2,799,856 
30, 242 
2,830,098 
1,314,895 
16,536 


1,331,431 


6,968,704 


Unidentified 
species 


13,973 
0 


13,973 
58,387 

0 
58,387 
46, 362 


0 


46,362 


oe) 


118,722 


Total 
stems 


3,529,724 
659,913 


4,189,637 
3,474,701 
648 , 942 
4,123,643 
1,805,124 
149,102 


1,954,226 


10, 267,506 


39 


*spoompiey [ef;oO1emmoO.uOU sepnyouT 
e 


6°L 8 41 va 6 a 62 0Z €1 (queoied) 
1Joiia But{dues 
6°L L8€ ‘99 LOL‘OY L66‘T 7E0° 9EL “VE 029 *Sz 98E 064 ‘T yl “EZ seyoods [Te ‘TeIO] 

6 €072 ‘77 60€ “LT 04S ‘T 67 *Z 07 ET 768°9 cLT 9€S 981 ‘9 Spoompiey [eIO]L 
GE 799°€ L79°T 02 €2 709‘T ST0‘Z 0 0 G10‘Z epSPpoompszey 19440 
TS 82S GEE 96 £6 941 £61 TZ 0 cLI UT 
18 68 OL 0 OL 0 61 61 0 0 Poomsseg 
99 B7E GCE ST 0 OTE €2 €¢ 0 0 SyeO poy 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 syeo 93 74M 
Ge Holy LE8*Z 104 69T L79‘Z ARG 0 Oh L90‘T uedsy 
OOT 7] 0 0 0 0 9” 0 0 9” yse 4 eTE 
67 78T 0) 0 0 0 78T 0 0 781 yse 97 74M 
1x4 €LS‘T 787 ‘T £9€ 804 TIS 162 19 0 OE? yoood 
€v 1Sz‘T LE8 0 0 Le8 71 0 0 V1 yoatq Aerp 
G2 099‘Z 190°Z 9S G82 O@L‘T 66S 0 4 9LS yorqq sedeg 
GT L19°9 877° SSL €S8 1Z8°€ 681 ‘T 8Y 8ST £86 YOttq MOTTOA 
Lé 707 °Z €€8°T 801 T1Zé 71S °T 69€ 0 0 69€ eTdem poy 
BE 688 799 901 BE? OTE SEZ 0 SOT O€eT etTdem i1e3ng 

al "81°C 8S7°E7 LSY G89 °T OTE ‘Iz 9ZL°8T VIC 756 8SS “LT SPOOMJFOS TeIOL 
18 082 082 0 (AG 8S 0 0 0 0 SPOOMAFOS 19430 
8Y LeL 607 82 LOT VLE BITE 0) 12 L6Z2 yooTWSH 
6L £€9 eLE 0 0 cle 192 0 €7~ 8E7~ Te pes—97 YM U19Y ION 
10) 3 800€ 979‘T 7vT Tel TLE‘T Z9E‘T €v 104 862 ‘T eutd 29 74M 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 eutd poy 
61 8€0°7T 9SE‘S OST 614 L8L‘Y 7898 GL Il’ 961 ‘8 sonids poy 
OOT c8T 781 0 0 é8T 0) (0) 0 0 eonids yorT_ 
OOT OOT 0 0 0 0 OOT 0 0 OOT vonids 9374M 
69 009 79 0 €Z TY 8S¢ 0 9” cS yoereuey, 
91 46S “ZZ 671 “ST + | €86 T€0‘4T Gy SL 96 CEY L16‘9 AyF wespeg 

quasisde oe Sorat Sipe opens Seer a (GSSU Ia PURSTIOUT: Ce eee eae eee 
S901) 6°71 6°OT 6° FT 6°OT 
LOIL9 TTe eae asl -0°TT -0°S Ug age -O°TT -0°S 
sut[dues Teqoy, SS SaaS eS Sofoods 
do} ueyo1g doj 308 4UT 


€861 ‘eatysdmey man 63 7UQ ureYIAON ‘SseTO JejJOMeTpP 
pue ‘uo; Fpuos ‘seafoods Aq pueTiequt} uo svvij peop ButTpuejys Jo AequNyN—--*9T 2eTGPZ 


40 


*spoompiey TeToO1ewwoou0U SepnTouy 


6°9 Ol OT T€ 8 os 9€ TT IT (qued1ed ) 
Ioiia But{Tdues 
6°9 L88°T€ 861 ‘OT 757 ‘6 746 689 ‘TZ 9LT VLC G19°L 779° €1 sepoeds [Te “TeI0] 
8 677° 97 996°9 177 “9 VAS €9% “61 €€l 164 166‘9 780°ZT Spoompiey [eIO] 
87 LLO‘T cOS LOV G6 GLS 9v 0 9GE €ZT pepoompiey 19430 
€Z L9T LOT L9T 0 0 0 0 0 0 UT 
€Z OOT 68 OL 61 Il 0 0 (0) Il poomsseg 
99 cSE VCE VAS 0 82 0 0) 82 0 syeo poy 
TZ LE 0 0 0 LE 0 0 LE 0 syeo 327uM 
€€ 7971 699 829 TY €6S 0) 89 Sé6l O€E uedsy 
OOT 9Y 0 0 0 7] 0 0 0 9” yse 4oeTE 
Ov 6LY 94 0 9% €€7 0 0 €Il OZE yse oTUM 
ST 618°47 €¢6 S88 BE 956 ‘€ 0 OIT E77 L19‘Z yooog 
7/ 767 6€ 6€ 0 €S2 0 0 94 L0Z yortq Aen 
T€ 09€ “7 LLG LLS 0 €8L°T 0 (6 "GY LOE “T yitq iedeg 
ST E76 °C €81°Z 7607 68 09€ “E 0 €7¢ ZEB ST GOS ‘T YoOttq MOTTO 
61 EVE ‘9 ces 0479 Gél 806° TV (6 Z08‘T €79°€ etTdem poy 
0Z 760 °€ Z19 06S 2Z 088°Z 9 0 116 €76‘T eTdem iesng 
GT 854°C CEcme €€8°Z 66€ 9777 ev x4 819 77S “T SPoom}zzos [BIOL 
TZ LIE 9LT 9LT 0 Tvl 0 0 T¥I 0 SPOomMjzos 19430 
(a3 G29 G1Z qa €% OI” 0 0 L91 €%2 yIOTWSH 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0) 0 0 Tepes—97FYUM UL94IION 
Ov 99L 79S 764 OL 702 0 €Z va) LET eutd o27UM 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 eutd poy 
€€ 600‘T GLL £69 c8 VET 0 0) L9 L9T sonids poy 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 eonads yorT” 
0 0 0 0 0) 0 0 0 0 0 eonids 9ITYUM 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 yoereuey 
1Z 177 70S ‘T OO€ *T 707 LEZ‘ €v 0 661 G66 ITZ wesTeg 
SUEOSER 0 seceeee seme ae eS GOOlG) UEMNOUT, sae e ee eee 
soolq doy doj doy doj do} dATT TrIno 
B Coe @ i) Tie peep usyoIg qe qUT DATL peeq uaex7o1g q0eqUrL ON sotoods 
Buy [dues Teqo], Te IO], SS SS Tao} 
peeq ATT 


€861 ‘e1tysdmey men S3TUM UTZYAION ‘SUOTITPpUOD pue satoeds fkq 
pueTioqutj uo Set ~AeD peATesqo YFTM (*4°G*p SeydUT +0°C) Seer, JO AequMN--*/T eTqQeL 


41 


Table 18.--Number of shrubs, seedlings, and saplings on timberland by species, browse 
preference class, and stand-size class, Northern Unit, New Hampshire, 1983 


(In millions of stems) 


Species Stand-size class 
and eee All Percent 
browse i Sapling and Non- classes saplings 
preference class Sawtimber Poletimber seedling stocked 

Northern white-cedar 5.6 0 0 -0 5.6 0 
Eastern hemlock 178.7 26.6 1.8 -0 207.1 12 
Striped maple 764.8 309.9 43.1 -0 1,117.8 2 
Red maple SiG 7/ 454.1 87.8 0 1,073.6 17 
Mountain maple 557/03} 367.6 30.2 0 955.1 1 
Apple 0 Wists} 2.0 -0 13.8 72 
Staghorn sumac 3.6 0 0 -0 3.6 s? 
Mountain ash 40.9 87.2 2.0 -0 130.1 s 
Hobblebush viburnumn 1,033.5 208.6 59.7 0 1,301.8 s 
Total readily browsed 3} No 1 1,465.8 226.6 -0 4,808.5 

Balsam fir 1,111.9 1,483.7 106.5 -0 2,702.1 17 
White pine 80.6 52.5 1.8 0 134.9 31 
Sugar maple 1,003.2 591.2 141.1 0 1/355} 7 
Shadbush 65.8 N3}57/ 4.0 -0 83.5 s 
Yellow birch SI7/ 555 127.1 89.9 -0 534.5 14 
Paper birch 210.1 332.6 48.1 -0 590.8 19 
Red-Osier dogwood 4.0 37.8 20.8 -0 62.6 s 
Hawthorn 14.2 -0 4.0 0 18.2 0 
American hazelnut 179.2 95.0 30.0 0 304.2 s 
Beaked hazelnut 107.0 33.3 37.5 0 177.8 s 
Beech 734.0 231.6 89.2 -0 1,054.8 9 
White ash 244.7 130.8 Io? .0 390.7 5 
Black ash 18.3 0 2.0 -0 20.3 0 
Winterberry 9.5 -0 0 0 a5) s 
Honeysuckle 75.4 Slot 32.2 -0 138.7 Ss 
Mountain holly 0 3.8 0 -0 3.8 s 
Balsam poplar 10.9 12.2 A) 0 7X3} 51 0 
Bigtooth aspen 0 12.0 0 -0 12.0 0) 
Quaking aspen 47.9 45.1 43.0 -0 136.0 12 
Pin cherry 72S 5335 7/ 108.6 Alo) $)35)5 i 5 
Black cherry 66.7 Vos: 93.6 0 237.6 3 
Chokecherry 9.3 93.5 5.8 0 108.6 s 
White oak Wot ZO -0 -0 9.7 21 
Roses 2.0 0 0 0 2.0 s 
Brambles 1,292.3 1,797.0 1,019.8 0 4,109.1 s 
Willows 10.9 27.4 -0 0 38.3 23 
Common elderberry 31.8 Devil Woz 0 46.1 s 
Red-berried elder 70.4 0 2.0 0 72.4 s 
American elm 13.9 3}58) 1.8 0 19.6 0 
Blueberries 74.7 478.9 112.6 0 666.2 Ss 
Sweetfern 34.3 25.6 0 0 5959 Ss 
Maple-leaf viburnum S15)57/ Mito ll 4.0 0) 80.8 s 
Wild raisin 45.7 14.3 29.4 -0 89.4 s 
Small cranberry WS}G7/ eal 0 -0 14.8 s 


Total commonly browsed 6,116.1 5,851.4 20551 0 14,022.6 


Table 18.-—-Continued 
(In millions of stems) 


Species Stand-size class 
and ee All Percent 
browse i Sapling and Non- classes daplings 

preference class Sawtimber Poletimber seedling stocked 
Tamarack 1.8 4.1 0 0 5.9 31 
White spruce 11.8 33a7/ 0 20 15.5 61 
Black spruce -0 5.4 -0 0 5.4 0 
Red spruce 459.0 390.6 86.6 -0 936.2 14 
Pitch pine -0 So// -0 0 ai/ 67 
Speckled alder 106.3 68.9 92> A) 267.7 s 
Gray birch S3joil 29.6 20.3 -0 83.0 Sil 
Lambkill 68.2 84.7 26.1 0 179.0 Ss 
Labrador tea -0 -0 17.6 0 17.6 s 
Eastern hophornbeam il 53} 24.5 14.2 0 60.0 16 
Red oak 153.6 82.0 185.2 0 420.8 3} 
Spiraea 147.2 297.9 134.1 A) 579.2 s 
Total infrequently browsed 1,002.3 997.1 576.6 -0 DST} 50) 
Witch-hazel 28.6 Dop 21.9 -0 SLol/ 
Gooseberries 7.4 37.6 6.1 -0 51.1 
Total questionable 36.0 39.8 28.0 0 103.8 
Other species 176.0 226.1 149.7 0 551.8 
Total all species 10,446.5 8,580.2 3,036.0 -0 22,062.7 
Sampling error 

(percent ) 9 13 28 - 5.7 


*Classed as shrub species. 


9°61 97°C OF L°T 0°? 0° 0° G°OT 0° UTo UueoTFISuy 
0°TL 0° 7°OL 0° 0° 0° 0° 0°2 0° Jeple petijeq-poy 
1°94 0° £°9€ 0° 0° 0° Os 8°6 0° AijeqiepyTe uowmo) 
£°8Ee 6°L 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 7°O0€ 0° SMOTTTM 
1°601‘¥ T°€1Z 0°96 °Z 6°9 0°9 0° 0° 8°OLT‘T £°9S72 SoTqueig 
0°? 0° 0°? 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° sosoy 
L°6 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° L°6 yeo 33TUM 
9°80T 7° EY €°CE 0° 0° 0° 0° 0°€? 6°6 ALLIYIoyxoyO 
9° LEZ 7° OT 7°S9 0° 8° LY 0° O°cE Gasca L°6S At1eyD ye 
I°SEE OS 8° 172 0° L°T 0° 0° 8°19 (6 EXE Al19YD UT 
0° 9€T G°ST T°69 0° 0°? S°9 0° I°ZT 8°SZ uedse Bupzyenh 
O°?cT 0° 0° 0° 0°OT 0° 0° 0°? 0° uedse y30043TYg 
T°€?¢ 0° e°cl 0° 0° On 0° 6°OT (0) ie{dod wesTeg 
8°e 0° 8°€ 0° 0° 0° 0° (0) 0° ATTOY uFequnoy 
L* 8€T JLXS 9°GL 0° 0° 0° 0° 9°S'7 O°vT eTHONsAoUOH 
C°6 0° G°6 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° Ai1aq194UTM 
€°072 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° c°9OT 1° yse 4°eTd 
L° 06€ 9°ZOT 2° O8T 7°€ 6°17 9°61 0° S°OT G°?S yse 33T4M 
8°7S0°T 9°¢ 7°700‘T 0° 6°S 6°T 0° 1° eee yooog 
8° LLT Siac L°87¢ 0° (SUS 0° 0° 0°76 0°? qJnuTezey pexeog 
o°V70€ 8°T L°9@T 0°92 0°8 0° 0° e°?tt G°62 jnuTezey ueotiouy 
é°St 0° o°uT 0° 0°” 0° 0° 0° 0° uloy Mey 
9°79 0° 0° 8°02 0°” 0° 0° 8° LE 0° poomZop 1a tso-pey 
8° 06S T° 6€ 9°86I 0° 0°? s°9 0° €°LS2 €°/8 yoitq stedeg 
G*7ES WG GS* T8€ 0° 0° 0° 0° T°S2T 8°S7~ Yortq MOTTIA 
G*€8 0° 0°O0€ 0° 0°” 0° 0° 0°? G° LY ysnqpeys 
C°SELST L°8S €°O1S‘*T 0° G*HE L°8 0° 2°02 T°€Ot etTdem aesng 
6° VET 6°OT 8°97 0° T°Oor 6°S B°E 0°? 7°GL eutd 23 T4M 
T°Z0L‘Z 9°CI7e L°LéS 0° 6° LT 6°S 0° MXSYLO | €°9T AfZ wesTeg 
G°808‘¥ 6° 862 L°89Z°E WAS €°Tror 1°9 6°T 9°6LL 9°89€ pasmoiq AT}peet Te] 
8° TOE *T HOOys 6°L90‘T 0° 0° 0° 0° o°SLT 0°? mnuangfaA ysnqeTqqoH 
T°O€T 8°T o°uT 0° 0° 0° 0° 9°70I S°*6 yse upequnoy 
9°E€ 0° 0° L°T 0° 0° 0° 0° 6°I Deuns ur0yse Ss 
8°eT 8°6 0°? 0° 0° 0° 0° 0°? 0° etddy 
T°SG6 9°78 8°9L9 0° 0° 0° 0° L°G6T 0° eTdem upequnoy 
9°€L0‘T 7°76 L°90S (Lo 6° 7S T°9 6°T £° 61 9°S6T eTdem poy 
JO AS 6°97 7° O16 0° 9°8E 0° 0° 7°06 G°Te etdem pedti4s 
T° L072 L°8 L£°0S 0° B°L 0° 0° 8° TT T°8cl yooTMey uso sey 
Mg 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 9°S 0° Tepso—97FYM UL9Y4ION 
yoitq spoompiey eTdem per ALOYITY outd outd Bo outd pol sSeTo soUerTezeid 

sdnoa3 /uedsy u19Yy AION /yse/uTa /x®80 /AP80 p1eH /sonids /23 74M 9SMo1q 

TTV pue 

dnoai3 sdAq-3sS0104 sofoods 


(sweqs JO suo;{, [yu uT) 


€861 ‘eatysdmey mon {3 FUQ UISeYyZION ‘dnoi3 oedAQ-Jso103 pue ‘sseToO seoUet1ezeid 
esMoIq ‘seftoeds Aq pueTisqut} uo sZuttdes pue ‘ssut[peess ‘sqnays jo AequUNN--°6], FTGeL 


44 


L°S T€ Tl GL 6€ HL G9 GI 1Z (quedided ) 
1oii9 Buy tdwes 
L£°790‘7Z EISGCaT 9°6L7‘TT 7°06 e°T8Y (Nel T° 6€4 T°€se ‘9 €°6S0‘°Z soypoods [Te TeIO], 
8° TSS €°9T LECT G°1? 0° €°8 Sue eee CLG G*Tel seyoeds 19420 
8° COT 0° 9° GE 0° 1°92 0° 0° Cece O°? eTqeuoy ysonb Teo] 
T°TS 0° 8° Le 0° 0° 0° 0° (S304 0° S09 T119qaso05y 
L°@s 0° 9°L 0° 1°72 0° 0° 0° OMe Tezey-Yyo rtm 


0°95 *Z CO ea e° 179 LE=9 6° 6€ 6°£ 6° ECE 8°9S6 1° 19% pesmorq 
eee ET AT Juenbeayuy TeV, 


f° 62S €° ev G*6ET eal 0° OT 0° 0° 0° 9GT [LANES eoeitds 
8°07Y €° 8°79 (Sanh O°st 6°E£ esre 0° 9°SL eo pow 
0°09 0° y° 7 0° 0°? 0° 0° ORS 9°TT weequioydoy ureqjsey 
9° LT 0° 0° 0° 0° OF 0° 9° LT 0° Boy Aopeaqey 
0°6LT 0° v° 18 0° 0° 0° 0°?sS 9°92 0°6T TT Faque'y 
0°€8 0° OT (7A! 0° 6°6 0° T°ScT G°4T L°ScT yortq AerD 
L°L97 9°OE T°Z8 OI 0° 0° 0° T°88 Z°09 tepte pepTyxoeds 
L°S 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° L°s 0° 0° autd yortd 
7° 9€6 €°Sv Y°Z0Z 0° 0° (0) 0° 0° 629 G°9¢S eonids poy 
7°S 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0°G 0° gonads yore Tg 
G°cT 0° ge 0° 0° 0° 0° L°Tl 0° vonids 9o3TYyM 
6°S 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 6°S (0) yoesrewey, 
9°ZZ0‘ HT 0°S08 9°96 ‘SL 8°8S 6°STE 0°SS G°60T L°OTR SY I°TZO‘I pesmosaq ATUOMMOD TeIO], 
8° rT 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 8° HT 0° ArJoqueio TTeUsg 
7°68 ON 8° 0° 0° 0° 0° 8° 1S (YT ILCE, uysfFet PT EM 
8°08 0° L°le 0° T°€y 0° 0° 0° 0°9 unuingyA jeoT-oT[dey 
6° 6S 0° LOWE, 0° O° 0° y° 872 0° 8°S ULIBTJIOOMS 
7°999 8°9V €°9€ 0° L°SE 0° €°CV 9°67 Crna SoyiteqonT 
yoatq spoompiaey eTdew per ALOYI TY autd outd ATS eutd pea sseTo v0uetezoad 
sdnoai3 /uedsy ur9y7z AON /yse /UTy /x®0 /X®0 paey /eonads /27 74M asMoiq 
TIv pue 
dnoa3 oedA3-489104 sopoods 


(sueaqs jo suoy],T yw uz) 
ponuyzquop——"6T eTqeL, 


45 


Table 20.--Number of shrubs, seedlings, and saplings on timberland by species, 
browse preference class, and browse utilization class, Northern Unit, 


New Hampshire, 1983 


Species and Browse utilization class 


browse preference pee Sees ee ee eee as ee All Sampling 
class None Light Moderate Heavy GUESSES cee 

SESS SSS SSS SSS MESISIET OTS }E Cm S Percent 
Northern white-cedar 5.6 0 0 0 5.6 73 
Eastern hemlock 201.2 0 5.9 70) 207.1 2S 
Striped maple 912.1 140.8 39.3 25.6 1,117.8 13 
Red maple 889.3 92.2 90.1 2.0 1,073.6 12 
Mountain maple 716.1 157.5 63.0 18.5 955.1 16 
Apple 13.8 0 0 0 13.8 73 
Staghorn sumac 3.6 0 0 0 3.6 71 
Mountain ash 117.9 0 WAG? 0 130.1 39 
Hobblebush viburnum 903.3 271.0 80.9 46.6 1,301.8 14 
Total readily browsed 3,762.9 661.5 291.4 92.7 4,808.5 7/ 
Balsam fir 2,654.8 34.3 10.8 Do? 2,702.1 13 
White pine 130.9 2.0 2.0 Ale) 134.9 2h 
Sugar maple 1,538.2 178.6 5.4 13.3 1,735.5 18 
Shadbush 83.5 0 0 -0 83.5 45 
Yellow birch 397.1 97.8 39.6 -0 534.5 17 
Paper birch 455.7 103.1 7.6 24.4 590.8 19 
Red-Osier dogwood 41.8 0 20.8 -0 62.6 59 
Hawthorn 18.2 0 0 0 18.2 71 
American hazelnut 278.2 26.0 0 0 304.2 37 
Beaked hazelnut 120.5 14.0 Ae) 43.3 177.8 41 
Beech 1,024.6 12.5 15.9 1.8 1,054.8 15 
White ash 287.1 92.6 11.0 0 390.7 21 
Black ash 20.3 0 0 -0 20.3 45 
Winterberry 9.5 0 Ae) 0 9.5 100 
Honeysuckle 133.0 5./ 0) Ae) 138.7 30 
Mountain holly 3.8 0 0 Ae) 3.8 100 
Balsam poplar 14.4 Ae) 8.7 0 23.1 71 
Bigtooth aspen 2.0 10.0 0) 0 12.0 85 
Quaking aspen 114.9 19.0 Dol 0 136.0 24 
Pin cherry 304.8 30.3 0 0 335.1 31 
Black cherry 216.3 11.6 7.9 1.8 237.6 22 
Chokecherry 102.6 2.0 4.0 Ae) 108.6 45 
White oak 6.0 3.7 0 0 9.7 60 
Roses 0 2.0 0 0 2.0 100 
Brambles 3,981.7 45.1 82.3 -0 4,109.1 22 
Willows 38.3 0 Ale) -0 38.3 49 
Common elderberry 28.6 17.5 0 0 46.1 41 
Red-berried elder 60.4 Ae) 10.0 2.0 72.4 72 
American elm 19.6 Ale) 0 0 19.6 44 
Blueberries 554.5 111.7 0 0 666.2 41 
Sweetfern 59.9 Ale) 0 0 59.9 55 
Maple-leaf viburnum 68.0 12.8 0 Ae) 80.8 46 
Wild raisin 69.3 20.1 0 0 89.4 43 
Small cranberry 14.8 0 0 Ae) 14.8 93 


Total commonly browsed 12,853.3 852.4 228.1 88.8 14,022.6 8 


Table 20.--Continued 


Species and 


browse preference All Sampling 
class None Light Moderate Heavy parses CEEOL 

SERS SSS Million stems --~-------------------- Percent 
Tamarack 5.9 0 -0 0 5.9 76 
White spruce 15.5 -0 Ale) 0 M5)55) 51 
Black spruce 5.4 -0 -0 -0 5.4 100 
Red spruce 904.2 8.4 21.6 2.0 936.2 20 
Pitch pine Sod 0 0 Ale) 5.7 100 
Speckled alder 258.7 0 9.0 0 267.7 40 
Gray birch 76.5 6.5 0 0 83.0 32 
Lambkill 179.0 Ae) 0 0 179.0 40 
Labrador tea 17.6 -0 0 0 17.6 100 
Eastern hophornbeam 60.0 0 m0) 0) 60.0 37 
Red oak 410.4 2.0 8.4 0) 420.8 45 
Spiraea 526.3 52.9 ALO) 0 579.2 28 
Total infrequently browsed 2,465.2 69.8 39.0 2.0 2,576.0 14 
Witch-hazel 39.7 0 13.0 0) 52. 51 
Gooseberries 51.1 0 0 Ale) Stoll 36 
Total questionable 90.8 0) 13.0 0 103.8 31 
Other species 518.3 21.9 7.8 3.8 551.8 22 
Total all species 19,690.5 1,605.6 579.3 187.3 22,062./7 So// 

Sampling error 
(percent ) 6 13 20 42 5./ 


Browse utilization class 


47 


48 


SOUTHERN UNIT 
TABLES 


Elm/Ash/Red Maple--1% 
Oak/Hickory--14% 


Aspen/Birch--2% 
Oak/Pine--3% 
Hard Pine--41% White/Red Pine--44% 


Northern Hardwoods--34% 
Spruce/Fir-—41% 


Area of timberland by type group 


Table 21.--Area of timberland by forest type, forest-type group, and 
stand-size class, Southern Unit, New Hampshire, 1983 


(In thousands of acres) 


Stand-size class 
Forest type and — All 


forest-type group Sawtiaben Paletimbar Sapling and NAS eS eReA classes 
seedling 

Red pine 14.5 0 0 0 14.5 
White pine 535.8 53.7 5.0 10) 644.5 
White pine/hemlock 158.8 49.7 14.4 0 222.9 
Hemlock 111.9 14.5 7.4 0 133.8 

White/red pine group 821.0 117.9 76.8 Ae) 1,015.7 
Red spruce 14.7 11.5 0 0 26.2 
Red spruce/balsam fir 0 7.3 0 -0 7.3 

Spruce/fir group 14.7 18.8 0 0 33.5 
Pitch pine 0 7.4 7.3 0 14.7 

Hard pine group 0 7.4 7.3 0 14.7 
Wh. pine/no. red oak/wh. ash 35.6 29.2 7.3 0 72.1 
Other oak/pine 0 7.4 0 AAO) 7.4 

Oak/pine group 35.6 36.6 7.3 0 79.5 
Post, black, or bear oak 22.0 0 0 Ale) 22.0 
Chestnut oak 7.1 Ae) 0) 0 7.1 
White oak/red oak/hickory 14.6 14.3 0 0 28.9 
White oak 14.5 0 0 0 14.5 
Northern red oak 70.9 72.3 ALO) 0 143.2 
Scarlet oak .0 14.2 0 0 14.2 
Red maple/central hardwoods 7.3 28.9 0 0 36.2 
Mixed central hardwoods 36.6 14.7 AAO) 0 51.3 

Oak/hickory group ~ L360 144.4 -0 -0 317.4 
Black ash/Amer. elm/red maple 0 6.7 8.9 AAO) 15.6 

Elm/ash/red maple group -0 6.7 8.9 -0 15.6 
Sugar maple/beech/yellow birch 188.1 108.7 6.7 0 a iB) 
Black cherry 0 0) 7.0 0 7.0 
Red maple/northern hardwoods 131.7 123.8 13.3 0 268.8 
Pin cherry/reverting field -0 AiO) 5.3 0 5.3 
Mixed northern hardwoods 129.5 72.3 7.1 0 208.9 

Northern hardwoods group 449.3 304.8 39.4 0 793-5 
Aspen 0 22.1 7.5 0 29.6 
Paper birch (0) 15.0 0 0 15.0 
Gray birch 10) 0 7.4 0 7.4 


Aspen/birch group 0) 37.1 14.9 0 52.0 


All forest types 1,493.6 673.7 154.6 -0 2,321.9 


49 


8°S 7G 02 82 vA ZI OI 6 OT 8 8 (qued10d) 
Joiijo Buy{dues 
g°S Zev €6 6S 949 SIE 784 ‘T 789°Z €00‘S 08S ‘6 080‘ I 901 ‘SZ vly‘ye setoeds [Te ‘TeIOT 
OOT LI 0 0 0 0 0 0 LI 0 0 0 yse uyejunoy 
61 Ger ‘6 0 7 GS 121 12Z 169 G2@z ‘1 €OL‘T O1v'Z €26°7 yeo yoeTa 
6 GZ1 ‘Ov 82 BLE OLT 818 ZL2‘1 81S ‘2 L8L‘¥ 6€S‘9 786 ‘OT €€9‘ZT yeo ped ureyji0N 
LS 296‘ 0 0 0 0 0 €S L61 ELE OIL 629 yeo ynujzseyD 
8h 7GH°Z 0 92 02 94 1€ €6 992 64S 779 69L Yeo JeETIeIS 
81 G72 ‘6 €Z OI 61 621 9872 6€€ 816 L16 704 *Z 781‘ yeo o3TUM 
OOT €€ 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 €€ ALeYDeHouD 
02 OILSS 0 0 0 0 99 TST 604 €61‘T 88 ‘T €0L‘Z Ar19yo Yor TA 
09 787 0 0 0 0 LI 0 0 0 Ty 771 Aixayo utd 
8Z 1€S‘Z 0 0 0 0 0 0 7G 99 620‘T Z8E‘T  weequioydoy use3seq 
vd 6I1€ 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 89 1SZ etddy 
€I 10S ° ZT 8 8ST 9G Bee 80Z 9ET ST TLS‘T 6S0‘Z BLS ‘4 668 ‘9 yooog 
oy 08z‘€ 0 0 0 07 €8 OI 9€T 6S9 1/6 76E°T ALO TH 
88 8SS 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 8S¢ iepeopei uisqseq 
qU<s.Ieq = ------------------------------------------- see01} puesnoyy, ---------------------------------------- 
462 6°82 6°02 6°81 6°91 6°71 6°71 6°01 6°8 6°9 
1oize sesse[o -0°1Z -0°61 -O°LI -0°ST -O0°ET -0°TT -0°6 -0°L -0°S peroode 
Sut {dues TIV 


(AyZyey Yseeaq ye sayoUT) sseTD Js9zJOUeTG 


€861 ‘eazyusdwey mon 63 Fug ureYIRNOS ‘sseTD AJdjZOWeTp pue 
seyoeds Aq pueTieqwy} uo sve1q BupONpoid—-j nay pue -Jnu oATT [Te jo Asqunyn--°7zZ eTqeR], 


50 


Table 23.--Number of shrubs and saplings on timberland by stand-size class, type of stem, 
and mast type, Southern Unit, New Hampshire, 1983 


Stand-size class 
and type of stem 


Sawtimber: 
Shrubs 
Saplings 


Total sawtimber 


Poletimber: 
Shrubs 
Saplings 


Total poletimber 
Sapling/seedling: 


Shrubs 
Saplings 


Total sapling/seedling 


Nonstocked: 
Shrubs 
Saplings 

Total nonstocked 


Total, all classes 


Nuts 


111,366 
120,026 
231,392 
112,768 

47,059 


159,827 


398,499 


Mast type 


Other seeds 


659,293 
435,491 


1,094,784 
651,051 
310,300 
961,351 
312,480 

93,175 


405,655 


oo 


2,461,790 


(In thousands of stems) 


Berries 
2,207,192 
S25) 
2,220,443 
1,336,628 
0 
1,336,628 
539,861 
4,418 


544,279 


oo 


4,101,350 


Unidentified 
species 


160,912 
0 


160,912 
43,919 
2,865 
46,784 
24,892 
0 


24,892 


232,588 


Total 
stems 


3,138,763 
568,768 


3,707,531 
2,144,366 
360,224 
2,504,590 
877,233 
104,873 


982,106 


Y MEA c2727/ 


51 


*spoompiey [eFOTewMooUCU sepnToUT _ 


WH 8 ST 91 6 él 97 92 €1 (quedied ) 
ioiiea Bup{dues 
ee OL‘ 9E 877°1Z =£90'T VAI 8798 ZYO°ST = 16€ €9L 888 ‘ET sayoods [Te ‘TeBIO] 

OT 8L°LT €SL°TT Tes S16 Loe ‘OT T€0‘9 (aval £€2 959°¢ spoompiey [BIO], 
VE (ASO 160‘T G9 €£ £66 Tv‘ 0 LT ciel ADDS RAN CAN EK0) 
9f 666 (ay) 62 €e OSE €8S 81 0 SEs uTa 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 poomsseg 
Lé L9OT‘T S6S LT E 77S LS 91 ”Y as syeo poy 
GS 69S 80% 0 oT 26E T9T 9@ 0 Gel syeo 9374M 
VE 820‘ TvZ 0 0 T¥Z L872 0 LT OLZ ued sy 
OOoT G9 G9 0 0 G9 0 0 (0) 0 yse 9s9eTE 
Tv G89 L8S €Z L8 LLY 86 0 0 86 yse o37F4M 
€v G7E‘T 079 99 (aval EY G89 02 LOT 8SS yooog 
LE 046 S6S 0) 0 G6S SVE 0 0 SVE youtq Aerp 
G2 ie, 689°T SE €LT 184‘T €SS 0 0 €cs¢ yoryq tedeg 
ce HLT Z04‘T ina 64 OzE‘T ZLT 91 0 9cT Yoatq MOTTA 
61 076 °€ 9062 é81 OTE 80477 810°T 6 81 196 etdew poy 
T€ 8E0'T 009 18 (G3 60S 7 L 0 604 etdeu ie3ng 

Il 989 ‘81 G19‘6 CES 208 Tve‘8 110°6 672 O€S 7E7 ‘8B SpoomjzJos [eIOL 
19 T€8 Tel 9¢ €€ cL OOL 0 GY SS9 Spoomzzos 19430 
GC 0841 659 9L (ASI 901 128 eel €€ 999 yIoTWoH 
0 0 0) 0 0 0) 0 0 0) 0 Aepso—-97 Tym UL9YI10ON 
GT €68°1T 8119 96£ 82S 707° STL°S 601 €82 €ZE°S euyd eau 
GL OS VAS 0 0 VAS OT 0 0 OT autd poy 
SZ 1S0‘€ 964‘ LT 1G Ger ‘I GGS‘T 8I LT 02S ‘TI aoniads poy 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 eonids yoRTE 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 eonids 83TUM 
OoT SS 0 0) 0) 0 SS 0 GS 0) yoerewey 
GE 97E‘T LLY‘T LI 0 091 ‘T 671 0 L6 cS AIFF wesyTeg 

TITS OU Oa ee ee ee eee eee Boone DUES OU ee 
Sh 6°71 6°OT 6° VT 6°OT 
AOAL9 TTe poets azel S(O =(0)"°G Bae yell (0) |! =(OinG 
sutztdues Te#IO1, sopoods 
doj usaxo1g doq 30e UT 
€861 ‘oatysduey moy *3TUM UTEYQNOS ‘sseTO AaqZoWeTp 


pue ‘uot z~puos ‘satoeds Aq pueTioquyq uo soeiq peep BuTpuejs jo ASquNN--—"hZ OTqQe]L 


52 


*spoompiey TeFOLeuUMOOUOU SepNyc'T 


8°9 él €1 62 8 OL 9H 6 Tl (quedjed) 
Joiio Buyt{tdues 
8°9 9€8 ‘HE 0z0‘8 176‘9 6L0‘T 918 ‘97 1St 81 08% ‘TI VOL‘IT sefoeds [Te ‘Te OF 
8 1€9°8Z 617° O16‘Y 69S 7ST EZ 1S¥ Ly GEGOV Z8Z‘OI spoompiey [BIO] 
0€ €7S°T SOY LEE 89 SEIT via 0 99/ BEE poPoompzey 19430 
Ty p71 €6 GY 84 TS 0) 0 ve LI wT 
LS L8€ 0 0 0 L8E 0 0 OzE 19 poomsseg 
1Z ZE0*Z Zev I€€ 101 009‘T oY 0 889 898 SyeO poy 
LE Gcz VE 0 7€ 12Z 0 0 v€ L81 syeo 2aTUM 
99 G9Y 9€ 9€ 0 674 0 0 ZI LI uedsy 
ZL 98 0 0 0 98 0 0 0 98 yse »orTE 
9€ 16€ 977 "77 0 LOT 0 0 LIT OS yse o3TUM 
61 909‘€ SZ 661 cS 7SESE 0 (45 718°T 9841 yooog 
8E 9€Z Gel Sel 0 101 0 0 9€ G9 yoitq Aeip 
2Z TE6°Z eT €vT*T v€ 7GL°T 0 0 CLS 6L1‘T yoitq tedeg 
97 LOS ‘*Z O€L 089 OS LLL‘ 0 1 1€8 706 YOITq MOTTE 
al 764 ‘TT 629°T 784 °T G71 6986 0 LI ISL°S L60‘4 etdew poy 
7Z G6 ‘7 O€€ 962 7€ 777 °T ELE vE 768 €26 eTdew 1e3ng 
GT G0z‘9 17S‘Z neo OTS 799°€ 0 ve 807 ‘2 GOP | Spoomjjos [BIO] 
GL Ov 97 97 0 val 0 0 val 0 SPOOM}JOS 10430 
CL CcLT‘T 622 71Z LI 946 0 7€ LEE CLS yoo way 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0) Teped-977TYM U1eYII0N 
61 ZLS°€ 6€€ “T ZEIT L0Z €€7‘°Z 0 0 6L9‘T GG eutd 9374M 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 eutd pey 
LY G80‘T 619 Tv 8EZ 904 0 0 O€T 917 sonids poy 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 eonids yoerTg” 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 eonids 9274M 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 yorseuey, 
7G €€€ 892 022 84 G9 0 0 8Y LI 1yJ wesTeg 
quedideg Senos Serie SSeS = GREPS OHS f,, coemco Sse eee Se EE a5 
sol} do3 do3 doj doj do} ATT Trno 
10119 tte peep usy7o1g qoe UL PATT peed usxZoIg q0e WUT ON sopoods 
Sut Tdues Tero] TeqoL 12307, 
peed PATTI 


pueTIequUyT, UO SeTIFAeD peATosqoO YIM (*Y°q*p SeydUT +0°C) see1q JO JSequNN--°¢Z 2eTqQe] 


€861 ‘eafysdmey mon 63}FuUQ UIeYQANOS ‘UOT }_pUOD pue sotoeds Aq 


53 


Table 26.--Number of shrubs, seedlings, and saplings on timberland by species, browse 
preference class, and stand-size class, Southern Unit, New Hampshire, 1983 


(In millions of stems) 


Species Stand-size class 
and ee ee All Percent 
browse : : Sapling and Non- classes saplings 
Seeierenee Glass Sawtimber Poletimber seedling stocked 

Canada yew 25.3 0 .0 0 2553 s@ 
Eastern hemlock 328.5 9351 Ms o72 0 446.8 20 
Striped maple 329.4 NING. 2 Ae) 0 448.6 4 
Red maple 840.4 579.0 205.1 0 1,624.5 16 
Mountain maple 81.7 10.8 0 0 92.5 0 
Apple 4.5 0 9.9 -0 14.4 21 
Smooth sumac 2.9 L25 0 AO) 15.4 s 
Staghorn sumac U52 0 3.0 0 10.2 s 
Mountain ash oS 0 0 0 os s 
Hobblebush viburnum 84.9 60.0 0 0 144.9 s 
Total readily browsed 1,706.3 874.6 243.2 0 2,824.1 

Balsam fir 129.2 44.0 AO) 0 7/352 14 
Common juniper 90.6 207.4 6.0 0 304.0 Ss 
White pine 448.8 72.7 35.0 0 556.5 21 
Sugar maple 223.1 255.6 54.1 0 532.8 10 
Shadbush 199.1 74.3 1.4 -0 274.8 s 
Yellow birch 175.0 66.2 1.5 0 242.7 16 
Black birch 92.5 29.3 -0 0 121.8 25 
Paper birch 129.3 131.9 14.4 AO) 275.6 14 
Red-Osier dogwood 10.2 50.6 13.8 0 74.6 s 
Hawthorn 10.1 8.7 0 0 18.8 0 
American hazelnut 45.8 46.9 AA) -0 92.7 s 
Beaked hazelnut 65.7 65.9 0 0 131.6 s 
Beech 266.3 63.0 15) AO) 330.8 19 
White ash 241.6 V3ol/ -0 -0 Sil 58 7 
Black ash 4.2 10.2 0 0 14.4 42 
Winterberry 30.3 56.0 AO) 0 86.3 s 
Honeysuckle 35.4 Ae) 34.7 0 70.1 s 
Mountain holly 0 22.6 0 0 22.6 s 
Bigtooth aspen 4.5 7.4 7.8 0 IY) s7/ 0 
Quaking aspen 59.3 32.3 32.7 0 124.3 14 
Pin cherry 32.4 19s1 50.0 0 101.5 2 
Black cherry 184.0 49.5 55.4 0 288.9 3 
Chokecherry 28.4 34.4 36.8 0 99.6 s 
White oak 121.5 50.4 65) -0 173.4 1l 
Roses 4.5 0 4.2 0 8.7 s 
Brambles 463.5 PNT oil 176.8 -0 857.4 s 
Willows 4.5 0 Sell 0 7.6 20 
Common elderberry 3.0 14.4 0 0 17.4 s 
Red-berried elder 4.3 Ae) 0 0 4.3 s 
American elm 8.5 Dine. 1.5 Ae) S22 7 
Blueberries 963.3 475./ 209.6 0 1,648.6 s 
Sweetfern 39155 17.6 -0 -0 57.1 s 
Maple-leaf viburnum 171.8 55.0 21.4 -0 248.2 s 
Wild raisin 111.0 32.6 -0 0 143.6 s 


Total commonly browsed 4,401.2 2,308.7 763.2 0 7,473.1 


Table 26.--Continued 


(In millions of stems) 


Species Stand-size class 
and —<—<——— All Percent 
browse Sawti aber Poletinber Sapling and Non- classes saplings 

preference class seedling stocked 
Black spruce 155) 0 20 0 55} 100 
Red spruce 47.1 60.7 -0 10) 107.8 19 
Pitch pine 0 165} 0 0 os 100 
Speckled alder 43.0 47.9 16.6 0 107.5 Ss 
Black chokecherry 1.4 1.4 46.6 -0 49.4 s 
Gray birch UU od SoZ 156.8 -0 287.7 26 
Lambkill 50.1 26.4 Dies 10) 78.8 s 
Eastern hophornbeam 26.7 9.7 ok 0 43.6 44 
Red oak 287.5 124.9 40.4 -0 452.8 10 
Spiraea 155 ;e7/) 241.5 222 0) 619.7 s 
Total infrequently browsed 690.7 567.2 492.4 0 57/5053) 
Witch-hazel 194.1 163.7 30.6 0 388.4 s 
Gooseberries 6.5 2.9 20 -0 9.4 s 
Total questionable 200.6 166.6 30.6 0 397.8 
Other species 702.9 461.9 124.0 20 1,288.8 
Total all species Teh Over, 4,379.0 1,653.4 -0 B35 7/Syfso 1 
Sampling error 

(percent ) 8 12 25 - 565 


*Classed as shrub species. 


L°8 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° L°8 sesoy 
7° ELT 0° 0°st 0° L°€9 G°T 7°€T 0° 8°9L yeo eaTuM 
9°66 0° 0°92 0° VaAS 0° 0° 0° f° 6E AAISYDoHoyYD 
6° 8872 6°8 8°€8 0° €° 92 LTT 8°62 0° 7° 871 Azzeyo ye 
S° TOT O°e 9° 7H €°T o°SC 0° 0° 0° 9°17 Aiieyo utg 
€°”CT B°Te €°4 0° 6°S Gey 0° 0° 8° LL uedse Sufzyend 
L°61 0° (S70) 0° 6°8 0° Ore 0° G°T uedse y30033Tg 
GG 0° 0° 0° B°S 0° 0° 0° 8°9T ATTOy upequnoy 
T°OL 0° 7° 9E 0° Go Ul 0° 0° 0° L°9Z eTyYonsf£ouoy 
£°98 0° 8°99 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° G°61 Aii29q194UTM 
view! 0° 7°L 0° (Gun) 0° 0° 0° 8°? yse »oeT"d 
€°LT€ (L> fl S*80T 0° 9°9€ 0° 0° 0° G° HOT yse o77UM 
8° OE 7°T 6° TEC 0° €°6E 7°T 0° G*T €°ss yovog 
9° TET 0° Gril 0° B°SY G°Gs 0° 0° T°€Z jnupTezey poxeeg 
L°%6 0° 9° 47T 0° T°€# S°Or 0° 0° G° HZ ynuytezey uedticny 
8°sI 0° Goll 0° T°O1 0° 0° 0° G*T utoy 4MeY 
9° FL 8° el 6°6 0° CH 0° 0° 0° 0° L°8 poomZop 197TSQ-pey 
9°SLle G°L G°08 0° G°GS 0° 0° 6°T Z°O€T yoitq iasedeg 
8°T?I 0° 9° FT 0° G°0Z 0° S*T 0° 7°S8 yortq AeTa 
KG 0° L°601 0° 6°12 6°? 0° 7° OT 8°26 Yortq MOTTEA 
8°77 vie) 8°e9 0° 0°6ET G*T 0° S*T 9°79 ysnqpeys 
8° CES 8° OT V° OTE 0° C°EE G*T 0° 0° 6°79T etdem aeZns 
G°9SS 0°e f° LOT 0° 7° 6S 9°12 Ore 0° £°9SE eutd a27uM 
0° ¥70€ 0° G°1Z2 0° 7°70Z T°02 G*T 0° G°9G aedtunf uomwmog 
c°e LI G°T €°96 0° S°Y 0° 0° 7° OT G°09 IfjJ wesTeg 
1°778°Z 9°89 Z°€60°T 7°? c°OT€ 9°CL 8°€7 7ST 6° L0Z°T pesmoiq AT }peet T[eIOL 
6° 771 0° G° vel 0° y°H G°t 0° 0° G°l wunuing fA ysnqeTqqoy 
G°T 0° G°T 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° yse upejunoy 
c° OT 0° O°€ 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° eo oeuns uz0yseqs 
7°CT 0° 9°?T 0° 7°T 0° 0° 0° 7°T deuns yJoous 
7° 7T 0° 7° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0°Or atddy 
Ac) 0° G°68 0° O°e 0° 0° 0° 0° etTdeu upejunow 
G°4729°T c°L9 €°8cy 7°72 B°E97 G°67 8° EZ 9°CY T°97Z etdew poy 
9°87 7°T 9° LZE 0° 9° LT 0° 0° 0° e° cor etdew podt1qg 
8°97 0° c°€8 0° 9°7T 9°8T 0° 0° 7° OEE yooTwsey uszsqseq 
€°SZ 0° 9°8 0° 9°¢ 0° 0° 0° T°Tt mek epeuep 
yoitq Spoompieyu otTdeu por AIOYI TY outd oautd ITS autd per SSPTD sd.UeIZzoId 

sdnoi3 /uedsy u19U ION /use /UTa /%®0 /7e0 paeH /aonads /2774M aSMo1qg 

TTV SSE pue 

dno1i3 odkj-3s0I104 setoeds 


(swej3s Jo SUOT,TT}W UT) 


€861 ‘eitusduey mon 63 FUQ UADYQANOS ‘dno1iZ odkj-JAsei0j pue ‘sseTD vdUEeITZzeAd 
asmoiq ‘satoeds Aq pue,Tisquyq uo ssuyztdes pue ‘ssut[Tpess ‘sqnays jo Aequnn—--°/Z 2TqQeI, 


56 


G°sS (Ay) Tl 08 61 CY TZ 87 IT (queoied ) 
Joiio 3uytdues 
T°VELSET T°S6E 7°089°E L°9GZ G°8SS ‘Z L°TlLy 0°77 8°9FT 1°S00‘9 sefoeds [Te [BIO] 
8° 887 ‘T 6° VT L°OL7 T° 62 6°T8I €°728 7° 9T 0° G°€69 sefoeds 19430 
8° L6E 0°€ 8° TST 0° 9°08 T° Lé 0° 0° €°SeTt eTqeuofjsenb Teo] 
7°6 0° O°e 0° €°V 0° 0° 0° T°Z Sefit9qe9sooy 
7°88 Ore 8°Sy7T 0° €°9L T° LZ 0° 0° c° eel Tezey-Yo rtm 
€°OSL‘T c° TET G°OTE C°OLT T° LST 7° 0S o° 9 L°€s O°TEs pesmoirqg 
ATqjuenbeijzuy [Te Ao] 
L°619 L°SE L°601 L°TyT T° 8€ Ore 6° FI 0° 9°917 eoeitds 
8°CSH G°cZé 8°€9 0° O° LS €°6r G°y 0° L° 787 yeO pod 
9° Cr 0° G°eT 0° 7° €T 0° 0° 0° L°9T uvequioydoy ureqseq 
8°8Z 0° L°sS y°7C 6°7C L°LT 0° 0° T°0OS TT Faquey 
L° L872 G°89 8°?E G*6 en 7° OT 8°97 G°y 8°€6 yortq erp 
7°67 0° 0° 0° 7°T 0° 0° 0° 0°87 AAAVYIoYOYD Ye TE 
c° LOT G*T G°€e 9° 9T 0° 0° 0° 6°8 O° LY iepte peTyxeds 
G°T 0° 0° 0° G*T 0° 0° 0° 0° eutd yortd 
8° LOT 0° 0°0S 0° 7°T 0° 0° €°O” T°9T sonids poy 
G*T 0° G*T 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° vonids yoeT_ 
T°ELY SL 9° LLT 0°”S8‘T O°€es L°878‘T €°6€7 9°CET L°LY 7° LET‘€ pesmoaq ATuoMMOD TeIOI, 
9°EvT 6° TT G°OT 0° G°69 0° 0° 7°T €°OS uysTet PTIM 
7° 8H G° 6°? 0° €°s801 G° CoEv 0° 8°78 unuing}A jeeT—ol[dey 
T°LS 0° 0°82 0° c°? 0° 0° 0° 9°72 ulejz IONS 
9°849‘T 0°9 L°?el 0° G°86S L°46 6°8 9°02 f° L6L SofiIioqonyTg 
GIGS 7° OT 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 8°SCT bo 
€° 0° €°” 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 19plTs pefiteq—poy 
y° LT 0° 0° 0° 7° HT 0° 0° 0° O°E Adioqiepte uowmmoyg 
9°L Us 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° 0° Gc’ SMOTT TM 
7° 1S8 L°SE€ T°€0Z2 G°6 9°8ET 7°T SUS 0° 8° LEY soTqueig 
yortq spoompiey etdem por ALOYI TY outd outd ITS outd pel sse[o ddUuetezoid 
sdnoi3 /uedsy udoy ION /use /wTg /%e0 /xeO paey /eonads /2374M easmMoig 
TIV pue 
dnoi3 odhéq- sS0104 sotoods 


(sweqs JO suo;,T TW ut) 


penuzqwop-—"/Z eTqIeL, 


57 


Table 28.--Number of shrubs, seedlings, and saplings on timberland by species, 
browse prefere ce class, and browse utilization class Southern Unit, 


New Hampshire, 1983 


Species and Browse utilization class : 

browse preference cc sae Sampling 

class None Light Moderate Heavy classes SEEDS 

SSS SS SS SS SSS Minn on Stems) a Percent 
Canada yew D353) -0 -0 -0 25.3 60 
Eastern hemlock 446.8 0) -0 0 446.8 14 
Striped maple 376.0 30.9 41.7 0 448.6 21 
Red maple 1,382.3 137.4 86.2 18.6 1,624.5 9 
Mountain maple 89.4 Soil 0 0 92.5 54 
Apple 14.4 0 0 0 14.4 76 
Smooth sumac 15.4 0) 0 0 15.4 82 
Staghorn sumac 10.2 -0 0 -0 10.2 Ui 
Mountain ash oS) 0 0 -0 ios 100 
Hobblebush viburnum 80.3 64.6 0 0 144.9 43 
Total readily browsed 2,441.6 236.0 127.9 18.6 2,824.1 7 
Balsam fir 15)3}52 1.4 18.6 0 W/ 3.522 26 
Common juniper 301.0 3.0 -0 -0 304.0 50 
White pine 546.2 10.3 -0 0 556.5 18 
Sugar maple 428.1 82.0 D2 -0 532.8 21 
Shadbush 228.0 38.4 -0 8.4 274.8 34 
Yellow birch 183.7 53}52 5.8 AO) 242.7 30 
Black birch 118.8 3.0 0 -0 121.8 35 
Paper birch 217.4 42.9 os} 3.0 275.6 19 
Red-Osier dogwood 74.6 0 -0 -0 74.6 62 
Hawthorn 18.8 0 0) 0 18.8 47 
American hazelnut 69.4 19.5 3.8 -0 92.7 33 
Beaked hazelnut 70.5 61.1 0 0 131.6 51 
Beech 283.2 34.5 335i -0 330.8 13 
White ash 280.0 32.9 4.4 -0 S7/ 53} 17 
Black ash 14.4 0) Ale) 0 14.4 55 
Winterberry W358) 7.8 0 4.6 86.3 68 
Honeysuckle 70.1 0 0 0 70.1 60 
Mountain holly 4.4 1.4 -0 16.8 22.6 79 
Bigtooth aspen 19.7 Ae) 0 0 19.7 40 
Quaking aspen 91.1 23.6 -0 9.6 124.3 31 
Pin cherry 83.8 14.7 3.0 0 101.5 38 
Black cherry 283.2 Joi/ -0 -0 288.9 18 
Chokecherry 99.6 0 0 0 99.6 38 
White oak S/o 22 3.0 10.1 S}5il 173.4 24 
Roses ok 155} 0 0 8.7 62 
Brambles 857.4 0 0 0 857.4 20 
Willows 7.6 0) -0 0 7.6 53 
Common elderberry 17.4 0 0 0 17.4 84 
Red-berried elder 4.3 0 0 0 4.3 74 
American elm S57 AO) 0 -0 S22 51 
Blueberries 1,536.4 34.7 59.3 18.2 1,648.6 23 
Sweetfern 49.8 1.4 569 0 by/5il 45 
Maple-leaf viburnum 238.1 10.1 0 -0 248.2 36 
Wild raisin WS 7/ ils) Ae) 0 143.6 39 


Total commonly browsed 6,752.4 498.0 159.0 63.7 ToT Ssoul 8 


Table 28.--Continued 


Species and Browse utilization class 

browse preference —_— eu Sampling 
class None Light Moderate Heavy classes SOE 

SSS SSS Million stems —-------------~---~---- Percent 
Black spruce 1.5 -0 0) 0 1.5 100 
Red spruce 107.8 -0 0 0 107.8 28 
Pitch pine 15 0 -0 .0 16S 100 
Speckled alder 93/55 14.0 -0 -0 107.5 32 
Black chokecherry 49.4 0 -0 0 49.4 94 
Gray birch 199.9 297 41.7 16.4 287.7 30 
Lambkill 78.8 -0 -0 0 78.8 45 
Eastern hophornbeam 43.6 20 0 -0 43.6 32 
Red oak 396.8 26.2 26.8 3.0 452.8 14 
Spiraea 544.1 27.0 -0 48.6 619.7 28 
Total infrequently browsed Le SiGe 96.9 68.5 68.0 IL 7/5053} 14 
Witch hazel 363.0 953 16.1 0 388.4 21 
Gooseberries 9.4 Ae) -0 -0 9.4 46 
Total questionable 372.4 9.3 16.1 0 397.8 20 
Other species 1,194.3 61.9 5.9 26.7 1,288.8 16 
Total all species WAPATO) 902.1 377.4 177.0 13,734.1 555 

Sampling error 
(percent ) 6 16 24 31 555 


59 


COUNTY TABLES 


0°8I - ZS 1 6% Ge 8Z 1Z 9€ €Z €Z (quedded) 
iJoiio Buytdwes 
O°8T nZE “6 0 16 9€ LZ €%Z 06S Ovz‘T 9LE‘T 160‘Z 17S‘¢ seafoods [Te ‘TeIO] 
0Z 869°9 0 76 91 L8 OZT 78H 166 €8I‘T 664‘ 027 ‘Z yeo pet ureyzI0N 
64 Z1v 0 0 0 07 69 0S ZS €ZI €€ 69 yeo eaTUM 
00T €€ 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 €€ AAIBYO YLT 
98 862 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 862 ueoquioydoy uieqseq 
6€ €88‘T 0 0 02 oI 8S 8S 161 OL 69S 606 yooog 
JUV 019g ee —----—-—---—-— -—-—--------— S901] puesnoyy, —— ——--—-— 
+62 6°82 6°02 6°8I 6°9I 6°41 6°71 6°01 6°8 6°9 
o1s9 SesseTo -0°12 -0°61 -0°LT -0°SI -0°€1 -0°TT -0°6 -0°L -0°S sepoads 


But [dues Tlv 
(AYysTey Jseeiq Je seyoUy) sseToO JEeJoMeTG 


€861 ‘eatysdwuey mon ‘AQun0D deuyjteg ‘sse[To JeqjoweTp pue 
sejpoeds Aq pueTiequyT uo saeajy BuyOnpoid—jynaz pue —Jjnu DAFT [Te JO AequnN—--*67 STWeL 


61 


*spoompiey Te fo1ewMODUOU sepnToUT 
e 


L°€? (G3 CL 19 ce GE Oot OOoT 9€ (queoied) 
10119 3But{dumes 
L°€?S 189°Z 00% ‘T (Gi TOT LGZT L82‘T 91 91 GSZ‘T seafoods [Te ‘TeIOL 
cE 070‘T 969 Gi OS 709 VE 91 0 82E spoompiey [eI0], 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 poPpoompizey 19430 
OOT SOT SOT 0 0 G9T 0 0 0 0 wld 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 poomsseg 
CL OS VAS 0 VE 0 91 OT 0 0 syeo poy 
OOT Ge 0 0 0 0 ce 0 0 Ge syeo 337 TUM 
OOT €€ 0 0 0 0 €€ 0 0 ce uedsy 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 yse 49eTE 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 yse e3TuUM 
OOT 91 OT 0 OT 0 0 0 0 0 Yyooog 
OOT TL TZ 0 0 TZ 0 0 0 0 yortq Aeip 
09 OL OL 0 0 OZ 0 0 0 0 yoitq 1edeg 
cL AG 9ET 0 0 9ET 68 0 0 68 Yortq MOTTO 
0S VIZ 6LT LT 0) cor GE 0 0 Ge eTdew poy 
98 191 GZ GZ 0 0 9€T 0 0 9ET etdew ie3ng 
9€ L79°T VOL 0 TS €99 £16 0 91 L76 SPpoomjzyzos TeIOT 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Spoomyzos 19430 
TS OLE 691 0 GE VET T0¢ 0 0 102 yIOTMSH 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0) 0 0 Tepesd—97 74M U19YI1ON 
67 607 ‘T ZO0S 0 91 987 LOL 0 91 169 eutd o3TYyM 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 eutd poy 
OOT €€ €€ 0 0 €€ 0 0 0 0 eonids poy 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 eonids yorT” 
0 0 (0) 0) 0 0 0 0 0 0 eonids 9374M 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 yoereuey, 
OOT GE 0 0 0 0 GE 0 0 GE Af} wesTeg 
Quedteg SS SSS SS SSS SSS -------— $901} puesnoyy, ---------------------- aa SSSSSSaSSees 
Seer] 6°71 6°OI 6°71 6°OT 
10119 TTe ae eel -O0°TT -0°S eee a2) -0°TT -0°S 
sutTdues qTeqOL as sofoeds 
do} uaxo1g do} oe jul 


€861 ‘eatysdmey men SAQunN0D deuyjTeg ‘sseTD iJejewWeTp 
pue ‘uofqTpuod ‘seafoods Aq pue{T1esqmy} uo sve1} peep BuTpueqjs jo 1eqmNN--°0E eTqQeL 


62 


Table 31.--Number of shrubs, seedlings, and saplings on timberland by species, 
browse preference class, and browse utilization class, Belknap County, 


Species and 


New Hampshire, 1983 


Browse utilization class 


browse preference Ee Sampling 
class None Light Moderate Heavy “ns are 

SSS SSS SSS SS Million stems -------------------—--- Percent 
Eastern hemlock 49.3 0 -0 -0 49.3 50 
Striped maple 59.4 10.8 -0 -0 70.2 54 
Red maple 89.7 4.4 15.9 0 110.0 26 
Mountain maple Toll Sol -0 -0 10.8 100 
Smooth sumac eS} 0 0 -0 13) 100 
Total readily browsed 207.6 18.3 15.9 0 241.8 23 
Balsam fir 721 53} AO) rl) 0) Die 94 
Common juniper 39.8 -0 0 0 39.8 96 
White pine 109.1 4.3 0 0 113.4 58 
Sugar maple 35.3 Tel 2.9 -0 45.3 42 
Shadbush 10.1 0 Ale) 0 10.1 59 
Yellow birch 333}57/ 4.3 0 -0 38.0 34 
Black birch G5) -0 -0 i) oS 100 
Paper birch 34.3 12.0 10.8 0 Soll 41 
Red-Osier dogwood 13.8 0) -0 0 13.8 100 
Hawthorn 1 0 0 -0 1U55) 100 
Beech 39.0 -0 5.8 0 44.8 41 
White ash 133055 oS 1.4 -0 16.4 55 
Quaking aspen 29.8 -0 0 Ae) 29.8 69 
Pin cherry 1.4 AiO) 0 Ae) 1.4 100 
Black cherry 2.9 1.4 0 -0 4.3 74 
White oak 5.9 20 0 Jol 9.0 72 
Brambles 80.9 0 0 0 80.9 59 
Willows 6.1 Ale) 20 0 6.1 62 
American elm a5} 0 0 A0) 15) 100 
Blueberries 58.0 2.9 NZ Gi Ae) 78.0 45 
Wild rasisn 5.8 Ae) 0 0 5.8 100 
Total commonly browsed 545.4 33.5 38.0 35 1 620.0 15 
Red spruce 155 0 0 0 M5) 100 
Speckled alder Hol 0 0 -0 Hoi 100 
Gray birch 4.5 -0 -0 -0 4.5 75 
Lambkill oS 0 -0 0 ie 100 
Eastern hophornbeam 10.6 20 0 0 10.6 56 
Red oak 62.3 -0 eS) -0 65.2 47 
Spiraea 45.0 20 -0 0) 45.0 58 
Total infrequently browsed 1325 20 2.9 0 135.4 31 
Witch-hazel 13.1 0 -0 0 Sel 80 
Total questionable 1133511 -0 -0 -0 13.1 80 
Other species 14.4 -0 -0 0 14.4 61 
Total all species 913.0 51.8 56.8 Sjoll 1,024.7 12.8 

Sampling error 
(percent ) 13 37 44 100 12.8 


63 


L°4T OOT LE 64 VAs (46 9¢ VKG €Z 1&4 Sc (queoied) 
1oiis Suyt{dues 
ee ee ee ee es Se a ee 
L°4t 716° 61 (6 SOT L8T TO}S cYI‘T GLZ°T cI8‘T €6°Z ces ‘¥ 76Z°L seafoods [Te ‘TeIO] 
Te LS6°9 0 II TS O2T STY 9S72 929 756 ¢80‘Z 6€4‘Z yeo pet usu zION 
£6 €LZ 0 0 0 0 0 1Z 0 0 0 CSZ eo 82 FUM 
WL SOE 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 SY 092 Array ye TY 
OOT SY 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 SY weequioydoy ule3sey 
OOT L8 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 18 etddy 
02 Lyz‘ZT (46 7GT 9ET G8E O€L 866 681 ‘T 610°Z COV *Z 602 ‘¥ yooog 
qUedTeg = ------------------------------------------— $391} puesnoyy, ---------------------------------------- 
+6Z 6°82 6°02 6°81 6°9T 6° VT 6°CI 6°OT 6°8 6°9 
10119 Sosselo -0°12 -0°6I -0°LT -0°ST -0°ET -0°TT -0°6 -0°L -0°S seqoeds 


But {dues TIv 
(343}ey Jseeiq Je seyoUT) sseTD IoZoMeTG 


€861 ‘e1fyusdweq mon ‘AQuUNOD TTOIIeD ‘sseTD JajouMeTp pue 
sefoeds Aq pueTiequyj uo sae1q BSuyonpoid—-qynaz pue —Anu eATT [Te Jo aequmy—-°7E eTqQeZ 


64 


*Spoompiey [Te fOLemMooUCU sepnToUT | 


€°9T 81 GZ €€ ZZ 62 OOT 67 T€ (quedsed) 
1Oljia 3uy {dues 

€°9T 891°9 761° Y 00% 129 TLT‘€ 9197 €Z 0SZ €0€ ‘7 sefoeds [Te ‘TeIOL 
8T 6L7°E LtS‘Z 8672 8zS TOL‘T 7S6 €Z eLT LGL Spoompizey TeI07 

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 pSPpoompiey 129410 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ula 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 poomsseg 
69 06 06 0 0 06 0 0 0 0 SyYeO poy 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 syeo 23 T4M 
VAS 167 €LT 0 0 €LT 8Te 0 S8 €€7c uedsy 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 yse 4oe Tg 
OOT GY 0 0 0 0 GY 0 0 SY yse o2TUM 
GE 819 AS OLT 691 98T €cT €~ 0) OcT yooog 
oot LL LL 0 0 LL 0 0 0 0 yoatq Aeig 
8t C9E 617 0 66 OST 98 0 0 98 yorytq tedeg 
VA) LE0*T c¥8 99 68 L89 G6l 0 G9 O€T Yyortq MOTTO 
(G/ L09 VLY c9 701 80€ €€1 0 0 eel eTdeu poy 
8/ 68 L9 0) L9 ) ZZ ) 22 ) eTdem ieZng 
O€ 682 ‘€ 699°T col €6 OL4°T 779°T 0 8Z 94S ‘T SPOOMZJOS TeIOL 

L8 0872 082 0 (KZ 8SZ 0 0 0 0 SPoOmMzzos 10430 
19 88 GY 0 0 GY €v 0 14 (6 yooTwWeH 
0 0 0 0 0 0 (0) 0 0 0 Teped—97 FYM UISYIION 
WL €88 S¥T LE 0 801 8tZ 0 0 8EZ outd 332TUM 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 outd poy 
97S OST ‘T GZS (KG 0 €0S GS9 0 0 GS9 sonids poy 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 sonids yoeTE 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 eonids 93 T4uM 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 yoeieuey 
(7 8S8 019 €V TZ 9S¢ ssi 0 LS Tel ifj wesTeg 
qusd1eg —------~------~-----_-____-___-___--__. 8901} puesnouy, ----------------------------------__ 

s901} TeIOL +61 6°4T 6° OI Teo] +61 6° FI 6°OT 
10119 TTe -0°TT -0°S -0°TT -0°S 
Sut tdues TeroL Soafoods 
do} useyo1g doj 208 july 


€861 ‘ei1fyusdweyq man SAQuUNOD [TOII1eD ‘sseTD JeJeWeTp 
s kq puejTisquy{ uo saeij peep Sufpuejys jo JsqunN—-°¢E eTqQeL 


pue ‘uoyzATpuos ‘saqzo 


65 


Table 34.--Number of shrubs, seedlings, and saplings on timberland by species, 
browse preference class, and browse utilization class, Carroll County, 
New Hampshire, 1983 


Species. and Browse utilization class 

browse preference ee ee All Sampling 
class None Light Moderate Heavy classes eeeCr 

SSS SSS Million stems —---------------------- Percent 
Eastern hemlock 137i 0 3.9 0 141.2 28 
Striped maple 137.2 41.2 18.6 7.6 204.6 33 
Red maple 215.9 0 0 0 215.9 27 
Mountain maple 30.3 0 0 9.5 39.8 62 
Staghorn sumac 3.6 0 20 Ae) 3.6 71 
Mountain ash 9.5 0 0 0 9.5 100 
Hobblebush viburnum 138.9 32.4 46.3 18.9 236.5 32 
Total readily browsed 672.7 73.6 68.8 36.0 851.1 16 
Balsam fir 165.7 0 0 0 165.7 27 
White pine 64.2 0 Al) 0 64.2 29 
Sugar maple 179.8 28.6 1.8 13.3 223.5 32 
Shadbush 29.2 0 0 0 29.2 83 
Yellow birch 72.8 0 0 Ale) 72.8 42 
Paper birch 29.4 1.9 0 Ae) 31.3 40 
American hazelnut 118.8 0 0 Ale) 118.8 71 
Beaked hazelnut 35.4 0 0 0 35.4 100 
Beech 381.5 2.0 0 1.8 385.3 24 
White ash 39.7 26.5 -0 0 66.2 47 
Winterberry 9.5 0 0 0 9.5 100 
Mountain holly 3.8 0 Ae) 0 3.8 100 
Quaking aspen 3.7 -0 0 Ale) 3.7 71 
Pin cherry 62.8 0 0 0 62.8 55 
Black cherry 48.3 3.8 0 0 52.1 54 
White oak 0 S\67/ Ae) 0 3.7 100 
Brambles 22.6 0 Ao) Ae) 22.6 46 
Common elderberry 35 7/ 3.7 0 20 724 66 
American elm 2.0 Ae) 0 0 2.0 100 
Blueberries 102.0 20 0 0 102.0 40 
Sweetfern 49.4 0 0 0 49.4 65 
Maple-leaf viburnum 3.9 1.9 0 0 5.8 75 
Wild raisin 7.6 0 0 0 7.6 69 


Total commonly browsed 1,435.8 72.1 1.8 15.1 1,524.8 14 


Table 34.--Continued 


Species and Browse utilization class 
browse preference sw att Sampling 
class None Light Moderate Heavy classes CeCe 
SSS SSS eM On eS ECMS i Percent 
Red spruce 47.8 -0 -0 -0 47.8 35 
Pitch pine 57 -0 -0 -0 5.7 100 
Speckled alder 19 0 -0 -0 1.9 100 
Gray birch 24.8 -0 0 0 24.8 63 
Lambkill 152.4 -0 -0 -0 152.4 45 
Eastern hophornbeam 17.2 0 -0 -0 7/572 45 
Red oak 367.8 0 0 -0 367.8 52 
Spiraea 45.2 0 -0 0 45.2 96 
Total infrequently browsed 662.8 0 0 Ae) 662.8 34 
Witch-hazel 7.6 0 -0 -0 7.6 79 
Total questionable 7.6 0 -0 0 7.6 79 
Other species 119.5 11.8 0 3.8 135%e1 34 
Total all species 2,898.4 NBY/ 55) 70.6 54.9 3,181.4 10.4 


Sampling error 
(percent ) 11 33 55 96 10.4 


L°?T OOoT 6€ cs 92 1K6 €Z 14 SZ 91 LI (3ue0I0d) 
1OlJa Buy {dues 


L°?l 008‘8T LT 18 €21 sos 6LL 892 T ¢08*T 66S ‘7: 887°S SEE°9 sefoeds TTe ‘TeIOL 
SL 887‘ 0 cr 5 Ov SY 1Z SIT 9€¢ 897 O0£ eo AeTE 
61 162 ‘8 LT 62 89 762 169 62S 090*T 918 DESC OSL*Z yeo per ursyjION 
64 VES 0 0 0 97 0 oT SS T€T 142 £9 yeo 33TUM 
ve €SS°Z 0 0 0 0 0 6S 9ST 029 LLL £68 Alieyo Ye 
OOT T€ 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 T€ Alieyo Utd 
18 SEE 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Tel 707 weequioydoy use4seg 
Le 7SS°4 0 Ov 0 Ly 9¢7 VEY cOv 029 L6Z‘T 98e*T yoood 
76 9171 0 0 0 0 LT 91 oT 99 L6E 90L 41099 TH 
quedqeg = --------------------------------------- ---- se01} puesnouy --------- ------------------------------- 
+6Z 6°82 6°02 6°8T 6°91 6° FI 6°CI 6°OT 6°8 6°9 
ake) EOSSeTS -0°T2 -0°6T -0°LT -0°ST SOne -0°TT -0°6 -O°L -0°S seqoeds 


But [dues TIv 
(143 Fey Jseeiq Je saeyoUT) sseTD IsejeMReTG 


€861 ‘eatyusdmeq may ‘AQuN0D satyseyy ‘sseTo JeJeUeTp pue 
sopoeds Aq pueTiequyt} uo seeiq SufOnNpoid—jynaz pue —Jnu sATT TTe jo AequNN--*cE oeTGeL 


68 


*spoompiey [e}o1emmooucu sepnTouy 


G°4yT OT T€ 97 61 LZ OOT 08 672 (queoied) 
iJo1i9 3uy{Tdues 
G° YT S10‘9 Tv “7 G0z Oy 969°€ 7L9°T LT 69 88S ‘T sefoeds [Te ‘*TeIO] 
(KA 9E0‘E 89E‘Z L9 8SZ €70°Z 899 LT 0 1S9 spoompiey [Te OL 
€9 799 €6E LT 0 OLE Tle 0 0 TlZ prPoomprzey 19430 
76 £92 0 0 0 0 £92 LI 0 9n7~ wa 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 poomsseg 
Ol 89 89 0 0 89 0 0 0 0 syeo poy 
OOT 9T 91 0 91 0 0 0 0 0 syeo 32TUM 
OOT €€ €€ 0 0 €€ 0 0 0 0 uadsy 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 yse ,oeTYg 
vl Gel GZI 0 oY 18 0 0 0 0 yse o2F4M 
VAS 002 002 €€ cS GIT 0 0 0 0 yooog 
6L 8zI 8ZI 0 0 8cT 0 0 0 0 yoitq sein 
GY LSE H7E 0 OT 80€ €€ 0 0 €€ yoitq iedeg 
BL €SZ 6172 0 0 612 VE 0 (0) 7€ yoritq MOTTA 
Le 8ZZ 199 0 WIT L9S 49 0 0 49 atdeu poy 
81 10Z 102 LI 91 89T 0 0 0 0 etdem ieZng 
1Z 616‘Z €L6‘T SET Z8I €S9‘T 900‘T 0 69 L€6 SPOOM{ JOS TeIOL 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 (0) 0 Spoomzjzos 129430 
19 yaa L6 OT (0) 18 LT (0) 0 LI yo Tmey 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Tepa9d—37 FYM UISYIION 
8~ ZIL‘T ZIZ‘T CSOT c8T G26 00s 0 69 Te? autd 927T4UM 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 autd poy 
LE 6IT‘T 0£9 LT 0 €19 684 0 0 687 sonids pey 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 eonids Yoel 
0 0 (0) 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 sonids 3274M 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 (0) yoereuey 
OOT VAS vE 0 0 HE 0 (0) (0) 0 ifj wesTeg 
quel 18g --------~--------------------------— s331} puesnoyy, ------------------------------------ 
seer} e 6°71 6° OI 6°41 6° OT 
10119 Tre ai gol -0°TT -0°S ee col -0°TT -0°S 
Sut [dues jTeIoOL satoods 
do} usyxo1g do} 30ePjUrL 


€861 ‘eafusdmey man ‘AQuNOD saTyseyD ‘sseTo JejJewWeTp 


pue ‘uozTjTpuos ‘satoeds Aq pue[iequy} uo seei] peep BuTpuejys jo JequNN--°9¢ eTqQeL 


69 


Table 37.--Number of shrubs, seedlings, and saplings on timberland by species, 
browse preference class, and browse utilization class, Cheshire County, 


New Hampshire, 1983 


Species and Browse utilization class 

browse preference ENN See ee ee i ae Sampling 
class None Light Moderate Heavy ia eae 

SSSR SSS SSS SS Million stems ------------------~---— Percent 
Canada yew 11.1 0 0 AO) Niet 100 
Eastern hemlock 59.8 AO) 0) Ole 59.8 23 
Striped maple 53.0 0 37.3 0 90.3 49 
Red maple 138.3 13.2 13.2 0 164.7 18 
Mountain maple 47.6 Ae) AAO) 0 47.6 94 
Apple 4.5 0) A) 0 4.5 100 
Smooth sumac 1.4 0 0 Ale) 1.4 100 
Hobblebush viburnum 4.5 0 0 0 4.5 100 
Total readily browsed 320.2 13.2 50.5 Ae) 383.9 18 
Balsam fir 13.4 Ao) Ale) Ale) 13.4 49 
Common juniper 4.5 3.0 0 0 7.5 58 
White pine 49.5 0 0 -0 49.5 29 
Sugar maple 126.9 14.5 1.5 0 142.9 37 
Shadbush 0 22.4 0 0 22.4 100 
Yellow birch 58.6 40.3 0 0 98.9 68 
Black birch 14.7 0 0 0 14.7 52 
Paper birch 32.7 1.5 0 3.0 Siz 38 
Red-Osier dogwood 42.2 0 0 AO) 42.2 100 
Hawthorn 11.5 Ale) 0 -0 11.5 68 
American hazelnut 10.4 0 0 0 10.4 100 
Beaked hazelnut 1.5 0 AO) 0 1.5 100 
Beech 79.5 8.7 0 0 88.2 23 
White ash 60.2 11.5 1.5 0 73.2 39 
Honeysuckle 32.6 0) 0 0 32.6 100 
Bigtooth aspen 1.5 AO) AiO) Ale) G5) 100 
Pin cherry 4.1 Ae) 0 0) 4.1 75 
Black cherry 54.3 0 0 0 54.3 47 
Chokecherry 4.2 0 0 AO) 4.2 100 
White oak 1.4 0 0 0 1.4 100 
Brambles 101.5 AAO) 0 0 101.5 35 
Common elderberry 14.4 0 Ae) 0 14.4 100 
Red-berried elder 1.5 0 0 0 1.5 100 
Blueberries 200.6 7.3 -0 0 207.9 82 
Sweetfern 27.7 0 -0 0 27.7 58 
Wild raisin 10.1 AO) 0 -0 10.1 65 


Total commonly browsed 959.5 109.2 3.0 3.0 1,074.7 21 


Table 37.--Continued 


Species and Browse utilization class 
browse preference tes Sampling 
class None Light Moderate Heavy aaesee SEEOn 
a Million stems ---------------------- Percent 
Red spruce 41.5 0 0 0 41.5 60 
Speckled alder 21.6 0 0 0 21.6 100 
Black chokeberry 2.8 0 0 0 2.8 TAN 
Gray birch 9.5 0 0 Ale) 9.5 100 
Lambkill 27.4 0 0 0 27.4 100 
Eastern hophornbeam 7.4 0 0 0 7.4 83 
Red oak 39.1 4.4 22.4 3.0 68.9 33 
Spiraea 191.7 0 0 5.9 197.6 69 
Total infrequently browsed 341.0 4.4 22.4 8.9 376.7 42 
Gooseberries 1.5 0 0 0 1.5 100 
Total questionable 67.1 0 0 0 67.1 65 
Other species 187.6 0 0 0 187.6 52 
Total all species 1,875.4 126.8 75.9 11.9 2,090.0 19.3 
Sampling error 
(percent ) 21 41 60 78 19.3 


71 


L°61 = OOT OoT OOT €Z BE (Gui VK €€ €Z (quedied) 
iolio Suttdues 


L°61 1£89‘OT 0 1z 1z T€ 09 737 169 LL0‘Z 00S‘z ZO8‘y sepfoeds [Te ‘TeI0L 
GY L96 0 0 0 0 0 0 77 6ST 16 €69 yse uzequnoy 
ay 186‘T 0 0 0 0 €Z VET ZBI 6S4 €LE () :} AlieyD ye 
£9 669 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Ly 879 Aii9yo utd 
LL Z8I 0 0 0 0 0 TS 0 0 Tel 0 weequioydoy u1sj3seq 
16 69L 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 9ST 0 G19 atddy 
OOT 1z 0 1Z 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 qnuie3jng 
0€ ZL0°9 0 0 1Z I€ LE 662 c8Y GoEe‘T 8c8‘T 9€0‘Z yooog 
qusdIeg = ------------------------------------------- §931} puesnoyy, -------------------~--------------------- 
+62 6°82 6°07 6°81 6°9I 6°4v1 6°ZI 6°OT 6°8 6°9 
10112 Sesselo -0°1Z -0°61 -0°LI -0°ST -0°€1 -0°TT -0°6 -0°L -0°¢ porande 


Sut {dues TIv 
(3ysfey Jseeiq Je sayoUyT) sseTD IsjeUeTG 


€861 ‘eatusduey men ‘AQuUNOD sooD ‘sseTD AJaqoweTp pue 
seafoods Aq pueTiequyj uo seeij BupoONpoid—jyynaZ pue -—ynU JAF, [Te JO IequNN--°gEe eTqe] 


72 


*spoompiey [eyToLeumMoouCU sepnTtouT , 


O°TT II 1Z 61 (ai LT OS GZ 8I (queoied) 
1oije But tdmes 
O°TT 629‘ TE LOL‘ 61 870°T 70E*Z CTY “91 ZI6‘TT 98 689 FGieatel sejtoeds [Te ‘TeIOL 
GT €1Z ‘TT €08°L TOL GL6 190°9 O17 *€ vA] 6€72 anes Spoompizey [eIOJ, 
LY 919*Z L88 02 €Z 778 6ZL‘T 0 0 6ZL‘T poPoompaey 1eyI0 
OOoT 78T Ty? 0 0 18/7 £41 TZ 0 (aa ula 
0 0 0 0 0 (0) 0 0 0 0 Ppoomsseg 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0) 0 0 0 SyeO poy 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 syeo 33 7UM 
9€ 881 *Z 814 °T 14 18 9TE‘T OLL 0 c8 689 uedsy 
(0) 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 yse 4xoeTg 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 yse 237M 
cL SOT SOT LT 9v (Gy) 0 0 0 0 yooog 
OOT VAKG 777 0 0 717 0 0 0 0 yortq Aei9 
6€ BULL Z470°T 61 8IT S06 OL 0 €Z LY yoiqtq redeg 
61 084 °€ TEZ‘E €c9 049 896‘T 6472 €Z 87 BLT Yortq MOTTE 
SY G76 689 0 €Z 999 9€Z 0 0 9€7 etTdem poy 
94 6SE 9471 19 oY TY €1Z 0 €8 O€I etdew iegng 
91 99% ‘07 796‘TT L872 6ZE‘T 87E “OT 20S ‘8 CY OS O10‘8 Spoomzjzos Te OL 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 SPOomjzzos 10430 
Oot 977¢ 972 82 LOT T6 0 0 0 0 yooTwWeH 
6L €€9 ele 0 0 cLE 192 0 €Z 8tc Tepss—99 FYM U19YIAON 
LS GS6E 69T 6€ S8 SY 977 02 14 S8T autd a374M 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 eutd poy 
77 L6z°4 867 ‘T 8zI 682 180‘T 66L°Z 0 9ST £79 °Z eonids pay 
OOT ZBI 78T 0 0 c8T 0 0 0 0 aonids yxoeTg 
Oot OOT 0 0 0 0 OOT 0 0 Oot eonids 2374M 
91 (q KG 79 0 €Z TY 802 0 VKG 78T youreuey 
02 T9€“4T €S47°6 76 Sz8 9€S‘8 806 “4 (6 977 099‘¥ ify wesTeg 
quedieg ----------------—--------------------— s231] puesnouy, ------------------------------------ 
$901} e210 6°71 6° OT 210 6°41 6°OT 
10119 tte ee sl -0°TT -0°S Pe a aS -0°IT -0°S 
Sut [dues Teo] sofoeds 
doq uey,o01g do} oe QUT 


€861 ‘eafusduey may ‘AQunog soog ‘sse[d iejewe Tp 
pue ‘uofjTpuos ‘seafoods Aq pueTisquy} uo see13 peep BuypueAs jo ASsqUNN—-°6E FTqEL 


73 


74 


Table 40.--Number of shrubs, seedlings, and saplings on timberland by species, 
browse preference class, and browse utilization class, Coos County, 


New Hampshire, 1983 


SSS SSS SSS SSS SSS -- Million stems 


Species and 
browse preference 

class None 
Northern white-cedar 5.6 
Eastern hemlock 2.0 
Striped maple 391.5 
Red maple 264.3 
Mountain maple 570.5 
Apple 13.8 
Mountain ash 89.0 
Hobblebush viburnum 585.4 
Total readily browsed 1,922.1 
Balsam fir 1,270.5 
Sugar maple 914.4 
Shadbush 14.3 
Yellow birch 226.5 
Paper birch 173.4 
Red-Osier dogwood 37.8 
American hazelnut 114.6 
Beaked hazelnut 65.7 
Beech 242.6 
White ash 58.8 
Black ash 7.7 
Honeysuckle 71.1 
Balsam poplar 12.2 
Bigtooth aspen 2.0 
Quaking aspen 42.4 
Pin cherry 127.4 
Black cherry 41.1 
Chokecherry 84.6 
Brambles 3,520.6 
Willows 27.4 
Common elderberry 24.9 
Red-berried elder 58.4 
American elm 11.1 
Blueberries 413.8 
Wild raisin 37.8 
Small cranberry 14.8 
Total commonly browsed 7,615.9 


Browse utilization class 


Light 


Moderate 


24.4 


43.3 


All 
classes 


1,287.4 
1,013.2 
14.3 
351.9 


8,359.4 


Sampling 


error 


Percent 


73 
100 
20 
19 
18 
73 
53 
18 


Table 40.--Continued 


Species and Browse utilization class 
browse preference ee All Sampling 
class None Light Moderate Heavy classes Stes 
SSS SSS SSS Million stems —-—-----~-----—-—---——--—— Percent 
Tamarack Dog) 0 0 -0 5.9 76 
White spruce S355) 0 0 0 13.5 56 
Black spruce 5.4 -0 0 0 5.4 100 
Red spruce 454.1 1.9 21.6 2.0 479.6 33 
Speckled alder 255.4 -0 9.0 0 264.4 40 
Gray birch 5.8 0 0 0 5.8 58 
Labrador tea 17.6 0 0 00 17.6 100 
Eastern hophornbeam 2.0 0 0 0 2.0 100 
Spiraea 356.6 0 0 0 356.6 36 
Total infrequently browsed 1,142.9 1.9 30.6 2.0 1,177.4 21 
Gooseberries 33.1 0 0 Ad) 33.1 47 
Total questionable 33.1 0 0 Ae) Se 47 
Other species 240.5 0 7.8 0 248.3 37 
Total all species 10,954.5 931.6 377.4 130.2 12,393.7 9.2 


Sampling error 
(percent ) 10 18 27 46 9.2 


o°LT OOT OV 67 9€ 92 GC VKG €Z €Z €2 (juec1ed) 
1oiis Suttdues 


Coal 719‘ 77 €1 O8T C6 78t LSS EET 198‘T KO 786 ‘9 798°g sefoeds [Te ‘TeIOL 
79 G8s 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 G8S yse uzequnow 
1€ yy L‘TI €1 BE 4 O1Z 781 L94 L6S 769 °T 877 ‘E 062‘S yeo pel ureyjI0N 
OOT 8 0 91 0 0 0 79 0 0 0 0 yeo 93TUM 
7 SLLST 0 0 0 0 0 0 981 €87 ZL LEL Azieyo yxorTE 
64 974 0 0 0 0 0 0 6L €€ 612 66 weequioydoy uiejseq 
19 79H 0 02 0 0 0 0 0 0 ZOE OvT etddy 
OOT €6 0 0 €Z 0 €Z Ly 0 0 0 0 qnuie34ng 
Ké 8747 6 0 901 64 717 OSE BSL 666 EZ °Z 199 ‘Z L10‘Z yooeg 
qUVI1e”dg a a a ——— ——-—-—-—----— S901) puesnouy en 
+62 6° 8Z 6°0z 6°8I 6°91 6°71 6°ZI 6°01 6°8 6°9 
10119 sesselo -0°1Z -0°61 -0°LT -0°ST -0°€T -0°TT -0°6 -0°L -0°S sprawls 


Sut [dues TIlv 
(AYysTey yseeaiq Je seydUyT) sseTO AsjZeMeTG 


€861 ‘eatyusdwmeyq may ‘AQuNOD uoRzeAD ‘sseTD AejoweTp pue 
sazfoods Aq pueTiequT} uo soe1} BuyONpoid-j naz pue -Qnu osATT [Te jo ASeqUNN--°[TYy eTqQeL 


76 


*spoompiey [e}o1emmoouCU sepnTtouy , 


€861 ‘eatyusdmey mon SAQUNOD U0RzeAID ‘SseTD JejoweTp 
pue ‘uoz i Tpuod ‘soyfoods Aq pueTisquy uo saei1q peop BuTpuejzs jo JequNN—-°7Zy eT Qe], 


Goer €1 GZ 97 v1 02 9€ 9€ 0z (queosed) 
1Joiio Buytdumes 
G°ET 076° LZ 808 ‘9T 67S 601 ‘T OST ‘ST ZETSTT LLZ TGS 70€ ‘OT seafoods [Te ‘TeI0L 

7T 11S ‘6 616°9 187 948 759°S TES “7 SOT Scl ZOE ‘7 Spoompizey [eI0] 
9€ 940‘T O94 0 0 09L 982 0 0 982 poPpoomprey 19430 
LS Wve 762 96 €6 SOT OS 0 0 OS uTa 
18 68 OL 0 OL 0) 61 61 0 0 poomsseg 
98 8S2 SEZ ST 0 072 €2 €2 0 0 syeo pod 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 (0) syeo OF FUM 
Ov GLY ‘T 977 °T 0 88 8SI‘T 6722 0 08 671 uedsy 
Oot 9”V 0 0 0 0 9” 0 0 9” yse »oeTE 
LS 6€T 0 0 0 0 6€T 0 0 6€T yse 33 7UM 
(G3 062 7S9 9LT £61 £82 8eT 8t 0 OOT yooog 
TS 0€6 91S 0 0 91S V1 0 0 va a) yortq Aeip 
OV €8I‘T OVL LE 89 GE9 £77 0 0 £77 youyq sredeg 
O€ 001 ‘Z Gce‘T 99 €7cl 99T‘T SYL GC SY SL9 yorttq MOTTOR 
TS 0L9 019 9V 78 OVS 0 0 0 0 eTdem poy 
79 Tvy Thy SY Le1 692 0 0 0 0 etTdem 1e3ng 

02 677° 8T 6786 89 £972 8676 009‘8 eLT 97 Z00°8 Spoomzzos [eIOL 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 SPOOMZ FOS 19430 
(4!) €1Y 8eT 0 0 8eT GLe 0 0 GLZ Woo TWH 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Tepss—-99 74M ULSYIION 
cE O€L*T ZEE ST 89 9V SIZ ‘T 86E €¢ 0 GLE eutd a3TyM 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 eutd pey 
87 19S‘8 €LECE 0 O€T £02 °€ 8775S GL GSZ 868°4 eonids pey 
0 0 0) 0 0 0 0 0 0 0) eonads yoeTE 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 eonids e374M 
Oot OSE 0 0 0 0 OSE 0 (6 8CE yoeseUey, 
87 CLESL 9270'S 0 L8 6€6 “7 67€ “7 VL 6471 CLA WEC AFjZ wesyeg 

JUeDteg 9 ————————-————_______ > ————== === == Soo Ag PUBANOU [Mean —----—---=---— 
$901} 6°4T 6° OT 6° FT 6°OT 
10119 TTe PASE | SSL -0°TT -0°S ge a gte! -0°TT -0°S 
sutTdues qTeIoL satoeds 
doj usyo1g do} 308 3uUT 


77 


Table 43.--Number of shrubs, seedlings, and saplings on timberland by species, 
browse preference class, and browse utilization class, Grafton County, 


New Hampshire, 1983 


Species and Browse utilization class 
browse preference All Sampling 
class None Light Moderate Heavy erasses SEEOE 
SSS SSS Million stems -------------------—-—— Percent 

Eastern hemlock 61.9 0 2.0 0 63.9 52 
Striped maple 383.4 48.2 4.0 0 435.6 21 
Red maple 409.1 53.8 43.0 0 505.9 19 
Mountain maple 115.3 16.0 Ae) 0 131.3 42 
Mountain ash 19.4 -0 12.2 0 31.6 51 
Hobblebush viburnunm 179.0 32.6 2.0 0 213.6 35 
Total readily browsed 1,168.1 150.6 63.2 Ae) 1,381.9 2 
Balsam fir 1,218.6 28.2 0 Doe 1,249.0 24 
White pine 66.7 2.0 2.0 0 70.7 29 
Sugar maple 444.0 54.8 -0 -0 498.8 23 
Shadbush 40.0 0 0 -0 40.0 64 
Yellow birch 97.8 12.0 0 0 109.8 30 
Paper birch 252.9 80.9 2.0 0 335.8 28 
Red-Osier dogwood 4.0 0 0 0 4.0 100 
Hawthorn 18.2 0 0 0 18.2 71 
American hazelnut 44.8 0 0 0 44.8 54 
Beaked hazelnut 19.4 0 0 0 19.4 59 
Beech 400.5 10.5 15.9 0 426.9 21 
White ash 188.6 33.7 2.0 0 224.3 23 
Black ash 12.6 0 0 Ae) 12.6 59 
Honeysuckle 61.9 0 0 0 61.9 46 
Balsam poplar 2.2 Ae) 8.7 0 10.9 100 
Bigtooth aspen 0 10.0 0 0 10.0 100 
Quaking aspen 68.8 13.6 0 Ae) 82.4 30 
Pin cherry 114.6 10.9 0 0 125.5 71 
Black cherry 126.9 6.0 6.1 0 139.0 29 
Chokecherry 18.0 2.0 2.0 0 22.0 75 
White oak 6.0 0 0 0 6.0 74 
Roses 0 2.0 0 0 2.0 100 
Brambles 438.5 4.1 0 0 442.6 34 
Willows 10.9 Ae) 0 0 10.9 100 
Common elderberry Ale) 2.0 0 0 2.0 100 
Red-berried elder 2.0 0 8.0 0 10.0 100 
American elm 6.5 0 0 0 6.5 73 
Blueberries 38.7 4.3 Ale) 0 43.0 46 
Sweetfern 10.5 0 0 0 10.5 73 
Maple-leaf viburnum 64.1 10.9 -0 0 75.0 50 
Wild raisin 23.9 0 0 0 23.9 100 


Total commonly browsed 3,801.6 287.9 46.7 Not 4,138.4 9 


Table 43.-—-Continued 


Species and Browse utilization class 
browse preference PE Nr: a Ee A, SN alle eae Sh BRE Road eine oa Om ame Sampling 
class None Light Moderate Heavy Spee SrEge 
2 SS Million stems —----~----------------- Percent 
White spruce 2.0 0 0 0 2.0 100 
Red spruce 402.3 6.5 0 Ae) 408.8 25 
Speckled alder 1.4 -0 0 0 1.4 100 
Gray birch 45.9 6.5 0 0 52.4 40 
Eastern hophornbeam 40.8 0 Ae) 0 40.8 51 
Red oak 42.6 2.0 8.4 0 53.0 26 
Spiraea 124.5 52.9 0 0 177.4 49 
Total infrequently browsed 659.5 67.9 8.4 0 735.8 19 
Witch-hazel 32.1 m0) 13.0 0 45.1 58 
Gooseberries 18.0 0 0 0 18.0 57 
Total questionable 50.1 0 13.0 Ale) 63.1 44 
Other species 158.3 10.1 0 0 168.4 42 
Total all species 5,837.6 516.5 131.3 ee 6,487.6 6.5 
Sampling error 
(percent ) 7 20 29 100 6.5 


G°el 6L BE OOT Lé 82 KG 8T 14 8T 8I (queoied) 
iJoiio 3uytdues 


Gel 777° 07 T€ GSC 9T 4 £64 ISZ 898°T G78°€ 009°S 887‘2 sefoeds [Te ‘TeIOL 
62 SGI 0 co 0 94 €6 Gel 674 O€L 8L6 OL9 eo AOeTA 
97 SA / 0 cel 91 OvT C12 L6E 778 €78‘T 87072 126 ‘T Yeo pest UY IAON 
69 G9G‘T 0 0 0 0 0 0 9cT 70E 7LS 19S yeo 4nuysey) 
€9 HLL T 0 9¢ 0 GZ T€ 0 S9I 79E 8cr Sel yeo JeT1B9s 
LE 6£9°Z €¢ 0 0 0 09 GS LOT val €1S LOL*T yeo 93 7UM 
BE €66 0 0 0) 0 0 0 0 Sy! 9cI CCL AJIeYyD APTA 
OOT Trl 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 T¥I 0 Aizeyo utd 
£9 LOY 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 €€ 80€ 99 weequioydoy usejseyg 
VAS 191 ‘Z 8 SY 0 79 L6 VLT LLI cee 781 08/ yoood 
TZ 99 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 99 ALO¥O TH 

qUadIeg ---------------- ——-——-~----------- ~~~ ----- $901} puesnouy, ------------------ —-------~-~--~------_- 

+62 6°82 6°07¢ 6°8T 6°9T 6°41 6°CI 6°OT 6°8 6°9 
ehop ei) sesseTo = OmlrG -0°6T SO Al -0°ST -0°ET -0° TT -0°6 -0°L OS seqoeds 


sut Tdues TIV 
(1yZTey Jseeiq Je seydUT) sseTO AsjeueTG 


€861 Seatyusdmey mon SAQuUNOD OA0OQSTTTH ‘sseTo AejowWeTp pue 
sofoeds Aq pueTiequy} uo seer} BuTONpoid—jynay pue —Qnu dsATT [Te JO A9quUNN-—-*hy eTqQe], 


80 


*spoompiey [eyoremmoouou sepnTouy 


€861 ‘eatyusdmeq may SAQUNOD OJOGSTTTH ‘sseTo JejeueTp 


T°€Z 14 82 GE Gc TE OOT €S €€ (queodi1ed) 
Joiia Buy{dues 
T°€Z 86L°S G16 ‘Z 1654 062 y LEZ €88°7 8T CIT OSL‘Z sefoeds [Te ‘TeIO] 
€2 88L°T 6S7‘T TOT LOT 1S0‘T 62S 0) 71 S84 Spoompisey [PIO], 
19 G9 €€ LI 91 0 ce 0 0 ce pSpoomprey 19430 
L9 c0Z 9ET 0 LT 6IT 99 0 0 99 uTa 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 pooasseg 
LE SEE 6SZ LT 0 (QE 9L 0 0Y (43 SyeO pod 
LL O6E 8SE 0 0 BSE ce 0 0 (43 syeo aayuM 
69 99 €e 0 0 €€ €€ 0 0 €€ uedsy 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 yse yxoeTE 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 yse oF FUM 
OoT Ty TY 0 Ty 0 0 0 0 0 yoood 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 yoatq Aen 
19 €LZ 78 €1 0 69 T6I 0 0 T61 yoryq redeg 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Yottq MOTTA 
BE LOE 892 BE €€ L61 66 0 0 66 eTdem poy 
€Z 67 67 oT 0 €€ 0 0) 0 (0) eTdew 1esng 
€€ O10*Y 969‘T OST €81 €ZE“T SE °Z 81 IZ 697 ‘°Z SPOOMZ FOS TLIO 
88 LYC €€ 0 €€ 0 VIZ 0 0 VIZ SPOOMIFJOS 194IO 
G9 ITV 86 €T 7€ TS ele 0 oT L6Z yoTWeH 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Aepes—97 FYM U1S4 ION 
7 797 °€ L0S‘T LET 9IT 7G7‘T LSLST 0 cS ZOL‘T eutd e37UM 
OOT oT 0 0 0 0 91 0 0 91 eutd poy 
OOT cL 8T 0 0 81 VAS 8 0 9€ eonids pey 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 eonids yxoeTYE 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 eonids e3TUM 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 yoereuey, 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ifj wesTeg 
GRENSICR 9 Seems Beene ene = SoS puEsnoOu————— Sora a Soeeee 
Sseer4 6° VT 6°OT 6°47T 6°OT 
10119 TTe eae sees -O°TT -0°S eat fall -O0°TT -0°S 
Sut Tdues TeIOL setoods 
do} useyoirg doq oeqUl] 


pue ‘uofTjTpuod ‘satoods Aq pueTiequy, uo sode1q peop BuyTpueqs jo itsqunN——°Ccy eTqQeL 


81 


82 


Table 46.--Number of shrubs, seedlings, and saplings on timberland by species, 
browse preference class, and browse utilization class, Hillsboro County, 


Species and 


browse preference 


class 


Canada yew 
Eastern hemlock 
Striped maple 
Red maple 
Smooth sumac 
Staghorn sumac 


Hobblebush viburnum 


Total readily browsed 


Common juniper 
White pine 
Sugar maple 
Shadbush 
Yellow birch 
Black birch 
Paper birch 


Red-Osier dogwood. 


American hazelnut 
Beaked hazelnut 
Beech 

White ash 

Black ash 
Winterberry 
Honeysuckle 
Mountain holly 
Quaking aspen 
Pin cherry 
Black cherry 
Chokecherry 
White oak 
Brambles 
American elm 
Blueberries 
Sweetfern 


Maple-leaf viburnum 


Wild raisin 


New Hampshire, 1983 


wn Wn OV - 
OrFNOF ONNFR DUNN NMNM OO 

e aie. 167 (ee) 46: 
FP OOWF ENF UUNF HF ODDADOWOL FS 


Total commonly browsed 1,238.7 


Browse utilization class 


Moderate 


All 
classes 


Sampling 


error 


Percent 


100 
30 
49 
17 

100 

100 
71 


Table 46.--Continued 


Species and Browse utilization class 
browse preference a ee All Sampling 
class None Light Moderate Heavy classes CEEOE 
SSS SSS Million stems ---------------------- Percent 
Red spruce 1.4 0 0 AL) 1.4 100 
Speckled alder 7.1 0 Ae) 0 7.1 72 
Gray birch 13.0 7.2 0 0 20.2 61 
Lambkill 22.4 -0 0 0 22.4 57 
Eastern hophornbeam 8.6 0 0 0 8.6 85 
Red oak 86.0 5.6 0 -0 91.6 33 
Spiraea 8.5 0 <0 0 8.5 44 
Total infrequently browsed 147.0 12.8 0 0 159.8 22 
Witch-hazel 105.7 8.6 5/7 0 120.0 33 
Gooseberries 6.4 0 0 0 6.4 59 
Total questionable 112.1 8.6 5.7 0 126.4 32 
Other species 446.8 1.4 2.9 7.2 458.3 32 
Total all species 2,393.0 84.0 18.7 2 Dore 2,520.9 11.7 
Sampling error 
(percent ) 12 37 63 58 11.7 


(14ZTey Jseeiq Je seyoUT) sseTO iJ3sqoMReTG 


€861 ‘eatysdwmey mon SAQuNOD YORUTAIDB ‘sseTD AszoMWeTp pue 
sejfoods Aq pueTieqwt} uo seei} SupyoOnpoid—-qynaz pue -ynu aATT [Te Jo JequNN—--°/y eTQeI 


lec - 64 8S 7 92 02 81 0z cI 02 (queoied) 
1Oiie Buy {dues 
1°71 ZL0°9T 0 64 6S GEZ 18€ 7CI‘T 861 ‘Z 7S7°7 19%‘ 4 GLy‘G sefoeds [Te ‘ Teo] 
LE L€8 0 0 0 0 0 8cZ ZIT €yI 722 ZOT yeo Are 
8T O€z‘Z 0 6€ 02 GGT 78 94¢ €Z1‘T SZ ‘T GET ‘Z 718 ‘T Yeo ped uiseyj10N 
OOT 9GZ 0 0 0 0 0 0 LI GE 9€1 89 yeo ynuyseyH 
Z9 €49 0 0 02 1Z 0 9¢ 101 GIz 961 VAS Yeo JeTAePdS 
I€ 7GE‘Z 0 OI 61 ay OTT A €€€ 702 GS9 868 yeo 8ITUM 
6€ 798 0 0 0 0 0 LT Ly 1S LI ZEL ArisyO Ae 
OOT G8 0 0 0 0 LT 0 0 0 0 89 Aiieyo utd 
IL 792 0 0 0 0 0 0 VAS 0 ELT GE weequioydoy uieqjsey 
OOT 70Z 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 89 9€T etddy 
LE OIZ‘€ 0 0 0 LI OLT ZG1 BSE 08z G99 89S ‘T yooog 
0OT LZ 0 0 0 0 0 0 €S 4 0 0 A109 FH 
QUs0tede —Hssssessaceooena= rnin tee ete, ee Seasons FEEEG) UEGIN@DRR Goae eee Sees. sees oeessese 
+62 6°82 6°02 6°81 6°91 6° v1 6°71 6°01 6°8 6°9 
1o1ie sesseto -0°12 -0°61 -0°LT -0°SCT -0°€1 -0°TT -0°6 -0°L -0°S poroede 
Sut [dues TIV 


84 


*spoompiey [Te }OLeMMOOUCU sapntouT 


O°El 61 TE €4 (OYA 12 GE €% €Z (ques sed) 
iIoiia Zuztdues 
O°€l €SZ‘8 987 ‘¥ 6LT 612 888 ‘Ee 196‘€ L91 €2Z LLS‘E€ sejfoeds [Te ‘Te oF 
0z 7GE‘y 86L‘Z £6 Sy LSS‘Z 9GS‘T O€ 68 Ley‘ Spoompiey T[eI0, 
G9 G1z 0S LT 0 €€ GOI 0 0 COI pSPoompiey 120420 
LL CET £9 62 0 7 tL v7] 0 89 ula 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 poomsseg 
19 OLZ VET 0 0 HET 9ET 0 0 9€T SyYeO poy 
TZ 09 7€ 0 0 7€ 97 92 0 0 SyeO 33 TUM 
99 CGY €cE 0 0 EGE ZOT 0 0 ZOT uedsy 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 yse yxoeTgE 
G9 997 1 4 0 0 €€7 €€ 0 (0) €€ yse o3 74M 
OL 71 €€ 0 0 €€ Tv 0 IV 0 yooog 
€l Z9E 767 0 0 767¢ 89 0 0 89 yoitq Arig 
(Ay) 686 126 (46 76 L08 89 0 0 89 yoitq iedeg 
OOT 7E vE 0 0 HE 0 0 0 0 YyoItq MOTTA 
VA] ZEIT 8zS GZ 9¢ Loy 709 0 8Y 9GS eTdeu poy 
9¢ Z9€ 1Z1 0 0 IZI 17Z 0 0 172 eTdem iesng 
02 668 ‘€ 884 °T 98 IZ Tee ST IT¥‘Z LET HET Ov ‘Z spoomjjos Te 0] 
BL 78S 86 92 0 ZL 984 0 GY T7y SPpoomzjzos 128430 
(41) G77 641 LT LT GIT 96 79 0 7 yoo TwWey 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Iepes—37 FYM u19Yyz10N 
1Z ELL ST €19 92 LI OLS O9T‘T GL 7E 1S0‘T autd 33TUM 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 autd poy 
4!) 108 702 0 LE LOT L6S 0 0 16S sonids poy 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 eonids yoRTE 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 sonids 93 74M 
OOT GS 0 0 0 0 GS 0 GS 0 yorieuey, 
L9 174 77Y LT 0 LOY LT 0 0 LT iIfjZ wesTeg 
Jus 019g wee «S09 puesnouy, a 
so019 e210 6° 4T 6°OT 210 6°47I 6°OT 

10119 Tre ee tel -0°TT -0°S Perk pees -O°TT -0°S 


suf tdues Tero] soa foods 


do} uoyo1g doq 30e 4uUlL 


€861 ‘eatysduey mon SAQunop yOuMUTIAIa ‘sselo iejeweypp 
pue ‘uofj}Tpuod ‘seafoods Aq pue[iequy, uo see1j peep Butpueqys jo i1equNN-—-°gy eTqGeI] 


85 


86 


Table 49.--Number of shrubs, seedlings, and saplings on timberland by species, 
browse preference class, and browse utilization class, Merrimack County, 


Species and 


browse preference 


class 


Eastern hemlock 
Striped maple 
Red maple 


Staghorn sumac 


Hobblebush viburnum 


Total readily browsed 


Balsam fir 
Common juniper 
White pine 
Sugar maple 
Shadbush 


Yellow birch 
Black birch 


Paper birch 


New Hampshire, 1983 


Hawthorn 2.9 
American hazelnut 19.4 
Beaked hazelnut 11.8 
Beech 36.5 
White ash 49.6 
Black ash 6.0 
Honeysuckle 34.0 
Bigtooth aspen 13.4 
Quaking aspen 20.6 
Pin cherry 53.5 
Black cherry 67.0 
Chokecherry 31.1 
White oak 66.6 
Brambles 250.0 
American elm 17.9 
Blueberries 257.1 
Sweetfern 3.0 
Maple-leaf viburnum 148.7 
Wild raisin 17.9 
Total commonly browsed 1,494.2 


Browse utilization class 


Moderate 


All 
classes 


1,603.7 


Sampling 
error 


Percent 


30 
41 
19 
100 
48 


13 


Table 49.--Continued 


Species and 
browse preference 
class 


Red spruce 

Pitch pine 

Speckled alder 

Gray birch 

Lambkill 

Eastern hophornbeam 
Red oak 

Spiraea 


Total infrequently browsed 
Witch-hazel 

Total questionable 

Other species 

Total all species 


Sampling error 
(percent ) 


164.9 


2,667.2 


11 


Browse utilization class 


Moderate 


16.4 


19.3 


86 


All 
classes 


> 


— 
ht Ww 
ee e@ 


WDWrR Fare 
e 
Mon FUwo Nw 


ay 
Se 


uo 
ie) 
ve) 
e 

\o 


215.2 


2,932.7 


10.4 


Sampling 
error 


Percent 


36 
100 
55 
37 
100 
60 
25 
43 


16 


28 


28 


23 


10.4 


87 


L°ct = 6S OOT GE GE €€ 82 92 €2 02 (queoied) 
iJoiize Buy{tdues 


L£°ST L7L‘ST 0 19 7 €81 7GE G9S G9S‘T LoS ‘Z 766°€ 917°9 sefoeds [Te ‘TeI0L 
GE 817 °E 0 0 0 Ty £8 €8 94S 76S 909 GZE *T yeo Aor 
82 186 °S 0 8Y 7€ 79 6€T O€Z 871 048 7S9°T 767 °Z yeo pet ur9syzION 
OOT Tv 0 0 0 0 0 €¢ VAS 7E 0 0 yeo ynuyAseyH 
€€ 677 ‘Z 0 0 0 (4 €€ £6 7LZ GSZ 778 CEL eo 874M 
98 LOY 0 0 0 0 €€ cH 67 StI Tel L9 AIieyo Ye 
Oot ITE 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 601 (A0y4 weaequioydoy uieqseq 
8Y 166 0 eT 0 cE 0 79 621 77T 871 L84 yooog 
67 G9L*T 0 0 0 7¢ 99 0 L9 GTS 79S 1S¢ £10¥9 TH 
88 gcc 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 8c¢ Tepeopel uleysey 
quedleg -—----------~----~ ——----------—-——- ---- S901] puesnouy, ------------ ae ee ees ———-——— 
+6Z 6° 82 6°02 6°8T 6° 9T 6° FT 6°?T 6°OT 6°83 6°9 
1018 SesseyTo -0° 12 -0°61 -0° LT -0°ST -0°€T -0°TT -0°6 cl Oh -0°S setoeds 


Sut {dues TIv 
(3y2Tey AJseeiq Je sayoUT) sseTO AdJoMeTG 


€861 ‘eatysduey mon ‘SAQunOD weysutTyIOy ‘sseTD JaeqJewWeTp pue 
sejtoeds Aq pueTiequy} uo sveij BupfONpoid—jyynaz pue -—jzNU sATT [Te Jo JequnN--°0C eTqQeL 


88 


*Spoompiey [eTOLeuMoouCU sepnToUT, 


8°17 62 VL GY cE 672 TZ 69 Te (quedied) 
iJoiize Buy{dues 
8° 1Z LeS‘¥ GEST Ly OZ 89E°T 766 ‘Z 79 76 9€8°Z seyoeds [Te ‘TeIO] 
9€ 807 ‘Z COL 0 0 COL OT 7 *T 0 0 9Ty‘T Spoompiey [e307 
68 G29 7E 0 0 VE 16S 0 (0) T6S pSPoompiey 19430 
TZ €cl 0 0 0 0 €cl 0) 0 €cl wTa 
0 0 0 0 0 (0) (0) (0) 0 (0) poomsseg 
GG c1YV 89 0 0 89 HVE 0 0 VARS SyeO poy 
OOT 89 0 0 0 0 89 0 0 89 syeo 323TUM 
OOT VE VE 0 0 VE (0) 0 0 0 uedsy 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0) 0 0 0 yse yori 
0 0 0 (0) 0 0 0 0 0 (0) yse 23T4M 
0 (0) (0) (0) 0 0 0 0 0 0 yoovog 
19 €T€E col 0 0 ZcOT I1Zé 0 0 112 yortq Aeray 
0 0 0) 0 0 (0) 0) 0 0 0 yoitq itedeg 
OOT 6y7T 671 0 0 67T 0 0 (0) 0 yortq MOTTE 
LS 78 0) 0 0 10) 6L 0 0 6L eTdem poy 
0 0 0 (0) 0 0 0 0 0 0 eTdew 1e3ng 
T€ 61E ‘7 €V7L LY OcT OLS 9/¢‘T 79 76 077 ‘T SPOOMAFOS TeIOT, 
0 0 0 (0) 0 0 0 (0) 0 0 Spoomjz jos 19430 
CY 6ZLT 79 O€ vE 0 CTI O€ 0 c8 yooTWeH 
0 0 (0) 0 (0) 0 0 0 0 0 1Tepesd—97 FYM Ul9y ION 
HE 901 ‘Z G79 LT 98 77S 197°T VE (4°) Gee‘T outd 33TYM 
OoT 7€ VE (0) 0 VE 0 0 0 0 sutd poy 
(0) 0 (0) 0 0 0 (0) (0) 0 0 eonids poy 
0 0 0 0 0) 0 0 0 0 0 eonids yoeTg 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 eonids 2374M 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 (0) yoeireuey, 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ify wesTeg 
quedi18eg eee ee -----— S901} puesnouy -------------------- moa 
i [TeI0J, +CT 6°71 6° OT qeI0, +61 6°7T 6°OT 
10119 TTe -O°TT -0°S -0°TT -0°S 
Sut Tdues Tero; sopoeds 
do} usy70I1g doj oe july 


€861 Seatyusdweyq mon ‘AQuN0D WeYysuUTYDOY ‘sseTO Ieee Tp 
pue ‘uo, 3tTpuods ‘satoeds Aq pueTieqUyTj uo seei1j peop Bufpueqs jo AequUNN--°[¢ eTqeL 


89 


90 


Table 52.--Number of shrubs, seedlings, and saplings on timberland by species, 
browse preference class, and browse utilization class, Rockingham County, 


New Hampshire, 1983 


Species and 


browse preference 


class 


Eastern hemlock 
Striped maple 
Red maple 
Mountain maple 


Hobblebush viburnum 


Total readily browsed 


Common juniper 
White pine 
Sugar maple 
Shadbush 
Yellow birch 
Black birch 
Paper birch 
Hawthorn 
American hazelnut 
Beaked hazelnut 
Beech 

White ash 
Winterberry 
Bigtooth aspen 
Quaking aspen 
Black cherry 
Chokecherry 
White oak 

Roses 

Brambles 
Willows 

Common elderberry 
American elm 
Blueberries 


Maple-leaf viburnum 


Wild raisin 


Total commonly browsed 


Light 


Browse utilization class 


Moderate 


20 
0 
00 
0 
0 


All 
classes 


Sampling 


error 


Percent 


38 
100 
31 
100 
78 


Table 52.--Continued 


Species and Browse utilization class All Sanpliing 
browse preference 16 
class None Light Moderate Heavy eet eee 
DES SSIS Million stems ---------------------- Percent 
Speckled alder 14.6 9.4 0 0 24.0 55 
Black chokeberry 46.6 0 0 AO) 46.6 100 
Gray birch 35.6 0 4.4 0 40.0 47 
Lambkill 24.6 0 0 0 24.6 75 
Eastern hophornbeam 8.9 0 0 0) 8.9 85 
Red oak 36.6 3.0 0 0 39.6 27 
Spiraea 56.4 25.4 0 0 81.8 65 
Total infrequently browsed 223.3 37.8 4.4 0 265.5 39 
Witch-hazel 74.0 0 0 Ao) 74.0 61 
Total questionable 74.0 0 0 0 74.0 61 
Other species 292.1 26.6 3.0 Ae) 321.7 31 
Total all species 2,039.5 211.6 25.2 A) 2,276.3 14.6 
Sampling error 
(percent ) 15 37 66 - 14.6 


7° 8T OOT os = £9 LE O€ 9f cE 62 GZ (Juadied ) 
Joiis Buttdues 
7° ST L00‘8 IT 8Z 0 cL G62 094 G99 946 €00‘Z LLy‘€ seyoeds [Te ‘TeIOL 
(Gi) 628 0 0 0 0 0 LT 0 0 9EE 9¢S yeo AIeTE 
KG 00E*€ Il 9 0 GS O12 7LZ 812 €ey 696 780‘T yeo pet ur9yIION 
OOT LE 0 0 0 0 0 LE 0 0 0 0 yeo JeTIeIS 
VL LS0‘T 0 0 0 LT 8T 0 66 76 8eT £69 yeo 83FUM 
TZ VAS 0 0 0 0 0 0 VAS 0 0 0 Adiayo yep 
OOT GC 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 GZ AIJeyo utd 
OOT (G3 0 0 0 0) 0 0 0 0 0 (45 weequioydoy urejseq 
OOT STT 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 SIT atddy 
VE 774 °Z 0 ce 0 0 L9 cel VIE 147) HAS T€6 yoood 
OOT 901 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 GE TZ 41042 TH 
quadtJeg  —-—-----------~--------~- (ana a =— Sdo1q puesnouy ——-———---------..__._ 
+6Z 6°87 6°02 6°8T 6°9T 6°41 6°?CI 6° OT 6°8 6°9 
10119 Sesseyo -0°12 -0°6T -0°LT -0°CT -0°ET -0°TT -0°6 -0°L -0°S 


sopoods 


suttTdues TIV 
(3YyZTey Yseeiq Je seyoUyT) sseTO ASqoueTG 


€861 ‘eatyusdwmey mony ‘AQuNOD prozzezajs ‘sseToO JejJoWeTp pue 
sejtoeds Aq pueTiequt} uo seer, BupoOnpoiad—jzy_nay pue -Jnu sATT [Te Jo AequNN--°¢G eTqey 


92 


*spoompiey [efo1eummoouoU sapnTouy 
e 


€°S7 T€ 8Z 08 62 LE S9 a BE (queo1ed ) 
Jolie 3uytdues 
€°S7 ZZESE 019‘Z (4) O8T 877 °Z cS9 GZ 0 Le9 seyoeds [Te ‘TeIO] 
82 L09*T 6S0‘T ] 8z1 G88 84S 4 0 €2S Spoompizey TeIOL 
TZ 89 9€ 0 0 9€ ce 0 0 ce poPoomprzey 19420 
6L 08 87 0 9T ce (45 0 0 ce ula 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 poomsseg 
Oot (43 (43 0 0 (45 0 0 0 0 syeo poy 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 syeo 327M 
TS 022 SIT 0 0 8IT col 0 0 ra) uedsy 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 yse yore 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 yse 3o274M 
OOoT 8t 0 0 0 0 BE 0 0 Be Yyooog 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 yortq sein 
18 817 TS 0 91 SE Lee 0 0 Lez yorqq 1edeg 
8S 762 8LZ 0 0 8LZ oT 91 0 0 Yortqd MOTTEA 
09 L6S 9647 9¥ 96 VATS TOT 6 0 76 etTdew poy 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 eTdew 1eZns 
T€ STL‘T TI9‘°T 91 (45 €7¢ ‘T 701 0 0 Ol SPOOM{ 508 [BIOL 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 SPOOM}Z FOS 19430 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 yOOTMSH 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Te pes—97 FY U1SYIION 
Ov €726 LS8 OT (45 682 99 0 0 99 eutd 39374M 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 eutd poy 
TS S0Z LOT 0 0 LOT 8E 0 0 ge eonids pey 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 eonids yoeTE 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 eonids 9274M 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 yoereuey, 
SS L8S L8S 0 0 L8S 0 0 0 0 Afy wesTe” 
SUESEER, 9 aseeeecee eee ‘So01} puesnoyy, --------------------__- ee 
seer} 6°41 6° OI 6° 6°OT 
10119 Tre CS eet -0°TT -0°S Lg bro -O0°TT -0°S 
8u tT dues TeIOL sepoeds 
do} usyo1g do} 30e4UL 


€861 ‘eaftysdueyq mon SAQuUNOD paozzeaqs ‘sseTo JejomeyTp 
pue ‘uofjTpuod ‘sefoeds Aq pueTiequy} uo saeij peep SuTpueqys jo JequnN—-*4¢ eT qGeI, 


93 


94 


Table 55.--Number of shrubs, seedlings, and saplings on timberland by species, 


Species and 


browse preference 


class 


Canada yew 
Eastern hemlock 
Striped maple 
Red maple 
Mountain maple 


Hobblebush viburnum 


Total readily browsed 


Balsam fir 
Common juniper 
White pine 
Sugar maple 
Shadbush 
Yellow birch 
Black birch 
Paper birch 
Beaked hazelnut 
Beech 

White ash 
Black ash 
Winterberry 
Honeysuckle 
Mountain holly 
Quaking aspen 
Pin cherry 
Black cherry 
White oak 
Roses 

Brambles 
Blueberries 
Wild raisin 


browse preference class, and browse utilization class, Stratford County, 


New Hampshire, 1983. 


re bd 


NWNWH OU ON NUON 


a) _ 
Sp elia yey <6) (0) (0) 6 Ve) (ee! .6) eke ce 


i) 
oO 
e 
ODUNDAONOrRF WON FU LfOUONMOWUDA 


Total commonly browsed 554.5 


Light 


Browse utilization class 


Moderate 


All 


classes 


1 pe) Nore me 
O: (6) 16s Be Cer (@' Ve. 16 On. 1810+ 18) en (ere 
FDUDOAON Or DOr WOO fF OW) 


ran 
PRR UWWODNU NM W™ OUrF Om 


ip) 
nr 
a) 

° 


Sampling 


error 


Percent 


Table 55.--Continued 
Species and 


browse preference 
class 


Red spruce 
Speckled alder 
Gray birch 
Lambkill 

Red oak 
Spiraea 


Total infrequently browsed 
Witch-hazel 

Total questionable 

Other species 

Total all species 


Sampling error 
(percent) 


Browse utilization class 


Light 


37.2 


Moderate 


84.9 


All 
classes 


53.2 


Weiler 


18.8 


Sampling 
error 


Percent 


100 
40 
83 

100 
47 
25 
42 
57 
57 
25 


18.8 


95 


£°61 0 TL LG LY €Y LY 6S BE £72 62 (quesied) 
Joiio 3ut{tdues 


€°61 080‘¢ 0 gz 0s G8 6E1 GIz 6EZ €0S 6581 Z96‘1 sefoeds Tre ‘TeI0y 
001 LT 0 0 0 0 0 0 LI 0 0 0 yse upequnoy 
001 ZOI‘T 0 0 91 4 oI 09 16 001 00S 062 Yeo per ureyzs0N 
00T €€ 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 €€ £1xay2240y9 
OOT 991 0 0 0 0 Ef cf SZI Z81 tai 9Gz Aazayo xTE 
Ly 988 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 €€ 80€ G4S ueaquioydoy uss3seg 
Lt 91Z°Z 0 8Z H€ z9 06 ZZ1 0 881 416 8c8 yooog 
qUus0 19g —— a —-— S901} puesnoyuy SS —-—-—-—--— 
ee Gee 6°02 6°81 6°91 6°41 6°ZI 6°OI 6°8 6°9 
Jo11@ —- sesseto i OC Of OCT =O <r, —<W%G -0°/ -0°¢ ae 
Zuttdmueg [Ty Tess 


(JUZTey Jseeiq ye seyoUT) sseTD JazoOMeTG 


€861 ‘eatysduey man ‘SAQunoD ueATT [NS ‘sseToD JejJeMeTp pue 
sejyoeds Aq pueTiequyt, uo saeiq BupoONpoid-jynaz pue —ynu sATT [Te Jo AequnN--°9¢ eTqeI 


96 


*spoompiey [eyoOLewMooUCU sepntouy , 


fLXS)II [AN cE 6¢ 61 OV TZ €S 9 (qued1ed ) 
ioiio Buttdmes 
L°9T 898°S 187‘¥ LLZ LOE LE9*€ L8S‘T 78 8772 GS7‘T sofoeds [Te ‘Te IO], 
€7 TSZ‘€ T8L‘Z CST VAG GGG OL6 9G OOT 918 Spoompiey [eO7, 
LE G6S G¥S val LT 71S OS 0 LT €€ poPpoompszey 19430 
OOT LZ 0 0 0 (0) (KG Lé 0 0 uTa 
0 0 0 0 0 (0) 0 0 0 0 poomsseg 
0 (0) (0) 0 (0) (0) (0) 0 0 0 syeo poy 
0 0 0 (0) 0 0 0 0 (0) 0) syeo 33 T4M 
09 L81 OLT 0 0 OLT LT 0 LI 0) uedsy 
OOT G9 G9 (0) 0 G9 0 (0) 0 0 yse »oeTE 
OL 762 6272 €72 €v €9T G9 0 0 G9 yse 9374M 
8S 9G6 OSE €€ €€ 787 909 02 99 YAS yooog 
IZ 99 0 0 0 0 99 0 0 99 yorytq Aeip 
19 CLZ 17Z 0 64 761 v€ 0 0 v7€ yoitq i1edeg 
6S 619 98S €€ 67 70S €€ 0 (0) €€ yortq MOTTO 
GE cOYV 69€ 9S LT 962 €€ 0 0 €€ etTdeu poy 
VAS 6972 977 €7 9I L8T 6£ L 0 cE eTdew i1e3ns 
GZ LIT‘Z 00S‘T G6 €v7T 797 ‘T L19 O€ 87T 6£%7 Spoomjzyos TeIOL 
0 0 (0) 0 0 0 0 0 0 (0) SPOOMIFOS 194IO 
CV T9T Z8 0 LT G9 6L O€ LI cE yoo TWSH 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 (0) 0 0 Tepso—97 FYM ULSYIION 
VA) 906 778 G6 60T 8£9 99 0 LT LY outd 374M 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 (0) 0 0 oud poy 
€7 TZ8 VA 0 LT LCV LLE 0 LT O9€ eonids poy 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 eonids yorTg 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 gonids 93 74M 
0 0 0 0 (0) (0) 0 0 0 0 yoereuey 
19 6272 CET 0 0 CET L6 0 L6 0 AIFF wesyeg 
quedieg ae ee Es GREP SE) pO hn era eee ea 
svol1q [eo] +C1 6° 47T 6° OT TeIO; +GT 6°4VT 6° OT 
10119 TTe -0°TT -0°S -0°TT -0°S 
Sut Tdues TeI0], satoods 
do} usyoig doz 30e3uUr, 


€861 ‘eafysdmey mon ‘AQuNOD UBATT INS ‘sseTO JeJoOMRTp 
pue ‘uoyj Fpuod ‘sezfoods Aq pueTiequy} uo see13 peop BSuypueqjs jo rzsqunN—-°/¢ eTqQe] 


97 


98 


Table 58.--Number of shrubs, seedlings, and saplings on timberland by species, 
browse preference class, and browse utilization class, Sullivan County, 


Species and 


browse preference 


class 


Eastern hemlock 
Striped maple 
Red maple 
Mountain maple 
Apple 

Mountain ash 


Hobblebush viburnum 


Total readily browsed 


Balsam fir 

Common juniper 
White pine 

Sugar maple 
Shadbush 

Yellow birch 
Black birch 

Paper birch 
Red-Osier dogwood 
Hawthorn 

Beaked hazelnut 
Beech 

White ash 

Quaking aspen 

Pin cherry 

Black cherry 
Chokecherry 
Brambles 

Common elderberry 
Red-berried elder 
American elm 
Blueberries 
Sweetfern 


New Hampshire, 1983 


Total commonly browsed 725.5 


Browse utilization class 


Moderate 


All 


classes 


NO 
me ered fr 
e e e e ° e 


s+ 


Dre Lf 
e 


—y 
WON WMO FENN DUNRFPONM™NOF WN UD 


foe) 
wi ND NS 
(e*) 
e 


Sampling 


error 


Table 58.--Continued 


Species and 
browse preference 
class 


Black spruce 

Red spruce 

Gray birch 

Eastern hophornbeam 
Red oak 

Spiraea 


Total infrequently browsed 


Witch-hazel 
Gooseberries 


Total questionable 
Other species 
Total all species 


Sampling error 
(percent) 


1,507.0 


15 


Browse utilization class 


223.5 


Moderate 


36.9 


All 
classes 


38.4 


1,770.4 


13.7 


Sampling 
error 


Percent 


13.7 


99 


Tree Species of New Hampshire (as encountered on field plots) (Powell and Dickson 1984). 


a 


Scientific N 


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

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

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


A. spicatum Lam.° 
SS cass Britton 
B. lenta 
bo papuriora Marsh. 
- populifolia Marsh. 
nee spp- Nutt. 
Fagus grandifolia Ehrh. 


ape Mill.° 


100 


Common Name(s) 


Softwoods 


balsam fir 

eastern redcedar 
tamarack, eastern larch 
white spruce 

black spruce 

red spruce 

red or Norway pine 
pitch pine 

eastern white pine 
northern white-cedar 
eastern hemlock 


Hardwoods 


striped maple, moosewood 

red, soft, or swamp maple 
silver or soft maple 

Sugar, rock or hard maple 
mountain maple 

yellow birch 

sweet, black, or cherry birch 
paper, white or canoe birch 
gray birch 

hickory 

American beech 

white ash 

black or brown ash 

green or red ash 

butternut 

apple 

eastern hophornbeam, ironwood 
balsam poplar 

bigtooth aspen, poplar, popple 
quaking or trembling aspen 
pin or fire cherry 

black cherry 

white oak 

searlet oak 

chestnut oak 

northern red oak 

black oak 

willows 

american basswood 

american elm 


LK CK © Le TK @) 


< 
3 


inj tal (©) @ GS @) @ Gi Ge) ty Gy 


aNames according to: Little, Elbert L., Jr. Checklist of United States Trees 


(native and naturalized). Agric. Handb. 541. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of 
Agriculture, Forest Service; 1979. 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 field plots: vr = very rare 


(<0.05%), r = rare (0.05 to 0.49%), c = common (0.5 to 4.9%), and ve = very 
common (>5.0%). 


c : p 
Noncommercial species. 


101 


Shrub, Vine, and Occasional Tree Species of New Hampshire (as encountered on 


field plots but not recorded as trees) 


102 


a 


Solent iriou. 


Juniperus sp. L. 

Taxus canadensis Marsh. 

Ailanthus altissima (Mill.) Swingle 
Alnus sp. Mill. 

A. rugosa (Du Roi) Spreng. 
Amelanchier sp. Medic. 

Aronia melanocarpa (Michx.) Ell. 
Carpinus caroliniana Walt. 

Carya cordiformis (Wangenh.) K. Koch 
C. ovata (Mill.) K. Koch 

Castanea dentata (Marsh.) Borkh. 
Clematis verticillaris DC 

Comptonia peregrina (L.) J. Coult. 
Cornus alternifolia L. f. 

C. amomum Mill. 

C. canadensis L. 

Cruefllioidailir. 

C. racemosa Lam. 


C. rogosa Lam. 

C. stolonifera Michx. 
Corylus americana Marsh. 
C. cornuta Marsh. 


Gaultheria hispidula R. Br. 
G. procumbens L. 


Hamamelis virginiana 

Ilex montana (T. & G.) Gray 

L. verticillata (L.) Gray 

Sel neue ele L. 
Kesoliataotolcian Ine 

eRe Oedr. 

Lindera benzoin (L.) Blume 


Lonicera sp. L. 

Mitchella repens L. 

Nemopanthus mucronata (L.) Trel. 
Parthenocissus guinguefolia (L.) Planch. 
Physocarpus opulifolius (L.) Maxim. 
Platanus occidentalis L. 

Prunus sp. L. 

P. virginiana L. 

Quercus bicolor Willd. 

Rhamnus sp. L. 

Rhododendron sp. L. 

Rhus glabra L. 

R. radicans L. 

R. typhina L. 

Ribes sp. L. 

Rosa sp. L. 

Rubus sp. L. 


Common Name 


juniper 

Canada yew 
ailanthus 

alder 

speckled alder 
serviceberry 
black chokeberry 
American hornbeam 
bitternut hickory 
shagbark hickory 
American chestnut 
purple clematis 
sweetfern 


alternate-leaf dogwood 


silky dogwood 
bunchberry 
flowering dogwood 
gray or red-panicled 
dogwood 
round-leaved dogwood 
red-osier dogwood 
American hazelnut 
beaked hazelnut 
hawthorn 
creeping snowberry 
teaberry 
witch-hazel 
large-leaf holly 
common winterberry 
sheep laurel 
mountain laurel 
Labrador tea 
common spicebush 
honeysuckle 
partridgeberry 
mountain holly 
Virginia creeper 
ninebark 
American sycamore 
cherry, plum 
chokeberry 
swamp white oak 
buckthorn 
rhododendron, azalea 
smooth sumac 
poison ivy 
staghorn sumac 
currant, gooseberry 
rose 
briers, brambles 
American elder 


Scientific Name Common Name 

S. pubens Michx. red=-berried elder 
Sorbus americana Marsh. American mountain ash 
Spirea sp. L. spirea 

Staphylea trifolia L. American bladdernut 
Tilia sp. L. basswood 

Ulmus sp. L. elm 

Vaccinium sp. L. blueberry 

V. oxveoccos L. small cranberry 
Viburnum sp. L. viburnum 

V. acerifolium L. maple-leaf viburnum 
V. alnifolium Marsh. hobblebush viburnum 
V. cassinoides L. wild raisin 

V. dentatum L. arrowwood 

V. lentago L. nannyberry 

V. trilobum Marsh. American cranberry bush 
Vitis sp. L. grape 


“Names according to: Little, Elbert L., Jr. Checklist of United States trees 
(native and naturalized). Agric. Handb. 541. Washington, DC: U.S. Department 
of Agriculture, Forest Service; 1979. 375 p., and Symonds, George W.D. The 
Shrub Identification Book. New York: William Morrow & Co; 1963. 379 p. 


103 


€°072 c° 8 0°? 6° 6T 9° LT €°?C 6°02 0°6T 8°T yse o7TumM 
B°C€e 6°62 0°” €°O€ L° LZ G°?C G° LE 9°ZE 6°47 Yoovod uPofisny 
6°T 8°T Cn 9°? (On Go €°T e°T T° ‘ds uzoy Mey 
as [Losi] 6° L°S L°4 O°T 9°S L°y 8° qnuTezey peyeog 
0°9 6° T°T T° 7°€ [Le 1°38 9°9 H°T jnutezey ueotiony 
L°etT 9°€T T° 9°9 S°9 Te 9°77 G°?7 1 ArZoqyoung 
9° 6°T 7° f°? 9°T 9° L°? 7°? €° poomZop 19Ts0-pey 
S° 7° T* (3 L° Cm ‘The Te T° poomZop Ari 
€° c° {le 9° 7° T° lie E [Up PoomZo0p peToTued 
c° ve T° 7° 4° Tie. G* y° T° poomSop jeoT—punoy 
€° 6° T° 9° "° ee L ie we poomsop AxTTS 
f°? 6°T c° (Gt 6°T y° Cac 0°Z 79 poom8o0p jeeT—-97euI2RTY 
Cm c° Ne S° 4° Tr 0° The 12 poomZop Butr9moT A 
L°T y°T €° G°? 6°T 9° 6° 8° Is ULBFIOOMS 
ca c° I T° T° T° ¢° 7° Tee sfTjiemeTo eTdang 
8°T 9°T Ge GS 8°7 4° LY Te T° qnujseyo uedtiony 
6°T 8°T Cm 7°€ T°€ (She The Tee T° A1OyO FY yAeqseus 
c° 9° ye [is ES T° Li Tie Te AxoYyOFY 4nurS4q4TY_ 
8° fl lee 7°T (SPU (Gr We uo ire A10¥9 TH 
6° [L? 1 S°T €°T (Sy Te T° T° weequioy ued Tiomy 
T°OT 0°6 T°T €°eT T°tt T°? L£°9 €°9 ° yortq Avi 
0°SZ G°?t7e G°? f° C7 T°02 f° 9°87 9°SZ L°? yoitq tedeg 
9°¢ o°S 4° 2° OT £°6 O°T Ie 1 Tas Yyortq 3e99MS 
€°77~ 0°72 €°?C 7° 61 9° LT 8°T T°O€ 9°17 G°? Yyortqd MOTTE 
8° 9° On y°T O°T 4° ile Tee T° AAIIYOeyoyD YAoe TY” 
6°9 6°S O°T T°OT 1°8 0°72 9°€ OAS 4° A£110qQ99 FAI9g 
8°S LY, T°T G°sS >) 8° 0°9 [L244 (Se Jepte peTyoeds 
9°€ O°e 9° c*€ 8°C [Ly [LAS XS, 9° ‘ds 19pTy 
L°at Owns 6°? 9°Z 6°T ILS 7°82 1°72 €°” etdew upzejunoy 
Or LE €°Te 7°9 G°67¢ 99°C? 6°€ €°9H 7° 8E 6°L eTdem ae3ng 
9° 9° I° ye ° T° 6° 8° T° eTdem 19ATTS 
9°¢9 6°LS (LY Ut 8°08 L°89 T°?r f° 64 o°uY 0°S eTdew poy 
T° 872 L°€? 9° L°LT G°4T Gus 7°OV €°SE T°S etdeu pedyti3s 
8°ETS 8°12 6°T O°EE 9°62 WAS T°€T T°?T O°T yoTmoy ute sey 
c° 7° We T° T° il? 6° 8° The Jepeds—397 TYyM ur9sYyII0N 
L° 9° i* Gaal O°T Ge we T° Tt mof epeuep 
0°0€ 8° LZ Gr L°€y 1°6€ G°4 €°vT 9°€T L° eutd eqyTyM ureqseyg 
ce am T° 7° 7° ye c° "7° T° sutd yortd 
y°T (So I cS aa 9°T 6? 6° 8° ili outd poy 
€°SZ (Se (G4 O°e 7°7T 7° TT 6° 7° OV T°9€ €°y sonids poy 
on 9° le LS fr T° S* 7° T° vonids yore TY 
0°T 6° T° Its Le ile W2¢ 0°Z T° eonids 93TyM 
G° y° T° T° Te Tee 6° g° T° yoReseUey, 
0°” 1s 6° 8°L 9°¢C GC ee TS T° ated Funr 
9° LE 9°62 0°83 9°0OI €°6 €°T 7°19 T°ss Sa Cal AIfj wesTeg 
OnTeA Aduenbe1g Aj }ysueq onTea Aduenbeiry AqzTsueg OnTeA Aduoenbeig AyyFsueq 
sour A1oduy aoue J10duy aoue 310duy 
sopoods 


Te@I09 29e9S 


3}uQ uszsy3nos 


2yun uzsy310N 


€861 ‘o1Tysdmey moy ‘seafoods pue 3Tugq oFYydeazs0ey Aq RES Apoom iesseyT jo sonzTeA so.ueQiIodmy pue AdUenbeig pue Aj}Tsueq sATIeTSY 


104 


7° YT O°TT 7°€ 8°9T 9°7T G°Y O°?T 7°6 L°? ‘ds voevitds 
Z°¢€ 8°Z y° ° "° T° 6°9 6°S 9° yse ufequnom ueodtiouy 
6°T 9°T €° L° L° Ie T°€ 8°? 9° T2ePTe pofitoq—poy 
GG 6°T c° T°T O°T Ca He Z°E (30 Jepte uedtiouy 
9°T 7°T c° T°l O°T te e°? 0°? Ci *ds MOTTIM 
L°SE 0°72 L°etT 7°77 c°st c°9 €°cy 8°92 G°8T “ds snqny 
8° [E~ ls T°l O°T T° S° 9° T° *ds esoy 
G*é €°? Go L°T 9°T Ue 7°€ GAS €° eds sqjueiing 
€°? SG ie I*¥ T° T° 2 T° Tee AA} uostog 
8° L° I° 8° L° T° 6° g° T° oeuns ui0Yyse IS 
{Le 9° ils T°T O°T c° Ue Tes Te oeuns yJOOuS 
L°T Wes 9° €°? €°T O°T e°T 8° 9° *ds eeyTezy 
GI 6° €° 7°T O°T SS O°T 8° Go uloy yong 
T° 8°Ee €° T°L Gag or S° 7° ils yeo 4OeTE 
T° LZ 9°02 G°? O° Le 9°EE 7°€ o°ST 7°ET 0°? yeo pet UrTSYIAON 
s° 7° il 6° L° c° il T° TS yeo ynuzsey) 
6° Le 1 el e°T (~ lie T° uc yeo JoTIe IS 
[Eo 6° ue 4° y° Te ie i? te yeo e3TYyM duems 
7°83 9°L 9° O° FT L°@l €°T €°T c°l Le yeo 33TUM 
€°” (LE gy (Gn) 7°€ 8° G*y 6°E S° AraYyIexoyD 
7°6T 6° LT G°T G°€Z €°1? o°? 8°vT 9° ET T°T Alieyo YyoeTY 
G°6 €°8 €°T £°9 6°S 8° 8°?T €°rl 9°T AITeYyO Utd 
[£° 95 ue Gall O°T (S° ue ile T° *ds ArieuD 
T°OT €°6 8° L°8 L°l O°T O°cl €°rt L° uedse Zutyendh 
aa 9°T ue TAG Calc 6° 6° 8° Th uedse y30073Tg 
[Le 9° 9 Th f° Te 9° Gal Ga iejdod wesTeg 
€° z° I° ye "7° T° T° T° T° ezrowedhs 
€° 70° T° v° 4° T° Tas T° 1° YAeGouIN 
9° 9° T° O°T Orr T° T° T° T° Jedeeid eTUTBITA 
L°s 7°G (S 0°9 9°S 7° 7°S USS €° ueequioydoy uieqseq 
L° 9° T° 6° L° Zz: G° 1° Tas AT TOU upequnoy 
9591 G°9T T° €°CZ C°C? T° 7°6 7°6 ile At19qgespytizieg 
O°T 6° Ue 8° [ e €°T Coal ite *ds otddy 
0°S €°” oy 97°C 6°T S° T°8 VOL Ls eTWNsAouoy ysng 
€* c* le 9° 4° T° lies le T° ysnqeoqtds uowmo) 
Ge (E2 7° T° T° T° 9° 1° Tes thal i1opeiqey 
0°? 9°T We B°E 8°72 O°T T° T° ue TeaneT ufequnoy 
(an) G°E 8° O°” 7° € gr View) G°e 6° TeaneyT desys 
Go 6° (Se 6°T €°T L° G° 4° T° Ai1eq1i93UTAM uoMUOD 
oe wv ° 9° "° we 9° "° Ce ATTOY jeeT es1e7 
T°ttl 8°6 €°T c° st 9° CT 8°? T’€ 8°? (° TezeyyoI TM 
G°8t 7° 8T We £°SZ €°C?C T° 8°6 L°6 ue Arieqesy, 
G°T y°T Tine L° L° T° "°Z H°Z ie Aiieqmous Zuytdseei) 
T°Z 6°T Ce 8°T 9°T c° G°? 7°? c° yse 4 eTd 
onTea ADuoenbe1ry AV Fsueg onTea Aduenbelrq AQ Fsueq onTea Aduenbeig Aj }Fsueqg 
aouej1oduy aoue q1oduy 20ue 71 oduy 
sofoods 
qTeq03 2483S 31ug uzey Anos 3TuQ ursey ION 
penutjquo5 


€861 ‘eifyusdmey mon ‘sotoedg pue tug oTYydeazZ0e5 Aq psueqg Apoom iessey Jo seny,eA soueqiodwy pue Aouenbeig pue AjyTsueqg eATIeTOY 


105 


*y°q°*p SeyoUuyt Q°G ueYy} SseT sWeqs vei} pue sofoeds ouyA pue qniys S@pnpou 


O°T 6° T° T°T O°T G” 6° 8° We get} UMOUXU) 
G° 4° The G° 4° Z° G° 1° The qniys useiZ10A0 uMOUyUQ 
9°S L°4 O°T B°L o°9 eis Ca 8°? oF qnays snonpfoep uMouxu/) 
T’l wea ie iL» [h> T° L°T OoT Te qnays jJiemMp uMouxus) 
"° " T° ye y° T° S° ° 1 oUuFA uMOUyUL 
€° c° We ie ile we S° 7° T° edein 
Giz y)~ ue T° ile T° 6° 8° Te Aijequeis ysnqysty 
ome 8°? ¢° 9°72 7°? 7° T°, G*E 9° Arioqhuuen 
G°Z T°? om 9°47 L°€ 8° T° T° T° PoommMot ty 
6°S e°S L* 6°L 8°9 TT 9°€ cre s° uySFer PTIM 
8° LT 8°eT 0°” T°sS T°? T°T 6°TE 0°9¢ 6°S wunuingfA ysnqeTqqon 
0°S 0°” O°T S°9 L°Y 8°T QS CE 9° mnuingyA peseveT—eTdey 
8°? G°? Wyo £°€ 8°? iS €°? 0°? €° *ds wnuingtTA 
8° E? 7° LT 7°9 6° VE UE 8° TT c°el T°Or O°e ‘ds Airaqentg 
(5° (On Is q° vn ue T° T° ey Adiequeid T[TeuUs 
8°? 9? Gy T’€ 8°? (5 G°é 7°? ie aTo ued fiouy 
9° 9° is T°T O°T ue ile T° we *ds wTg 
O°T 6° We L° (L> ile €°T (om | We poomsseq ueofioculy 
0°T 6° T° 7°T e°T ile Si 4° T° ‘ds poomsseg 
€° Cs 1 9° 4° T° T° T° ue qnuseppeTq ueoficuy 
onTea Aduonbe1rq A} Fsueq onTea Aduoenbeirg AQ Fsueg onTea Aduonbe1g Aq Fsueq 
ao0ue 31 0duy aouejioduy aouez10duy 


[e703 2789S 


3}UQ ueYy ANOS 


3yuQ uzeyzI0N 


sopoods 


penuytquog 


€861 ‘e1ftyusdwey may ‘satoods pue yfug oTydeas005 Aq psue3g Apoom i1essey Jo sen Te, eouejiodwy pue Aduenbeig pue Aj};sueq eATIeTSY 


106 


Metric Equivalent of Units Used in This Report 


1 acre = 4,046.86 m° or 0.404686 ha 

1,000 acres = 404.686 ha 

1,000,000 acres = 404,686 ha 

1 inch = 2.54 em or 0.0254 

1 foot = 30.48 em or 0.3048 

Breast height = 1.4 above ground level 

1 mile = 1.609 km 5 5 

1 square foot = 929.03 cm or 0.929 m 

1 square foot per acre basalarea S 
0.229568 m /ha 

1 ton = 907.1848 kg 

1,000 tons = 907.1848 metric tons 


*U.S,GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFF ICE:1987-748-076:40018 107 


Brooks, Robert T.; Frieswyk, Thomas S.; Malley, Anne M. 1987. 
Forest Wildlife Habitat Statistics for New Hampshire--1983. 
NE-RB-97. Broomall, PA: U.S. Department of Agriculture, 
Forest Service. Northeastern Forest Experiment Station; 

HOTS pie 


A statistical report on the first forest wildlife habitat 
survey of New Hampshire (1983). Findings are displayed in 58 


tables covering forest area, landscape patterns, mast 
potential, standing dead and cavity trees, and understory 
woody-stemmed vegetation. Data are presented at county and/or 
unit and state levels of resolution. 


Keywords: Forest habitat survey, inventory, landscape 
pattern, snags, mast, browse. 


Headquarters of the Northeastern Forest Experiment Station are in Broomall, Pa. 
Field laboratories are maintained at: 
e@ Amherst, Massachusetts, in cooperation with the University of Massachusetts. 
e@ Berea, Kentucky, in cooperation with Berea College. 
@ Burlington, Vermont, in cooperation with the University of Vermont. 
@ Delaware, Ohio. 
e Durham, New Hampshire, in cooperation with the University of New Hampshire. 
e@ Hamden, Connecticut, in cooperation with Yale University. 


@ Morgantown, West Virginia, in cooperation with West Virginia University, 
Morgantown. 


@ Orono, Maine, in cooperation with the University of Maine, Orono. 
e 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, 
Syracuse. 


@ University Park, Pennsylvania, in cooperation with the Pennsylvania State 
University. 


@ Warren, Pennsylvania. 


Persons of any race, color, national origin, sex, age, religion, or with any handicap- 
ping condition are welcome to use and enjoy all facilities, programs, and services 
of the USDA. Discrimination in any form is strictly against agency policy, and 
should be reported to the Secretary of Agriculture, Washington, DC 20250.