By
Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- The efficiency and sustainability of Mississippi's
timber industry has helped grow it to the $1.2 billion value
it has today. The
state has about 18.5 million acres of timberland. Of these,
70 percent are held by private, non-industrial owners.
Mississippi's forest types are about 30 percent pine, 25
percent oak/pine mix and 45 percent hardwood. Bob
Daniels, forestry specialist with Mississippi State
University's Extension Service, said forests are quite
resilient and the state is using more of its pine than its
hardwoods. "The
forest industry has been a strong proponent of conservation
for years," Daniels said. "If you are dependent on a
renewable resource, you can't wipe it out and still stay in
business." Some
circles frown upon the timber industry, partly from past
practices and partly from the disturbed appearance of
harvested areas. Daniels said the industry in the 1950s was
less efficient, often cutting down a whole tree for just the
lowest 16 feet of trunk. At the sawmill, the log would be
squared and the large slabs cut off would be burned for
disposal. "That
was wasteful, but there were no markets for the wasted
wood," Daniels said. "Today, the timber industry uses about
75 percent of the entire harvested tree, and it follows best
management practices to protect the land during
harvest." Modern
loggers are highly mechanized. Daniels said operators can
drive machines up to the tree being harvested, attach to it
with grapple arms and fell it with a blade. The machine
directs where the tree falls, protecting the operator from
felling the tree by hand, one of the most dangerous jobs
around. Once on
the ground, workers remove limbs with chain saws and load
the felled tree onto a log truck for the sawmill. Branches,
tree tops and stumps that remain are part of what gives
harvested areas a cluttered look before the newly planted
trees get established. "Limbs
are typically left in the woods to begin to rot, but this
logging slash can be an obstacle to reforestation," Daniels
said. Previously,
the industry would gather this material with bulldozers and
other equipment and burn it on the land before replanting.
Today, people sometimes use a roll chopper to crush and
break limbs so they can be burned after they dry. Both
methods eliminate much of the debris and undergrowth so new
trees can be planted and thrive. Daniels
said a more popular method of reforestation today clears all
the usable wood out of the area, then uses herbicides to
control undergrowth that competes with newly planted
seedlings. Once
cut, modern sawmills bring full-length trees to the mill,
leaving just the branches and the top of the tree cut off at
a diameter of about 6 inches. These whole trees are
efficiently manufactured into lumber lengths and sizes that
are most valuable according to daily lumber market
conditions. Bark is
removed from trees, stored and sold, and the slabs cut off
to square logs are chipped into very specific sizes and sold
to paper or chip board mills. Other wood particles that
remain are sold to particleboard mills, and the very
smallest pieces are either sold or used for boiler fuel, or
used on-site to fuel wood-fired kilns. "Because
of the improvements in forest operations, manufacturing
technology and lumber yield, the production of Southern pine
lumber in the South has gone from 10.5 billion board feet in
1985 to 16.1 billion board feet in 2000," Daniels said.
Old
images of the lumberjack and broken-down equipment are
history, he said. "Today's
forest industry efficiently grows trees, manufactures
products and nurtures the forests," Daniels said. "That's
what will keep growing trees economically important in
Mississippi's future." Released:
June 18, 2001
Forestry,
Wildlife & Fisheries News
Timber industry
runs efficient operations
For more information, contact: Dr. Bob Daniels, (662)
325-3151
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:31:54
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/fwnews/fw01/010618.html
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