Sunday, May 13, 2012

"The new frontiers of building: the multi-story wood buildings" - Looking for foresters contributions

This international conference has taken place on Monday 2012/05/07 in the Faculty of Engineering of the University of Cagliari.

The event, is quite important for the NFS because it is related to the 3 year PhD opportunity of next fall (clik here for further informations), has been audio recorded. 

Two contributions have specific relevance for forestry research.
Dott. Marcello Airi (Ente Foreste della Sardegna) presentation on the origin and potential management alternatives for Sardinia conifer woodlands,
and dott. Stephen John (University of Canterbury, New Zealand) who illustrated his country's experience on wood production by the "plantation forestry".

Some other good things are contained in the zip file downloadable from the link above.

The research needs the contribution of foresters, FATEVI AVANTI!!!

Monday, March 19, 2012

RESEARCH TOPICS IN THE NEW VISION OF FOREST ECOSYSTEMS (a short summary)


In the last years a new conception of forest environment and management, called Systemic Silviculture (Ciancio, 1999), based on the assumption that forest is a complex, not linear and not predictable biological organism has risen. This is not the place where talk about the fundamentals principles of this theory but, according to it, i would like to highlight the mutate management approach: from forecasting to monitoring (Corona e Scotti, 2011).
In the last century many efforts of forest researchers have been adressed toward predict the behavior of managed or not managed forest stands, mainly about dynamics, growth and yield aspects. The role and importance of the modelling approach in forestry is left to other authors and treaty, more prepared than the writer.
Here, i want just underline the important role that monitoring, and tools to implement it, are aquiring in forestry, either to assess or manage in a sustainable way forest and environmental resources.
The fundamentals on which an efficient survey plan have to be based are:
      1. Objectivity
      2. Repetitivity
      3. Reliability.
The switch, as above mentioned, from forecasting to monitoring and from the “command and control” to an adaptative approach in forestry, has allowed at a new branch of technology to increase is role about the forest resources management and planning: Remote Sensing (RS).
I strongly believe that the laboratory of the forester is the forest, so he cannot miss his appointment with the field analysis, description and measurements, in order to understand, as better as he can, what the forest “is trying to say”. Unfortunately these ones are the most expensive aspects of forest management planning, and above all, they are extremely hard to apply, in homogeneous and coherent way, on wide surfaces because, althought the use of specific guidelines, they can go against 2 of the 3 principles before mentioned, objectivity and repetitivity, while the reliability depends instead of operator's experience and professional skills.
The integrate use of remote sensing techniques, and sample methodologies for locate field observations, can solve many of these issues.
Remote sensing techniques return data which can be, after appropriate processing, related to forest parameters directly - such as photointerpetation (PI) of orthophotos (OP) - or indirectly – e.g. Image Processing (IP) of Multispectral Satellite Imagey (MSI) or LiDAR Data (LD) processing.
An important step of the planning process is the subdivision of the forest in a physiographic units and, inside each of these units, in a homogeneous physiognomic subunits1.
PI of OP, IP of MSI and LD processing can support foresters in the subdivision process, furthermore MSI and LD are able to return, after processing, the functional (MSI) and structural (LD) state of the ecosystem in a objectivity, repetitivity and truthfulness way, so they can be used as a efficients tools for monitoring and manage forests, because they allow the periodically assess of the results of our silvicultural intervents and give information on how correct them (adaptative management).
The data resulted from IP and LD processing have to be validate which field measurement and observation, located by a sample design which aims to reduce the cost of this step, in order to increase their precision and truthfulness.
In last analysis i think that an important branch of forest research have to be addressed to the combined use of remotely sensed data and field measurements (both new or pre-esistent, e.g. forest inventory data) because they offer, to the people involved in the forestry field - forest owner/manager or forest researcher - the tools to practice a sustainable forest resources management, and a vision of how the forest dynamics develops as a consequences of his actions.
1It needs a clarification. According to Systemic Silviculture theory, one of the most important goals of it, it is the increase of forest's complexity, either for structure or composition. So the subdivision of forest in homogeneous physiognomics subunits is not required.