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Pennsylvania’s Private Forest Owners and The Issues They Face Jim Finley School of Forest Resources Penn State University.

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Presentation on theme: "Pennsylvania’s Private Forest Owners and The Issues They Face Jim Finley School of Forest Resources Penn State University."— Presentation transcript:

1 Pennsylvania’s Private Forest Owners and The Issues They Face Jim Finley School of Forest Resources Penn State University

2 What We’ll Cover ► A bit of PA Forest History ► PA’s Forest Owners ► Issues  Harvesting  Regeneration  Challenges  Looking Forward ► Finding Assistance

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11 Pennsylvania is 58 percent forested 16.6 Million acres

12 Pennsylvania Forestland Area by Year

13 PA Forest Land Change

14 Who Owns the Forest?

15 Public Forests ► ► ~30% of Pennsylvania Forests ► ► 5 Million Acres ► ► Managed Publicly   Local, State, or Federal   Legislative direction   Public/Scientific input   Balancing multiple objectives

16 Private Forests ► ► ~70% of Pennsylvania Forests ► ► 12 Million Acres ► ► Managed Privately   Each individual landowner   Personal decisions   Few long-term plans   Little input from foresters

17 Results ► ► Distribution of owners Statewide (GIS Counties) ► Distribution of acres

18 General Characteristics ► ► 84% Male; 16% Female ► ► Average age: 61   38% retired ► ► Educated   22% 2-yr degree   23% 4-yr degree   20% Advanced degree ► ► Politically conservative   30% “moderate”   59% “moderate conservative” or “conservative”

19 General Characteristics ► ► Mostly rural   Own land in more rural areas than where they live ► ► Most live close   70% live within 10 miles ► ► Most post   58% post their forestland   Many would allow certain activities, if asked ► ► Most financially well-off, some diversity   20% earn < $35,000/yr   33% earn > $100,000/yr

20 Urbanization ParcelizationFragmentation

21 Results: State PFL Population ACRESOWNERS 1-9401,760 10-19119,040 20-49111,600 50-99 66,960 100+ Total 44,640 744,000

22 Results: Forestland Distribution ► ► Urban/Suburban Counties   Small holdings = 50% of forestland ► ► Rural Counties   Small holdings = 15% of forestland ► ► County-based sample allows for regional analysis and subsequent outreach programming

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25 Getting Started ► Forest Stewardship Plan  Define your objectives   Seek professional assistance.   Know what you have and where it is   Formulate a ten-year schedule   Review your plan frequently

26 Harvesting Practices ► ► 48% have harvested   Mostly firewood ► ► 11% harvested commercially   Represents 26% of private forestland Size of Forest (Acres) Harvested Commercially 1-106% 10-209% 20-5014% 50-10018% 100-20020% 200-50035% 500-100040% 1000+53%

27 Harvesting Perceptions ► ► Overwhelmingly happy with harvests   69.2% “Happy” or “Very Happy” ► ► Describe outcome of harvest   Everything looks good   Trees that were left look healthy   Given time, remaining trees will be large/valuable ► ► Most willing to harvest   54.2% “willing” or “very willing”   17.2 % “opposed” or “very opposed”

28 Harvesting Perceptions ► ► Most harvest managed by the landowner   20% involved a forester   44% managed the harvest themselves ► ► Key misconceptions about forest ecology   Tree size is a good indicator of tree age   Cutting large trees is the best approach   Ferns do not threaten forest ecosystems   Deer eat ferns

29 Harvesting Practices ► ► Reasons for harvesting:   Improve growing conditions for remaining trees   Trees were “mature”   Salvage   Wildlife ► ► Descriptions of harvests:   49.6% “Cut most of the large trees” or “Cut a few select large trees”   Translation: Diameter limit

30 Simply Silviculture Is: What you establish Regeneration What you leave Residual

31 All Species White Ash Black Cherry Sugar Maple NUMBEROFTREES DIAMETER 12 Inch Diameter Cut

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33 Sawtimber 0 25000 50000 75000 100000 125000 150000 Red Maple Northern red oak Black cherry Eastern Hemlock Chestnut oak Sugar maple White oak White ash Black birch White pine Thousands of Trees Shifting Species Composition

34 Desirable Commercial 36 % 50 % Interpretation: Desirable: about two-thirds would likely fail to regenerate. Commercial: half would likely fail. Samples Meeting Regeneration Criteria, Timber Management (Samples from 40% to 75% Stocked – High Deer)

35 Samples Meeting Regeneration Criteria, Timber Management (Samples from 40% to 75% Stocked – High Deer) 0 – 33% 34-66%67+% Wildlife Management Units No Data 16%

36 Invasive Plants ► Tree of heaven ► Japanese knotweed ► Mile-a-minute weed ► Bush honeysuckle ► Garlic mustard ► Oriental bittersweet ► Multiflora rose ► Japanese stilt grass

37 Exotic Insects and Diseases ► Gypsy Moth ► Hemlock Wooly Adelgid ► Asian Longhorned Beetle ► Emerald Ash Borer ► Sudden Oak Death Syndrome (SODS)

38 Competitive Plants ► ► Ferns   Hayscented   New York   Bracken ► ► Mountain Laurel ► ► Stripped Maple ► ► Beech Brush ► ► Grapevines

39 Forest Benefits ► ► Management and use   Recreation besides hunting (74.4%)   Hunting (74%)   Improve wildlife habitat (69%)   Harvest non-timber forest products (43.6%)

40 Wildlife Is Number One! ► Species of Interest ► Habitat Needs  Cover  Food  Water  Space ► Think Beyond Boundaries

41 Markets ► Competitive / Diverse ► Demand Driven  Bidding  Knowledge ► Known for High Quality ► Species Value Fluctuates ► Private Owners Essential  Limited Experience

42 Financials ► Income Taxes  Capital Gains  Ordinary Income  Expensing ► Land Taxes ► Inheritance Taxes

43 Estate Planning ► ► Transfer of property   Leave to more than one child (55.3%)   Subdivide and/or sell (44.7%)   Establish a trust or conservation easement (34%)

44 Access ► Land Maintenance ► Recreation Access ► Trespass ► Temporary/Permanent Roads ► Use BMPs  Protect Water  Follow Regulations

45 Finding Assistance ► Bureau of Forestry ► Private Natural Resource Consultants ► Forest Industry ► Conservation Districts ► Woodland Owner Assoc.  Pa. Forestry Assoc.  County groups ► Penn State Extension

46 What We’ve Covered ► A bit of PA Forest History ► PA’s Forest Owners ► Issues  Harvesting  Regeneration  Challenges  Looking Forward ► Finding Assistance

47 Contact Information: Jim Finley Penn State University School of Forest Resources 302 Forest Resources Building University Park, PA 16802 Phone: 814 863 0402 Email: jfinley@psu.edu Web Resources: RNRext.cas.psu.edu

48 Publication Links ► Forest Stewardship Bulletin 2: Sources of Information and Guidance for Forest Stewards http://pubs.cas.psu.edu/FreePubs/pdfs/uh076.pdf ► Forest Stewardship Bulletin 6: Planning Your Forest’s Future http://pubs.cas.psu.edu/FreePubs/pdfs/uh079.pdf ► Best Management Practices http://pubs.cas.psu.edu/FreePubs/pdfs/uh090.pdf ► Timber Market Report http://www.sfr.psu.edu/TMR/TMR.htm


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