Stand thickness of dominant tree species in the State Forests divided into stand age classes over the years 2009-2013
Description
The dataset contains data illustrating changes in the distribution of dominant tree species in the State Forests divided into stand age classes over the years 2009-2013. Dominant species can be defined as the species in the stand with the largest share in terms of area, thickness or number. Stand thickness means the gross thickness of the timber, i.e. the thickness of trunks and branches with a thickness of at least 7 cm at the thinner end when measured with bark.
It should be noted that this only concerns forests managed by the State Forests National Forest Holding. the span of the age class is 20 years (e.g. age class I – tree stands up to 20 years old, class II – 21 – 40 years, class III – 41 – 60 years, etc.). The average age is determined as a weighted average, with the area in individual age classes and subclasses taken as the weight. The term forest area refers to the area of forests excluding land related to forest management. The main source of information for the study is the Forest Data Bank (www.bdl.lasy.gov.pl).
The dominant tree species included in the dataset are:
- So - pine
- Św - spruce
- Jd - fir
- Bk - beech
- Db - oak
- Gb - hornbeam
- Brz - birch
- Ol - black alder
- Tp - poplar
- Os - aspen
Dataset file
hexmd5(md5(part1)+md5(part2)+...)-{parts_count}
where a single part of the file is 512 MB in size.Example script for calculation:
https://github.com/antespi/s3md5
File details
- License:
-
open in new tabCC BYAttribution
Details
- Year of publication:
- 2024
- Verification date:
- 2024-10-29
- Dataset language:
- Polish
- Fields of science:
-
- biological sciences (Natural sciences)
- DOI:
- DOI ID 10.34808/pd17-ym50 open in new tab
- Series:
- Verified by:
- Gdańsk University of Technology
Keywords
Cite as
Authors
seen 41 times