Timber Resource Statistics For Western Oregon, 1997 David L. Azuma, Larry F. Bednar, Bruce A. Hiserote, and Charles F. Veneklase Resource Bulletin PNW-RB-237 October 2004 REVISED United States Department of Agriculture Forest Service Pacific Northwest Research Station Authors David L. Azuma is a research forester, Larry F. Bednar was a mathematical statistician, Bruce A. Hiserote is a forester, and Charles F. Veneklase is a computer specialist, Forestry Sciences Laboratory, P.O. Box 3890, Portland, OR 97208-3890. Bednar is now a consultant, Portland, OR. Abstract Azuma, David L.; Bednar, Larry F.; Hiserote, Bruce A.; Veneklase, Charles F. 2004. Timber resource statistics for western Oregon, 1997. Rev. Resour. Bull. PNWRB-237. Portland, OR: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Research Station. 120 p. This report is a summary of timber resource statistics for western Oregon, which includes Benton, Clackamas, Clatsop, Columbia, Coos, Curry, Douglas, Hood River, Jackson, Josephine, Lane, Lincoln, Linn, Marion, Multnomah, Polk, Tillamook, Washington, and Yamhill Counties. Data were collected as part of a statewide multiresource inventory. The inventory sampled all private and public lands except those administered by the National Forest System and the Bureau of Land Management (BLM). The National Forest System and BLM provided data from regional inventories. Area information for parks and other reserves was obtained directly from the organizations managing these areas. Statistical tables provide estimates of land area, timber volume, growth, mortality, and harvest for individual survey units and at the half-state level. Keywords: Forest surveys, forest inventory, statistics (forest), timber resources, resources (forest), western Oregon. Summary Western Oregon has an estimated 19 million acres of land. About 80 percent of this land is forested with 71 percent being timberland. Lands administered by the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, National Forest System (NFS) and U.S. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Land Management (BLM) make up about 48 percent of the timberland. Within the nonfederal timberland area, net volume of growing stock is estimated as 23.5 billion cubic feet. About 58 percent of the volume is administered by forest industry, 20 percent by other public owners, and 21 percent by other private owners. About 82 percent of the total growing stock volume is in coniferous species, with Douglas-fir accounting for 74 percent of the conifer volume. Estimated net annual growth of growing stock for nonfederal lands is 0.77 billion cubic feet, and average annual mortality for this timber is an estimated 0.1 billion cubic feet. Preface Forest Inventory and Analysis (FIA) is a nationwide program of the USDA Forest Service authorized by the Forest and Rangeland Renewable Resources Research Act of 1978. Work units at Forest Service research and experiment stations conduct forest resource inventories throughout the 50 states. The FIA Program of the Pacific Northwest Research Station in Portland, Oregon, is responsible for forest inventories in Alaska, California, Hawaii, Oregon, and Washington. i Contents ix Western Oregon Survey Units and Counties 1 Introduction 1 Highlights 2 Inventory Procedures (Nonfederal Lands) 3 Land and Water Area Updated 3 Change in Ownership Definitions 3 Analysis of Change Between Inventories for Nonfederal Lands 3 Reliability of Inventory Data 4 Terminology 10 Names of Trees List of Tables 11 Acknowledgments 11 Metric Equivalents 11 Literature Cited Table 1—Estimated land area, by county, land class, and administrative status, western Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 2a—Estimated area of nonfederal reserved timberland and other forest land, by forest type, western Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 2b—Estimated area of nonfederal reserved timberland and other forest land, by forest type, northwest Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 2c—Estimated area of nonfederal reserved timberland and other forest land, by forest type, west-central Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 2d—Estimated area of nonfederal reserved timberland and other forest land, by forest type, southwest Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 3—Estimated area of timberland, by county and owner class, western Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 4a—Estimated area of nonfederal timberland, by forest type and owner class, western Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 4b—Estimated area of nonfederal timberland, by forest type and owner class, northwest Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 4c—Estimated area of nonfederal timberland, by forest type and owner class, west-central Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 4d—Estimated area of nonfederal timberland, by forest type and owner class, southwest Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 5a—Estimated area of nonfederal timberland, by owner class, stand-size class, and forest type group, western Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 5b—Estimated area of nonfederal timberland, by owner class, stand-size class, and forest type group, northwest Oregon, January 1, 1997 ii Table 5c—Estimated area of nonfederal timberland, by owner class, stand-size class, and forest type group, west-central Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 5d—Estimated area of nonfederal timberland, by owner class, stand-size class, and forest type group, southwest Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 6a—Estimated area of timberland, by cubic-foot site class and owner class, western Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 6b—Estimated area of timberland, by cubic-foot site class and owner class, northwest Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 6c—Estimated area of timberland, by cubic-foot site class and owner class, west-central Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 6d—Estimated area of timberland, by cubic-foot site class and owner class, southwest Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 7a—Estimated area of nonfederal timberland, by forest type and stand-size class, western Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 7b—Estimated area of nonfederal timberland, by forest type and stand-size class, northwest Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 7c—Estimated area of nonfederal timberland, by forest type and stand-size class, west-central Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 7d—Estimated area of nonfederal timberland, by forest type and stand-size class, southwest Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 8a—Estimated number of growing-stock trees on nonfederal timberland, by species and diameter class, western Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 8b—Estimated number of growing-stock trees on nonfederal timberland, by species and diameter class, northwest Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 8c—Estimated number of growing-stock trees on nonfederal timberland, by species and diameter class, west-central Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 8d—Estimated number of growing-stock trees on nonfederal timberland, by species and diameter class, southwest Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 9a—Estimated net volume of growing stock on nonfederal timberland, by species and diameter class, western Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 9b—Estimated net volume of growing stock on nonfederal timberland, by species and diameter class, northwest Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 9c—Estimated net volume of growing stock on nonfederal timberland, by species and diameter class, west-central Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 9d—Estimated net volume of growing stock on nonfederal timberland, by species and diameter class, southwest Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 10a—Estimated net volume of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by species and diameter class, western Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 10b—Estimated net volume of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by species and diameter class, northwest Oregon, January 1, 1997 iii Table 10c—Estimated net volume of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by species and diameter class, west-central Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 10d—Estimated net volume of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland by, species and diameter class, southwest Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 11a—Estimated net volume of growing stock and sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by class of timber, owner class, and species group, western Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 11b—Estimated net volume of growing stock and sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by class of timber, owner class, and species group, northwestern Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 11c—Estimated net volume of growing stock and sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by class of timber, owner class, and species group, west-central Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 11d—Estimated net volume of growing stock and sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by class of timber, owner class, and species group, southwest Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 12a—Estimated net volume of growing stock on nonfederal timberland, by species and owner class, western Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 12b—Estimated net volume of growing stock on nonfederal timberland, by species and owner class, northwest Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 12c—Estimated net volume of growing stock on nonfederal timberland, by species and owner class, west-central Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 12d—Estimated net volume of growing stock on nonfederal timberland, by species and owner class, southwest Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 13a—Estimated net volume of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by species and owner class, western Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 13b—Estimated net volume of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by species and owner class, northwest Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 13c—Estimated net volume of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by species and owner class, west-central Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 13d—Estimated net volume of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by species and owner class, southwest Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 14a—Estimated net volume of growing stock on nonfederal timberland, by forest type and stand-size class, western Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 14b—Estimated net volume of growing stock on nonfederal timberland, by forest type and stand-size class, northwest Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 14c—Estimated net volume of growing stock on nonfederal timberland, by forest type and stand-size class, west-central Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 14d—Estimated net volume of growing stock on nonfederal timberland, by forest type and stand-size class, southwest Oregon, January 1, 1997 iv Table 15a—Estimated net volume of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by forest type and stand-size class, western Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 15b—Estimated net volume of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by forest type and stand-size class, northwest Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 15c—Estimated net volume of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by forest type and stand-size class, west-central Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 15d—Estimated net volume of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by forest type and stand-size class, southwest Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 16a—Estimated net volume of growing stock on nonfederal timberland, by forest type and owner class, western Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 16b—Estimated net volume of growing stock on nonfederal timberland, by forest type and owner class, northwest Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 16c—Estimated net volume of growing stock on nonfederal timberland, by forest type and owner class, west-central Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 16d—Estimated net volume of growing stock on nonfederal timberland, by forest type and owner class, southwest Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 17a—Estimated net volume of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by forest type and owner class, western Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 17b—Estimated net volume of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by forest type and owner class, northwest Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 17c—Estimated net volume of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by forest type and owner class, west-central Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 17d—Estimated net volume of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by forest type and owner class, southwest Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 18a—Estimated net volume of timber on nonfederal timberland, by class of timber and species group, western Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 18b—Estimated net volume of timber on nonfederal timberland, by class of timber and species group, northwest Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 18c—Estimated net volume of timber on nonfederal timberland, by class of timber and species group, west-central Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 18d—Estimated net volume of timber on nonfederal timberland, by class of timber and species group, southwest Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 19a—Estimated current net annual growth of growing stock on nonfederal timberland, by forest type and owner class, western Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 19b—Estimated current net annual growth of growing stock on nonfederal timberland, by forest type and owner class, northwest Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 19c—Estimated current net annual growth of growing stock on nonfederal timberland, by forest type and owner class, west-central Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 19d—Estimated current net annual growth of growing stock on nonfederal timberland, by forest type and owner class, southwest Oregon, January 1, 1997 v Table 20a—Estimated gross annual growth of growing stock on nonfederal timberland, by owner class and species group, western Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 20b—Estimated gross annual growth of growing stock on nonfederal timberland, by owner class and species group, northwest Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 20c—Estimated gross annual growth of growing stock on nonfederal timberland, by owner class and species group, west-central Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 20d—Estimated gross annual growth of growing stock on nonfederal timberland, by owner class and species group, southwest Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 21a—Estimated current net annual growth of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by forest type and owner class, western Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 21b—Estimated current net annual growth of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by forest type and owner class, northwest Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 21c—Estimated current net annual growth of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by forest type and owner class, west-central Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 21d—Estimated current net annual growth of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by forest type and owner class, southwest Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 22a—Estimated average annual mortality of growing stock on nonfederal timberland, by forest type and owner class, western Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 22b—Estimated average annual mortality of growing stock on nonfederal timberland, by forest type and owner class, northwest Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 22c—Estimated average annual mortality of growing stock on nonfederal timberland, by forest type and owner class, west-central Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 22d—Estimated average annual mortality of growing stock on nonfederal timberland, by forest type and owner class, southwest Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 23a—Estimated average annual mortality of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by forest type and owner class, western Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 23b—Estimated average annual mortality of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by forest type and owner class, northwest Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 23c—Estimated average annual mortality of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by forest type and owner class, west-central Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 23d—Estimated average annual mortality of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by forest type and owner class, southwest Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 24a—Estimated area, net volume of growing stock, and net volume of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by stand age and owner class, western Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 24b—Estimated area, net volume of growing stock, and net volume of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by stand age and owner class, northwest Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 24c—Estimated area, net volume of growing stock, and net volume of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by stand age and owner class, west-central Oregon, January 1, 1997 vi Table 24d—Estimated area, net volume of growing stock, and net volume of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by stand age and owner class, southwest Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 25a—Estimated gross annual growth, average annual mortality, and average annual removals of growing stock on nonfederal timberland, by species and owner class, western Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 25b—Estimated gross annual growth, average annual mortality, and average annual removals of growing stock on nonfederal timberland, by species and owner class, northwest Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 25c—Estimated gross annual growth, average annual mortality, and average annual removals of growing stock on nonfederal timberland, by species and owner class, west-central Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 25d—Estimated gross annual growth, average annual mortality, and average annual removals of growing stock on nonfederal timberland, by species and owner class, southwest Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 26a—Estimated gross annual growth, average annual mortality, and average annual removals of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by species and owner class, western Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 26b—Estimated gross annual growth, average annual mortality, and average annual removals of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by species and owner class, northwest Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 26c—Estimated gross annual growth, average annual mortality, and average annual removals of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by species and owner class, westcentral Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 26d—Estimated gross annual growth, average annual mortality, and average annual removals of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by species and owner class, southwest Oregon, January 1, 1997 Table 27a—Estimated changes in area of nonfederal timberland, by owner class, western Oregon, 1986-87, 1997 Table 27b—Estimated changes in area of nonfederal timberland, by owner class, northwest Oregon, 1986, 1997 Table 27c—Estimated changes in area of nonfederal timberland, by owner class, westcentral Oregon, 1987, 1997 Table 27d—Estimated changes in area of nonfederal timberland, by owner class, southwest Oregon, 1986, 1997 Table 28a—Estimated changes in net volume of growing stock on nonfederal timberland, by species group and owner class, western Oregon, 1986-87, 1997 Table 28b—Estimated changes in net volume of growing stock on nonfederal timberland, by species group and owner class, northwest Oregon, 1986, 1997 Table 28c—Estimated changes in net volume of growing stock on nonfederal timberland, by species group and owner class, west-central Oregon, 1987, 1997 vii Table 28d—Estimated changes in net volume of growing stock on nonfederal timberland, by species group and owner class, southwest Oregon, 1986, 1997 Table 29a—Estimated changes in net volume of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by species group and owner class, western Oregon, 1986-87, 1997 Table 29b—Estimated changes in net volume of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by species group and owner class, northwest Oregon, 1986, 1997 Table 29c—Estimated changes in net volume of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by species group and owner class, west-central Oregon, 1987, 1997 Table 29d—Estimated changes in net volume of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by species group and owner class, southwest Oregon, 1986, 1997 Table 30a—Estimated timber harvest volume by year and owner class, western Oregon, 1997 Table 30b—Estimated timber harvest volume by year and owner class, northwest Oregon, 1997 Table 30c—Estimated timber harvest volume by year and owner class, west-central Oregon, 1997 Table 30d—Estimated timber harvest volume by year and owner class, southwest Oregon, 1997 viii ix Introduction The Forest Inventory and Analysis (FIA) unit of the USDA Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Research Station conducted a multiresource inventory in western Oregon’s forests between 1994 and 1998. This inventory included all lands except those administered by the Forest Service and the U.S. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Land Management (BLM). This report summarizes the timber resource statistics for western Oregon’s forests. Some statistical tables include inventory data provided by the Forest Service and the BLM for area on their lands. Other resources sampled but not included in this report are understory vegetation, crown cover, coarse woody debris, and snags. These data will lead to further analysis of the status of western Oregon’s forests. This FIA unit has been reporting statistics for western Oregon since the 1930s. Hazard and Metcalf (1964, 1965), Metcalf and Hazard (1964), Bassett (1977), Jacobs (1978), Mei (1979), and Gedney and others (1986a, 1986b, 1987) reported inventory statistics in the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s. The current grid system was a systematic sample implemented in the early 1960s; before this grid, a type map system was used for inventory statistics. McKay and others (1998) used an updated 1994 data set to report the latest forest statistics for western Oregon. This report contains statistical tables that provide current estimates of forest land area, change estimates for nonfederal lands, number of trees, timber volume, growth, mortality, and harvest. In several tables, area data supplied to the 1997 Resources Planning Act (RPA) by the National Forest System are incorporated. The national forest statistics include areas that are withdrawn from full production but still meet the FIA definition of timberland. National forest lands are not equally available for timber production because management must consider policies such as the Northwest Forest Plan and riparian reserves in decisionmaking. Highlights About 80 percent of western Oregon’s land is forested with about 71 percent being timberland. Federal agencies—the National Forest System and the Bureau of Land Management—administer about 48 percent of the timberland. Owners classed as forest industry administer about 31 percent of the timberland; nonindustrial and other public owners administer about 13 and 6 percent of timberland, respectively. The production of timber has shifted away from federal lands to state and privately owned lands. In the 1980s, federal lands produced an average of 2.66 billion board feet per year. In the 1990s, that number dropped to 0.79 billion board feet per year, with a 0.19 billion average between 1995 and 1997. Other public and private lands averaged 3.0 billion board feet in the 1980s and decreased 5 percent to 2.85 billion in the 1990s. The 70percent reduction from federal lands does not represent a change in land class, but is evidence of changing availability of land for timber production based on new management decisions. Federal land areas with reduced availability include, but are not limited to, riparian reserves, wildlife reserves, and access-limited areas. The stand size for nonfederal owners in western Oregon tends to be skewed to the small size classes. About 5 percent of the nonfederal lands have an average stand diameter of 21 inches or greater, and 43 percent have an average stand diameter between 5 and 11 inches. Public owners such as state, county, and other federal owners have about 10 percent of their lands with an average diameter of 21 inches or greater. Forest industry and nonindustrial private owners have about 4 percent of their land in the larger diameters. Forty-eight percent of all nonfederal lands have stand diameters between 11 and 21 inches. 1 Nonfederal timberlands in western Oregon show an increase in standing volume from 20.1 to 23.3 billion cubic feet based on plots measured during the previous and present inventories. Growth is 33 percent greater than removals plus mortality for nonfederal lands in western Oregon. The growth greater than removals plus mortality differs by survey unit with the southwest unit having the lowest percentage at 16 percent, followed by the west-central unit at 21 percent, and the northwest unit at 63 percent. A minor net loss of timberland—51,000 of 6.9 million acres—is due to land use change. Most of the losses in timberland came from previous timberland being reclassed as roads. The 189,000-acre loss in timberland to urban, agriculture, and other nonforest uses is offset by the 138,000-acre gain from nonforest and other forest becoming timberland. Reclassification of lands from the previous inventory accounts for an additional 184,000 acres of timberland. Inventory Procedures (Nonfederal Lands) Western Oregon was inventoried by using a double sampling for stratification scheme (Cochran 1977). The sampling is implemented on a permanent systematic grid and produces an even geographic distribution of both secondary (field) and primary (photo) plots across the state. Photo plots are placed at random inside each square of the grid. The primary sample for western Oregon consists of a grid of about 24,000 points established in 1994 by using aerial photographs taken in 1994. Data collected on each point included amount of tree cover by species group, average conifer height, disturbance codes, owner, and stage of development. The secondary sample consisted of 1,478 forest and nonforest field locations established in previous inventories and remeasured or reclassified in the 1994-98 period. This sample represents about a 1-in-16 subsample of the primary sample. The ratio of 1 field to 16 photo plots provides a sufficient number of plots to meet the required sampling precision for estimates of forest area and volume. The national forest and BLM plots were based on a similar grid system with a different plot design (Max and others 1996). The data were collected for these inventories between 1993 and 1996 and are in the 1997 RPA database. In 1984-86 a cluster of five subplots was installed at timberland grid locations. At that time, the subplots sampled a single homogeneous condition, by moving subplots into the condition if necessary. Variable-radius sampling was used to select trees over 5 inches diameter at breast height (d.b.h.), and a smaller fixed-radius plot was used to sample seedlings and saplings. In 1994, the sampling design was modified to remove potential bias inherent in the 1984-86 procedures. The term “condition class” was defined for the modified design to identify different situations that could occur on a plot. A condition class, or “condition,” refers to an area with a distinct land class (timberland, woodland, nonforest, etc.) and vegetative condition (forest type, stand age, etc.). The modified design requires that the field plots maintain fixed locations for all subplots in the cluster. Plots that straddle two or more conditions sample all conditions by establishing each subplot in the designated position and mapping the boundaries around each condition. The information pertinent to each condition is recorded as condition-class attributes. When multiple conditions exist on a plot, all data in one condition are processed together. This can impact the amount of information present to classify stand characteristics such as forest type, stand size, and stand age. On 1,478 field plots in the 1995-97 inventory, 2,754 condition classes were sampled, of which 1,403 were timberland conditions. Roads accounted for most nonforest conditions existing on plots. 2 Land and Water Area Updated The U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census compiles and publishes the acreage of land and water in the United States every 10 years. These area figures, available by state and county, are accepted and used by FIA in Portland, Oregon, as the gross number of acres to be inventoried in each county. The previous inventory was based on 1980 census data, and the current inventory uses 1990 census figures. Raster-scanned topographic maps from the U.S. Department of the Interior, Geological Survey and a geographic information system are now used by the Bureau of the Census to identify water bodies and landforms and to determine the size of much smaller areas than previously possible. As a result, the definition of inland water was changed to reflect the finer resolution. Streams with a minimum width of 200 feet are now recognized, compared to 660 feet in 1980; small water bodies are now at least 4.5 acres, compared to 40 acres in the past. Change in Ownership Definitions Land owned by Native Americans is now classified as “other private.” In the 1986-87 inventory, these lands were defined as “other public.” Forest industry was divided into the two categories of “forest industry with mills” and “forest industry without mills”; both are now classed as “forest industry.” Analysis of Change Between Inventories for Nonfederal Lands To analyze change in forest statistics, the 1986-87 data were recompiled to account for technical changes in the 1995-97 inventory. The summaries presented in tables 27a through 29d have been developed from remeasured plots outside of federal lands and include recompiled data from the 1986-87 inventory. Caution should be used in comparing present statistics and those published by Gedney and others (1986a, 1986b, 1987) because of procedural changes, stratification differences, and plot changes. Comparing estimates from previous to current ones is like comparing independent estimates of the resource at different points in time; although both are valid estimates, they will not be equal. Reliability of Inventory Data Inventories conducted by FIA are designed to provide sampling errors consistent with national standards set by the Forest Service. The target error for total timberland area is 3 percent per million acres and 10 percent per billion cubic feet of growing-stock volume. The sample design for this inventory provides the highest precision when estimates are aggregated for an entire survey unit such as the northwest, west-central, or southwest units in western Oregon. As the sample is divided into smaller units, the confidence intervals increase in relation to the size of the estimate. Confidence intervals are quantitative expressions of the variability inherent in the estimation procedures for area and volume. The tabulation below indicates, for instance, a 68-percent (one standard error) chance that the true timberland area for nonfederal owners in the northwest unit (2,369,000 acres) is within the range of 2,322,000 to 2,416,000 acres. Standard errors for nonfederal timberland area, by owner class and survey unit, are displayed below: Survey unit Other public Northwest West-central Southwest 574±40 98±26 179±32 Forest industry Other private Thousand acres (± standard error) 1,103±50 692±48 1,339±47 431±42 1,736±55 759±48 All owners 2,369±47 1,867±38 2,809±48 3 Standard errors for growing-stock volume on nonfederal timberland area, by owner class and survey unit, are displayed below: Survey unit Other public Northwest West- central Southwest Forest industry Other private All owners Million cubic feet (± standard error) 4,514±355 2,194±218 4,382±307 1,400±174 4,625±301 2,014±185 3,075±279 411±116 900±182 9,783±400 6,194±334 7,538±348 Confidence intervals vary with the size of the estimate and the amount of variance associated with the estimate. The following is a set of approximate confidence intervals calculated by using a regression analysis between actual standard error and the estimate involved. These regressions have r-square values greater than 0.86, indicating that 86 percent of the variance in the relation can be explained by the equation. The actual error estimates for cells in tables can be obtained from the Portland FIA unit. Timberland area Estimate 3,000 2,000 1,500 1,000 800 600 400 200 100 50 25 15 10 5 Terminology Interval Thousand acres ±126 ±89 ±66 ±54 ±48 ±42 ±34 ±25 ±18 ±13 ±10 ±8 ±6 ±5 Growing-stock volume Percent 4 4 4 5 6 7 8 12 18 26 40 53 60 99 Estimate 6,000 4,000 2,000 1,000 800 600 400 200 100 50 25 Interval Percent Million cubic feet ±240 ±173 ±143 ±104 ±94 ±83 ±70 ±52 ±40 ±31 ±25 4 4 7 10 12 14 18 26 40 62 99 Available other forest land—Forest land incapable of growing 20 cubic feet per acre per year (mean annual increment at culmination in fully stocked, natural stands) of industrial wood because of adverse conditions such as sterile soils, dry climate, poor drainage, subalpine sites, steepness, or rockiness. Bureau of Land Management land—Land administered by the U.S. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Land Management. Class of timber—A classification of trees as growing stock, cull, and salvable dead. Growing-stock trees are divided into poletimber and sawtimber trees. Condition class—A mapped area on a plot with a distinct land class (for example, timberland, oak woodland, nonforest) or a distinct vegetative condition (for example, forest type, stand size). The first condition identified at plot center is the only condition that is remeasured and used for the analysis of periodic change. County and municipal lands—Lands owned by county and other local public agencies. 4 Cull trees—Live trees of noncommercial species and live trees of commercial species that are more than 75-percent defective. Noncommercial species are apple, black locust, holly, junipers, Pacific yew, Pacific dogwood, white alder, and willow. Cull trees are not growing-stock trees. Cull trees, rotten—Cull trees with defect caused primarily by rot. Cull trees, sound—Trees of noncommercial species or cull trees of commercial species with defect caused primarily by poor form and roughness. Diameter class—A classification of trees based on diameter outside the bark measured at breast height, 4½ feet above the ground. The common abbreviation for diameter at breast height is d.b.h. Trees are grouped into 2-inch classes up to 21 inches d.b.h., after which the class intervals become broader. Even-aged stands—Stands where 70 percent or more of the tree stocking falls within three adjacent 10-year age classes. Farmer-owned lands—Lands owned by the operators of farms. Forest industry lands—Lands owned by companies that grow timber for industrial use. Includes companies both with and without wood processing plants. Forest land—Land at least 10 percent stocked with live trees, or land that had this minimum tree stocking in the past and is not currently developed for nonforest use. The minimum area recognized is 1 acre; it must be 115 feet wide. Forest types—Stands are assigned a pure softwood, pure hardwood, softwood-hardwood mix, or hardwood-softwood forest type. Stands with 70 percent or more of the stocking in live softwood trees are classified as pure softwood types and are assigned the type name of the softwood species with the greatest stocking among all softwoods on the condition class plot. Stands with 70 percent or more of the stocking in live hardwood trees are classified as pure hardwood types and are assigned the type name of the hardwood species with the greatest stocking among all hardwoods on the condition class plot. Mixed species types are assigned if softwood stocking is 31 to 69 percent total stocking on the plot; stands with 50 to 69 percent of the stocking in live softwood trees are classed as softwood-hardwood types and receive a type name that includes the softwood species with the greatest softwood stocking, followed by the hardwood species with the greatest hardwood stocking; stands with 51 to 69 percent of the stocking in live hardwood trees are classed as hardwood-softwood types and receive a type name that includes the hardwood species with the greatest hardwood stocking, followed by the softwood species with the greatest softwood stocking. For ease in reporting, the secondary forest type will be identified after a slash as “softwood” or “hardwood” in the summary tables Growing-stock trees—All live trees growing on timberland except cull trees (see “cull trees”). Growing-stock volume—Net volume in cubic feet of live sawtimber and poletimber growing-stock trees from the top of a stump 12 inches tall to a minimum 4-inch top (of central stem) inside the bark. Net volume is gross volume less deductions for rot and missing bole sections. 5 Growth, current net annual, growing stock—The increase in growing-stock volume on timberland during the last year of the period between the previous and current inventories. Components of current net annual growth for growing-stock volume include (a) the increment in net volume of poletimber and sawtimber growing-stock trees alive at the beginning of the year and surviving to year end; plus (b) ingrowth, the net volume of growing-stock trees reaching poletimber or sawtimber size during the year; minus (c) mortality, the net volume of poletimber and sawtimber growing-stock trees that died during the year. Growth, current net annual, sawtimber—The increase in sawtimber volume on timberland during the last year of the period between the previous and current inventories. Components of current net annual growth for sawtimber volume include (a) the increment in net volume of sawtimber trees alive at the beginning of the year and surviving to year end; plus (b) ingrowth, the net volume of trees reaching sawtimber size during the year; minus (c) mortality, the net volume of sawtimber trees that died during the year. Growth, periodic gross, growing stock—The increase in growing-stock volume between the previous and current inventories that is attributable to increasing tree size. Periodic gross growth includes (a) the increment in net volume of poletimber and sawtimber growing-stock trees alive at both the previous and current inventories; (b) the increment in net volume of poletimber and sawtimber growing-stock trees alive at the previous inventory and harvested between inventories; and (c) ingrowth, the net volume of growing-stock trees reaching poletimber or sawtimber size between inventories. Growth, periodic gross, sawtimber—The increase in sawtimber volume between the previous and current inventories that is attributable to increasing tree size. Periodic gross growth includes (a) the increment in net volume of sawtimber trees alive at both the previous and current inventories; (b) the increment in net volume of sawtimber trees alive at the previous inventory and harvested between inventories; and (c) ingrowth, the net volume of trees reaching sawtimber size between inventories. Hardwoods—Nonconiferous trees, usually broad-leaved. See “Names of Trees” for a list of hardwood species in this report. Industrial wood—All commercial roundwood products except fuelwood. Roundwood includes logs or bolts that are in straight sections at least 8 feet long for hardwoods and 12 feet long for softwoods. Land area—Area reported as land by the Bureau of the Census (U.S. Department of Commerce 1990). Total land area includes dry land and land temporarily or partially covered by water, such as marshes, swamps, and river flood plains; streams, sloughs, and canals less than 200 feet wide; and lakes, reservoirs, and ponds less than 4.5 acres in area. Land class—A classification of land by major use. The minimum area for classification is 1 acre. Mean annual increment (MAI) at culmination—A measure of the productivity of forest land expressed as the average increase in cubic-foot volume per acre per year. For a given species and site index, the mean is based on the age at which the mean annual increment culminates for fully stocked natural stands. The MAI is calculated from equations and is based on the site index of the plot. 6 Mortality, average annual, growing stock—The annual net volume of poletimber and sawtimber growing-stock trees that died between the previous and current inventories. Mortality, average annual, sawtimber—The annual net volume of sawtimber trees that died between the previous and current inventories. National forest lands—Federal lands that have been designated by Executive Order or statute as national forest or purchase units and other lands under the administration of the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, including experimental areas and Bankhead-Jones Title III lands. Native American lands—Tribal and allotted lands held in trust by the federal government. Native American lands are grouped with farmer and miscellaneous private lands as other private lands. Net volume—Gross volume less deductions for sound and rotten defects. Growingstock net volume is gross cubic-foot volume less deductions for rot and missing bole sections on poletimber and sawtimber growing-stock trees. Sawtimber net volume is gross board-foot volume less deductions for rot, sweep, crook, missing bole sections, and other defects that affect the use of sawtimber trees for lumber. Noncommercial species—A tree species not suitable for industrial wood products: apple, black locust, holly, junipers, Pacific yew, Pacific dogwood, white alder, and willow. Noncommercial species will not be included in growing-stock volume tables; however, if one or more of these species dominate on a plot, the forest type might be classified as a noncommercial species. Nonforest land—Land that has never supported forests or formerly was forested and currently is developed for nonforest uses. Included are lands used for agricultural crops, Christmas tree farms, cottonwood plantations, improved pasture, residential areas, city parks, constructed roads, operating railroads and their right-of-way clearings, powerline and pipeline clearings, streams more than 30 feet wide, and 1- to 40acre areas of water classified by the U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census, as land. If intermingled in forest areas, unimproved roads and other nonforest strips must be more than 120 feet wide, and clearings or other areas must be 1 acre or larger to qualify as nonforest land. Nonstocked areas—Timberland less than 10 percent stocked with live trees. Recent clearcuts scheduled for planting are classified as nonstocked area. Other private lands—Private lands not owned by forest industry. Native American lands, farmer-owned lands, and miscellaneous private lands are included. Other public lands—Lands administered by public agencies other than the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service and U.S. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Land Management. Other public lands do not include Native American lands, which are included with other private lands. Poletimber stands—Stands with a quadratic mean diameter (mean diameter weighted by basal area) from 5.0 to 9.0 inches at breast height if a softwood stand and from 5.0 to 11.0 inches at breast height if a hardwood stand. Poletimber trees—Live growing-stock trees of commercial species that are 5.0 inches in d.b.h. or larger but smaller than sawtimber trees. 7 Reserved other forest—Forest land incapable of growing 20 cubic feet per acre per year (mean annual increment at culmination in fully stocked, natural stands) of industrial wood that has been dedicated to noncommodity use through statute, ordinance, or administrative order. Reserved timberland—Forest land capable of growing 20 cubic feet or more per acre per year (mean annual increment at culmination in fully stocked, natural stands) of industrial wood that has been dedicated to noncommodity use through statute, ordinance, or administrative order. Roundwood—Logs, bolts, or other round sections cut from trees. Sapling and seedling stands—Stands with a quadratic mean diameter (mean diameter weighted by basal area) less than 5.0 inches at breast height. Sapling and seedling trees—Live trees of commercial species that are less than 5.0 inches d.b.h. and have no diseases, defects, or deformities likely to prevent their becoming poletimber trees. Saw-log portion—The bole of sawtimber trees between the stump and the saw-log top. Saw-log top is 7.0 inches in diameter outside bark on softwoods and 9.0 inches in diameter outside bark on hardwoods. Sawtimber stands—Stands with a quadratic mean diameter (mean diameter weighted by basal area) larger than 9.0 inches at breast height if a softwood stand and larger than 11.0 inches at breast height if a hardwood stand. Small sawtimber stands are sawtimber stands with a mean diameter (weighted by basal area) less than 21.0 inches at breast height. Large sawtimber stands are sawtimber stands that have a mean diameter 21.0 inches or larger at breast height. Sawtimber trees—Live softwood trees of commercial species at least 9.0 inches d.b.h. and live hardwood trees of commercial species at least 11.0 inches d.b.h. At least 25 percent of the board-foot volume in a sawtimber tree must be free from defect. Softwood trees must contain at least one 12-foot saw log with a top diameter of not less than 7 inches outside bark; hardwood trees must contain at least one 8-foot saw log with a top diameter of not less than 9 inches outside bark. Sawtimber volume—Net volume of sawtimber trees measured in board feet. Softwood volume is estimated from the top of a stump 12 inches tall up to a minimum 6-inch top diameter, inside bark, and hardwood volume is estimated from the top of a stump 12 inches tall up to a minimum 8-inch top diameter, inside bark. Net sawtimber volume equals gross volume less deduction for rot, sweep, crook, and other defects that affect use for lumber. 8 Scribner rule—The common board-foot log rule used locally in western Oregon to determine sawtimber volume. Scribner volume is estimated in terms of 32-foot logs for softwoods and 16-foot logs for hardwoods. See “sawtimber volume” for utilization limits. Site class—A classification of the potential productivity of forest land expressed as mean annual increment (MAI) at culmination in fully stocked natural stands. Six classes in this report are based on a range of MAI values that were calculated on every plot. Site index—A measure of the productivity of forest land expressed as the average height of dominant and codominant trees at a specified age. Softwoods—Coniferous trees, usually evergreen, with needles or scalelike leaves. See “Names of Trees” for a list of softwood species in this report. Stand age—The 10-year age class that best characterizes the stand. See “even-aged stand” and “uneven-aged stand” for more details. Stand-size class—A classification of stands based on tree size. Stand-size classes are sawtimber, poletimber, and sapling-seedling stands. State lands—Lands owned by states or administered by state agencies. Timber harvest—Volume of roundwood removed from forest land for products. Timber harvest statistics reported in tables 30a through 30d were collected by the Oregon Department of Forestry. Timber volume—Includes the net volume in cubic feet of poletimber and sawtimber trees and salvable dead sawtimber trees, and the net volume in cubic feet of cull trees of commercial species. In tables 18a-18d, the volume of cull trees includes the gross volume of noncommercial species. Volume is measured from the top of a stump 12 inches tall to a minimum 4-inch top diameter, inside bark. Timberland—Forest land capable of growing 20 cubic feet or more per acre per year (mean annual increment at culmination in fully stocked, natural stands) of industrial wood and not in a reserved status through removal of the area from timber utilization by statute, ordinance, or administrative order and not in a withdrawn status where it is pending consideration for reserved status. Uneven-aged stands—Stands where less than 70 percent of the tree stocking falls in three adjacent 10-year age classes. Upper stem portion—The bole of sawtimber trees above the saw-log top—7.0 inches diameter outside bark for softwoods and 9.0 inches diameter outside bark for hardwoods—to a minimum top diameter of 4.0 inches inside bark, or to the point where the central stem divides into limbs. 9 Names of Trees Common name Softwoods: Alaska-cedar Brewer spruce Douglas-fir Engelmann spruce Giant sequoia Grand fir Incense-cedar Jeffrey pine Knobcone pine Lodgepole pine Mountain hemlock Noble fir Pacific silver fir Ponderosa pine Port-Orford-cedar Redwood Scotch pine Shasta red fir Sitka spruce Subalpine fir Sugar pine Western hemlock Western juniper Western redcedar Western white pine White fir Whitebark pine Hardwoods: Apple Bigleaf maple Black cottonwood Black locust California black oak California-laurel Canyon live oak Cherry Golden chinkapin Holly Oregon ash Oregon white oak Quaking aspen Pacific madrone Red alder Tanoak White alder Willow 1 10 Nomenclature per Little (1979). Scientific name1 Chamaecyparis nootkatensis (D. Don) Spach Picea brewerana [breweriana] Wats. Pseudotsuga menziesii (Mirb.) Franco Picea engelmannii Parry ex Engelm. Sequoiadendron giganteum (Lindl.) Buchh. Abies grandis (Dougl. ex D. Don) Lindl. Libocedrus decurrens Torr. Pinus jeffreyi Grev. & Balf. Pinus attenuata Lemm. Pinus contorta Dougl. ex Loud. Tsuga mertensiana (Bong.) Carr. Abies procera Rehd. Abies amabilis Dougl. ex Forbes Pinus ponderosa Dougl. ex Laws. Chamaecyparis lawsoniana (A Murr.) Parl. Sequoia sempervirens (D. Don) Endl. Pinus sylvestris L. Abies shastensis (Lemmon) Picea sitchensis (Bong.) Carr. Abies lasiocarpa (Hook.) Nutt. Pinus lambertiana Dougl. Tsuga heterophylla (Raf.) Sarg. Juniperus occidentalis Hook. Thuja plicata Donn ex D. Don Pinus monticola Dougl. ex D. Don Abies concolor (Gord. & Glend.) Lindl. ex Hildebr. Pinus albicaulis Engelm. Malus spp. Mill. Acer macrophyllum Pursh Populus trichocarpa (Torr. & Gray) Robinia pseudoacacia L. Quercus kelloggii Newb. Umbellularia californica (Hook. & Arn.) Nutt. Quercus chrysolepis Liebm. Prunus spp. Chrysolepis chrysophylla (Dougl. ex Hook.) Hjelmqvist Ilex spp. Fraxinus latifolia Benth. Quercus garryana Dougl. ex Hook. Populus tremuloides Michx. Arbutus menziesii Pursh Alnus rubra Bong. Lithocarpus densiflorus (Hook. & Arn.) Rehd. Alnus rhombifolia Nutt. Salix spp. Acknowledgments Many people were involved in the collection of data and the design of the inventory. Thanks go to the data collection staff: Brett Anderson, Christina Anthony, Joy Archuleta, Dale Baer, Jennifer Baker, Del Barge, Adam Blackwood, Steve Bolon, Sarah Butler, Perry Colclasure, Shaun Curtis, Brian Daum, Sebastien DeLion, Peter DelZotto, Paul Dunham, Szilard Farkas, Perttu Finni, Andrei Fiodorov, Jennifer Gomoll, Walter Grabowiecki, Erica Hanson, Kalle Harkonen, Sarah Hedrich, Mike Hogan, Ellie Husk, Jari Jokinen, Dana Katz, Juha Kauppila, Kim Kuhne, J.D. Lloyd, Kitty McCovey, Tom Meade, Cecilia Meyers, Scott Nelson, Dominic Ortiz, Mikko Paivinen, Melissa Patterson, Aimee Porcaro, Bob Rhoads, Tony Rodriguez, Sam Solano, Julie Theil, Chuck Veneklase, Mark Weber, and Len Zeoli. Thanks go to Chuck Bolsinger, Gary Lettman, and Neil McKay who provided valuable reviews. Dale Weyermann provided the maps and Paul Dunham the cover photograph. A special thanks to the many landowners who allowed field crews on their lands to visit plots and measure trees. Metric Equivalents 1 acre = 0.405 hectare 1 acre = 4046.86 square meters 1,000 acres = 404.7 hectares 1,000 cubic feet = 28.3 cubic meters 1 cubic foot per acre = 0.07 cubic meter per hectare 1 foot = 0.3048 meter 1 inch = 2.54 centimeters 1 mile = 1.609 kilometers Literature Cited Bassett, P.M. 1977. Timber resources of southwest Oregon. Resour. Bull. PNW-RB-72. Portland, OR: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Forest and Range Experiment Station. 29 p. Cochran, W.G. 1977. Sampling techniques. 3rd ed. New York: John Wiley & Sons. 413 p. Gedney, D.R.; Bassett, P.M.; Mei, M.A. 1986a. Timber resource statistics for nonfederal forest land in southwest Oregon. Resour. Bull. PNW-138. Portland, OR: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Research Station. 26 p. Gedney, D.R.; Bassett, P.M.; Mei, M.A. 1986b. Timber resource statistics for nonfederal forest land in northwest Oregon. Resour. Bull. PNW-RB-140. Portland, OR: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Research Station. 26 p. Gedney, D.R.; Bassett, P.M.; Mei, M.A. 1987. Timber resource statistics for nonfederal forest land in west-central Oregon. Resour. Bull. PNW-RB-143. Portland, OR: U.S. De-partment of Agriculture, Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Research Station. 26 p. Hazard, J.W.; Metcalf, M.E. 1964. Forest statistics for southwest Oregon. Resour. Bull. PNW-8. Portland, OR: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Forest and Range Experiment Station. 32 p. 11 Hazard, J.W.; Metcalf, M.E. 1965. Forest statistics for west-central Oregon. Resour. Bull. PNW-10. Portland, OR: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Forest and Range Experiment Station. 35 p. Jacobs, D.M. 1978. Timber resources of west-central Oregon. Resour. Bull. PNW-76. Portland, OR: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Forest and Range Experiment Station. 30 p. Little, E.L., Jr. 1979. Checklist of United States trees (native and naturalized). Agric. Handb. 541. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service. 375 p. Max, T.A.; Schreuder, H.T.; Hazard, J.W. [and others]. 1996. The Pacific Northwest Region vegetation and inventory monitoring system. Res. Pap. PNW-RP-493. Portland, OR: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Research Station. 22 p. McKay, N.; Bolsinger, C.L.; Lettman, G.J. [and others]. 1998. Timber resource trends on nonfederal timberland in western Oregon between 1984-86 and 1994. Salem, OR: Oregon Department of Forestry. 126 p. Mei, M.A. 1979. Timber resources of northwest Oregon. Resour. Bull. PNW-82. Portland, OR: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Forest and Range Experiment Station. 29 p. Metcalf, M.E.; Hazard, J.W. 1964. Forest statistics for northwest Oregon. Resour. Bull. PNW-7. Portland, OR: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Forest and Range Experiment Station. 38 p. U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census. 1990. 1990 census of population. Vol. 1: characteristics of the population. Part 1: United States summary. Washington, DC: [Pages unknown]. 12 Table 1—Estimated land area by county, land class, and administrative status, western Oregon, January 1, 1997a b Forest land County Timberland Reserved timberland Available other forest Reserved other forest Total forest Nonforest All landc Thousand acres Northwest: Clackamas Clatsop Columbia Hood River Marion Multnomah Polk Tillamook Washington Yamhill Total West central: Benton Lane Lincoln Linn Total Southwest: Coos Curry Douglas Jackson Josephine Total Total 778 460 310 186 308 104 262 617 244 212 87 — — — 68 24 — 8 — — 28 28 27 15 18 — 4 11 8 23 — 4 — — 13 12 — — 7 6 893 492 337 201 407 140 266 636 259 241 303 37 83 133 351 139 208 69 204 217 1,196 529 420 334 758 279 474 705 463 458 3,481 187 162 42 3,872 1,744 5,616 318 2,165 547 918 1 241 6 66 3 45 16 39 — 6 — — 322 2,457 569 1,023 111 464 66 443 433 2,921 635 1,466 3,948 314 103 6 4,371 1,084 5,455 842 763 2,516 1,158 803 15 185 96 64 64 21 9 146 264 59 1 19 7 15 11 879 976 2,765 1,501 937 145 66 459 282 112 1,024 1,042 3,224 1,783 1,049 6,082 424 499 53 7,058 1,064 8,122 13,511 925 764 101 15,301 3,892 19,193 — = less than 500 acres. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Includes data for the national forests and BLM from their regional surveys, submitted to 1997 RPA. c Source: U.S. Department of Commerce 1990. 13 Table 2a—Estimated area of nonfederal reserved timberland and other forest land by forest type, western Oregon, January 1, 1997a Other forest Forest type Reserved timberland Available Reserved Total Thousand acres Softwood types: Douglas-fir Grand fir Incense-cedar Lodgepole pine Pacific silver fir Scotch pine Sitka spruce Western hemlock Western juniper 7 — — — — — 7 — — 186 11 9 31 8 2 — 4 4 16 7 — 5 — — 7 — — 209 18 9 36 8 2 14 4 4 14 255 35 304 — — — — — — — — — — 9 8 24 7 193 46 11 7 5 13 16 6 — — 5 — 3 — — — 25 13 24 7 198 46 14 7 5 13 — 322 29 352 Nonstockedb — 34 — 34 All types 14 611 64 690 Total Hardwood types: Bigleaf maple Black cottonwood California black oak Oregon ash Oregon white oak Pacific madrone Red alder Tanoak White alder Willow Total — = less than 500 acres found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Nonstocked areas are less than 10 percent stocked with live trees. 14 Table 2b—Estimated area of nonfederal reserved timberland and other forest land by forest type, northwest Oregon, January 1, 1997a Other forest Forest type Reserved timberland Available Reserved Total Thousand acres Softwood types: Douglas-fir Grand fir Lodgepole pine Sitka spruce Western hemlock — — — — — 53 — 16 — 4 9 7 — — — 62 7 16 — 4 — 73 16 89 — — — — — — — 6 4 30 11 13 16 6 — — 3 — 16 12 4 30 14 13 — 63 24 88 Nonstockedb — 10 — 10 All types — 146 40 187 Total Hardwood types: Bigleaf maple Black cottonwood Oregon ash Oregon white oak Red alder Willow Total — = less than 500 acres found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Nonstocked areas are less than 10 percent stocked with live trees. 15 Table 2c—Estimated area of nonfederal reserved timberland and other forest land by forest type, west-central Oregon, January 1, 1997a Other forest Forest type Reserved timberland Available Reserved Total Thousand acres Softwood types: Douglas-fir Lodgepole pine Pacific silver fir Scotch pine Western hemlock — — — — — 55 6 8 2 5 6 — — — — 61 6 8 2 5 — 76 6 82 — — — — 2 5 10 1 — — — — 2 5 10 1 — 18 — 18 Nonstockedb — 12 — 12 All types — 106 6 112 Total Hardwood types: Black cottonwood Golden chinkapin Oregon white oak Pacific madrone Total — = less than 500 acres found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Nonstocked areas are less than 10 percent stocked with live trees. 16 Table 2d—Estimated area of nonfederal reserved timberland and other forest land by forest type, southwest Oregon, January 1, 1997a Other forest Forest type Reserved timberland Available Reserved Total Thousand acres Softwood types: Douglas-fir Grand fir Incense-cedar Lodgepole pine Port-Orford-cedar Sitka spruce Western juniper 7 — — — 2 7 — 77 11 9 9 — — 4 — — — 5 — 7 — 84 11 9 14 2 14 4 15 110 12 137 — — — — — — — 9 24 3 153 45 7 5 — — — 5 — — — 9 24 3 158 45 7 5 — 246 5 251 Nonstockedb — 12 — 12 All types 15 368 16 400 Total Hardwood types: Bigleaf maple California black oak Oregon ash Oregon white oak Pacific madrone Tanoak White alder Total — = less than 500 acres found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Nonstocked areas are less than 10 percent stocked with live trees. 17 18 4,614 2,098 69 418 902 392 317 1,646 18 1,095 166 367 870 438 — — 121 147 50 1 87 — 26 2,056 1,409 154 53 595 324 283 436 66 267 20 83 211 51 — 11 — 21 4 40 40 12 32 National Bureau of forest Land Management 11 5 — — — 5 — 5 — 5 — — 1 — — 1 — — — — — — — Miscellaneous federal 748 116 63 — 42 11 — 102 28 45 22 7 530 6 112 — — 30 — — 302 80 — State Total public 104 62 9 — 7 11 35 — — — — — 42 6 6 — 19 — — — 11 — — 7,533 3,690 295 471 1,546 743 635 2,189 112 1,412 208 457 1,654 501 118 12 140 198 54 41 440 92 58 Thousand acres County — = less than 500 acres. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Data for the national forests and BLM is from their regional surveys, submitted to 1997 RPA. Total Total Southwest Oregon: Coos Curry Douglas Jackson Josephine Total West-central Oregon: Benton Lane Lincoln Linn Total Northwest Oregon: Clackamas Clatsop Columbia Hood River Marion Multnomah Polk Tillamook Washington Yamhill County Public 4,177 1,736 403 217 748 308 61 1,339 159 557 266 357 1,102 130 258 214 31 48 15 142 134 44 86 Forest industry 18 — — — — — — 18 — — 18 — — — — — — — — — — — — Native American 1,864 759 144 75 322 111 107 413 46 207 56 103 692 156 45 83 14 62 34 79 44 108 68 6,060 2,496 547 292 1,070 419 168 1,769 205 764 340 460 1,795 286 303 297 45 110 49 221 178 152 154 13,593 6,186 842 763 2,616 1,162 803 3,958 317 2,176 548 917 3,449 787 421 309 185 308 103 262 618 244 212 Miscellaneous Total All private private o w n e r s Private Table 3—Estimated area of timberland by county and owner class, western Oregon, January 1, 1997a b Table 4a—Estimated area of nonfederal timberland, by forest type and owner class, western Oregon, January 1, 1997a Forest type Other public Forest industry Other private All owners Thousand acres Softwood types: Douglas-fir Grand fir Incense-cedar Jeffrey pine Noble fir Pacific silver fir Ponderosa pine Port-Orford-cedar Redwood Sitka spruce Western hemlock Western redcedar White fir 573 — — — 6 — — — — 13 46 3 — 2,792 39 41 — 18 8 3 8 2 56 360 24 55 947 23 39 2 — — 17 11 — 40 31 28 2 4,313 63 79 2 24 8 20 19 2 109 437 55 58 642 3,407 1,141 5,190 — 12 — — — — 1 — 5 35 150 — — 2 50 6 6 19 41 — 6 54 77 309 105 2 2 96 7 33 — — 3 19 93 116 264 19 12 4 157 13 39 19 41 5 25 152 227 723 124 13 Total hardwood types 203 678 663 1,544 6 — 37 57 58 18 101 75 850 4,179 1,880 6,909 Total softwood types Hardwood types: Apple Bigleaf maple Black cottonwood California black oak California-laurel Canyon live oak Cherry Oregon ash Oregon white oak Pacific madrone Red alder Tanoak Willow Nonstockedb Not classifiedc All types — = less than 500 acres found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Nonstocked areas are less than 10 percent stocked with live trees. c Unclassified areas include access-denied areas that were harvested since the last inventory. 19 Table 4b—Estimated area of nonfederal timberland, by forest type and owner class, northwest Oregon, January 1, 1997a Forest type Other public Forest industry Other private All owners Thousand acres Softwood types: Douglas-fir Grand fir Incense-cedar Noble fir Pacific silver fir Sitka spruce Western hemlock Western redcedar 379 — — 6 — 13 46 3 665 — — 10 8 32 227 14 343 5 2 — — 10 15 18 1,387 5 2 16 8 55 288 36 448 956 394 1,798 — 12 — 1 — — 107 — 10 6 — — — 70 2 68 7 3 6 49 139 2 90 13 5 6 49 317 Total hardwood types 121 87 274 481 5 — 15 45 22 2 42 47 574 1,104 691 2,368 Total softwood types Hardwood types: Apple Bigleaf maple Black cottonwood Cherry Oregon ash Oregon white oak Red alder Nonstockedb Unclassifiedc Total all types — = less than 500 acres found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Nonstocked areas are less than 10 percent stocked with live trees. c Unclassified areas include access-denied areas that were harvested since the last inventory. 20 Table 4c—Estimated area of nonfederal timberland, by forest type and owner class, west-central Oregon, January 1, 1997a Forest type Other public Forest industry Other private All owners Thousand acres Softwood types: Douglas-fir Grand fir Incense-cedar Noble fir Ponderosa pine Sitka spruce Western hemlock Western redcedar 68 — — — — — — — 1,007 19 2 8 — 18 107 1 227 7 — — 1 20 14 3 1,302 26 2 8 1 38 121 4 68 1,162 272 1,502 — — — 5 8 16 21 — 1 34 — 96 23 5 13 14 5 53 44 5 14 53 13 165 29 152 113 294 Nonstockedb Not classifiedc — — 14 12 29 16 43 28 All types 97 1,339 430 1,867 Total softwood types Hardwood types: Bigleaf maple California black oak Oregon ash Oregon white oak Pacific madrone Red alder Total hardwood types — = less than 500 acres found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Nonstocked areas are less than 10 percent stocked with live trees. c Unclassified areas include access-denied areas that were harvested since the last inventory. 21 Table 4d—Estimated area of nonfederal timberland, by forest type and owner class, southwest Oregon, January 1, 1997a Forest type Other public Forest industry Other private All owners Thousand acres Softwood types: Douglas-fir Grand fir Incense-cedar Jeffrey pine Ponderosa pine Port-Orford-cedar Redwood Sitka spruce Western hemlock Western redcedar White fir Total softwood types Hardwood types: Apple Bigleaf maple California black oak California-laurel Canyon live oak Oregon ash Oregon white oak Pacific madrone Red alder Tanoak Willow Total hardwood types Nonstockedb All types 125 — — — — — — — — — — 1,121 20 38 — 3 8 2 6 26 9 55 377 11 37 2 16 11 — 10 2 6 2 1,623 31 75 2 19 19 2 17 28 15 58 125 1,289 476 1,890 — — — — — — — 27 26 — — 2 19 6 19 41 5 20 77 143 105 2 — 5 28 0 — — 30 110 72 19 12 2 23 34 19 41 5 50 214 241 124 13 53 439 276 768 — 8 7 15 179 1,736 759 2,809 — = less than 500 acres found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Nonstocked areas are less than 10 percent stocked with live trees. 22 Table 5a—Estimated area of nonfederal timberland, by owner class, stand-size class, and forest type group, western Oregon, January 1, 1997a Stand-size class Other public Forest industry Other private All owners Thousand acres Large sawtimber: Softwood types Hardwood type 75 12 127 3 118 16 320 31 All types 87 130 134 351 Small sawtimber: Softwood types Hardwood types 436 110 1,691 241 619 276 2,746 627 All types 546 1,932 895 3,373 Poletimber: Softwood types Hardwood types 43 45 435 247 108 177 586 469 All types 88 682 285 1,055 88 35 1,155 187 296 193 1,539 415 123 1,342 489 1,954 642 202 6 3,408 678 37 1,141 662 58 5,191 1,542 101 850 4,123 1,861 6,834 Seedlings and saplings: Softwood types Hardwood types All types All stand-size classes: Softwood types Hardwood types Nonstockedb All typesc — = less than 500 acres found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Stand-size class was not determined for nonstocked stands. c Total does not include 75,000 acres of unclassified access-denied lands. 23 Table 5b–Estimated area of nonfederal timberland, by owner class, stand-size class, and forest type group, northwest Oregon, January 1, 1997a Stand-size class Other public Forest industry Other private All owners Thousand acres Large sawtimber: Softwood types Hardwood types 31 8 26 — 71 9 128 17 All types 39 26 80 145 Small sawtimber: Softwood types Hardwood types 337 90 562 58 195 130 1,094 278 All types 427 620 325 1,372 Poletimber: Softwood types Hardwood types 26 22 94 12 16 63 136 97 All types 48 106 79 233 54 — 275 16 111 72 440 88 54 291 183 528 448 120 5 957 86 15 393 274 22 1,798 480 42 573 1,058 689 2,320 Seedlings and saplings: Softwood types Hardwood types All types All stand-size classes: Softwood types Hardwood types Nonstockedb All typesc — = less than 500 acres found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Stand-size class was not determined for nonstocked stands. c Total does not include 47,000 acres of unclassified access-denied lands. 24 Table 5c–Estimated area of nonfederal timberland, by owner class, stand-size class, and forest type group, west-central Oregon, January 1, 1997a Stand-size class Other public Forest industry Other private All owners Thousand acres Large sawtimber: Softwood types Hardwood types 6 — 57 — 32 7 95 7 All types 6 57 39 102 Small sawtimber: Softwood types Hardwood types 35 — 557 58 143 57 735 115 All types 35 615 200 850 Poletimber: Softwood types Hardwood types 12 14 143 62 25 11 180 87 All types 26 205 36 267 16 15 406 32 71 37 493 84 31 438 108 577 69 29 — 1,163 152 14 271 112 29 1,503 293 43 98 1,329 412 1,839 Seedlings and saplings: Softwood types Hardwood types All types All stand-size classes: Softwood types Hardwood types Nonstockedb All typesc — = less than 500 acres found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Stand-size class was not determined for nonstocked stands. c Total does not include 28,000 acres of unclassified access-denied lands. 25 Table 5d–Estimated area of nonfederal timberland, by owner class, stand-size class, and forest type group, southwest Oregon, January 1, 1997a Stand-size class Other public Forest industry Other private All owners Thousand acres Large sawtimber: Softwood types Hardwood types 38 4 45 3 15 — 98 7 All types 42 48 15 105 Small sawtimber: Softwood types Hardwood types 64 19 573 124 281 89 918 232 All types 83 697 370 1,150 Poletimber: Softwood types Hardwood types 4 9 198 174 66 103 268 286 All types 13 372 169 554 18 20 474 138 113 84 606 242 38 612 197 847 124 52 — 1,290 439 65 475 276 7 1,889 767 72 176 1,794 758 2,728 Seedlings and saplings: Softwood types Hardwood types All types All stand-size classes: Softwood types Hardwood types Nonstockedb All types — = less than 500 acres found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Stand-size class was not determined for nonstocked stands. 26 Table 6a—Estimated area of timberland, by cubic-foot site class and owner class, western Oregon, January 1, 1997a b Site classc Owner >225 165-224 120-164 85-119 50-84 All 20-49 classes Thousand acres National forest BLM Other public Forest industry Other private All owners 51 9 44 310 89 525 240 400 1,628 433 1,355 960 278 1,370 708 1,152 444 76 568 336 1,415 384 53 254 224 115 14 0 47 91 4,612 2,052 851 4,177 1,881 503 3,226 4,671 2,576 2,330 268 13,573 a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. National forest and BLM data are estimated by using the 1977 percentage area by site class applied to the present acreage. c Site class is the mean annual increment cubic-foot growth per acre at culmination in fully stocked natural stands. b Table 6b—Estimated area of timberland, by cubic-foot site class and owner class, northwest Oregon, January 1, 1997a b Site classc Owner >225 165-224 120-164 85-119 50-84 All 20-49 classes Thousand acres National forest BLM Other public Forest industry Other private All owners 18 4 44 202 51 84 23 307 442 159 251 132 166 360 330 194 39 45 95 126 314 12 13 4 22 5 0 0 0 4 867 210 575 1,103 692 319 1,015 1,240 499 365 9 3,447 a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. National forest and BLM data are estimated by using the 1977 percentage area by site class applied to the present acreage. c Site class is the mean annual increment cubic-foot growth per acre at culmination in fully stocked natural stands. b 27 Table 6c—Estimated area of timberland, by cubic-foot site class and owner class, west-central Oregon, January 1, 1997a b Site classc Owner >225 165-224 120-164 85-119 50-84 All 20-49 classes Thousand acres National forest BLM Other public Forest industry Other private All owners 22 2 0 63 18 325 67 39 655 158 587 291 47 459 175 366 50 13 135 50 322 26 0 20 29 22 0 0 8 0 1,644 436 99 1,340 430 105 1,244 1,559 615 397 30 3,949 — less than 500 acres. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b National forest and BLM data are estimated by using the 1977 percentage area by site class applied to the present acreage. c Site class is the mean annual increment cubic-foot growth per acre at culmination in fully stocked natural stands. Table 6d—Estimated area of timberland, by cubic-foot site class and owner class, southwest Oregon, January 1, 1997a b Site classc Owner >225 165-224 120-164 85-119 50-84 All 20-49 classes Thousand acres National forest BLM Other public Forest industry Other private All owners a 11 3 0 46 20 111 149 55 531 117 513 525 66 552 203 594 360 18 338 160 779 355 39 230 172 90 15 0 39 87 2,099 1,407 178 1,736 759 80 963 1,860 1,469 1,574 231 6,178 Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. National forest and BLM data are estimated by using the 1977 percentage area by site class applied to the present acreage. c Site class is the mean annual increment cubic-foot growth per acre at culmination in fully stocked natural stands. b 28 Table 7a—Estimated area of nonfederal timberland, by forest type and stand-size class, western Oregon, January 1, 1997a Forest type Large sawtimber Small sawtimber Poletimber Seedlingsapling All classes Thousand acres Softwood types: Douglas-fir Grand fir Incense-cedar Jeffrey pine Noble fir Pacific silver fir Ponderosa pine Port-Orford-cedar Redwood Sitka spruce Western hemlock Western redcedar White fir Total Hardwood types: Apple Bigleaf maple Black cottonwood California black oak California-laurel Canyon live oak Cherry Oregon ash Oregon white oak Pacific madrone Red alder Tanoak Willow Total Nonstockedb Unclassifiedc All types 237 9 7 2 — — 13 — — 36 1 29 1 2,289 27 22 — 6 — — 16 2 54 277 21 34 478 — 22 — 6 8 8 3 — 4 59 — — 1,308 26 29 — 12 — — — — 16 100 5 22 4,313 63 79 2 24 8 20 19 2 109 437 55 58 321 2,746 585 1,538 5,190 11 6 14 15 — — 4 2 46 12 3 — — 58 — 25 5 13 — 6 66 96 377 32 5 2 47 7 — — 28 1 — 40 85 202 37 2 2 42 — — — — 3 15 44 — 132 52 6 4 157 13 39 19 41 5 25 152 227 723 124 13 31 626 470 415 1,544 — — — — — — — — 101 75 352 3,724 1,055 1,954 6,909 — = less than 500 acres found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Nonstocked areas are less than 10 percent stocked with live trees. c Unclassified lands are areas where access was denied. 29 Table 7b—Estimated area of nonfederal timberland, by forest type and stand-size class, northwest Oregon, January 1, 1997a Forest type Large sawtimber Small sawtimber Poletimber Seedlingsapling All classes Thousand acres Softwood types: Douglas-fir Grand fir Incense-cedar Noble fir Pacific silver fir Sitka spruce Western hemlock Western redcedar Total Hardwood types: Apple Bigleaf maple Black cottonwood Cherry Oregon ash Oregon white oak Red alder Total Nonstockedb Unclassifiedc All types 96 — — — — 2 1 28 854 5 — 6 — 35 191 2 87 — — 6 — 4 40 — 350 — 2 4 8 14 56 5 1,387 5 2 16 8 55 288 36 128 1,093 137 440 1,798 — 7 — — — 2 8 — 46 6 — 6 16 203 2 6 — 1 — 23 65 — 30 7 3 — 9 40 2 90 13 5 6 49 317 17 279 97 88 481 — — — — — — — — 42 47 145 1,372 234 528 2,369 — = less than 500 acres found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Nonstocked areas are less than 10 percent stocked with live trees. c Unclassified lands are areas where access was denied. 30 Table 7c—Estimated area of nonfederal timberland, by forest type and stand-size class, west-central Oregon, January 1, 1997a Forest type Large sawtimber Small sawtimber Poletimber Seedlingsapling All classes Thousand acres Softwood types: Douglas-fir Grand fir Incense-cedar Noble fir Ponderosa pine Sitka spruce Western hemlock Western redcedar Total Hardwood types: Bigleaf maple California black oak Oregon ash Oregon white oak Pacific madrone Red alder Total Nonstockedb Unclassifiedc All types 67 — 2 — — 24 — 1 631 7 — — 1 13 80 3 170 — — — — — 10 — 435 19 — 8 — — 31 — 1,302 26 2 8 1 38 121 4 95 735 180 493 1,502 4 — 4 — — — 4 5 — 26 — 79 27 — — 13 — 47 9 — 10 14 13 39 44 5 14 53 13 165 7 115 87 85 294 — — — — — — — — 43 28 102 850 267 577 1,867 — = less than 500 acres found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Nonstocked areas are less than 10 percent stocked with live trees. c Unclassified lands are areas where access was denied. 31 Table 7d—Estimated area of nonfederal timberland, by forest type and stand-size class, southwest Oregon, January 1, 1997a Forest type Large sawtimber Small sawtimber Poletimber Seedlingsapling All classes Thousand acres Softwood types: Douglas-fir Grand fir Incense-cedar Jeffrey pine Ponderosa pine Port-Orford-cedar Redwood Sitka spruce Western hemlock Western redcedar White fir Total Hardwood types: Apple Bigleaf maple California black oak California-laurel Canyon live oak Oregon ash Oregon white oak Pacific madrone Red alder Tanoak Willow Total Nonstockedb All types 75 9 5 — — — — 9 — — 1 804 15 22 2 12 — 2 6 6 15 34 222 — 22 — — 16 — — 9 — — 523 7 27 — 8 3 — 2 13 — 22 1,623 31 75 2 19 19 2 17 28 15 58 98 918 268 606 1,890 — — — — — — — — 4 3 — — 7 9 15 — — 24 46 95 32 5 — 14 25 5 13 — 5 96 90 37 2 2 2 — — 28 5 21 72 53 52 6 2 23 34 19 41 5 50 214 241 124 13 7 233 286 242 768 — — — — 15 105 1,150 554 848 2,673 — = less than 500 acres found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Nonstocked areas are less than 10 percent stocked with live trees. 32 33 45,551 544 1,075 9,746 8,652 16,871 12,467 25,669 293 4,434 13,209 51,483 90,519 72,005 — 352,517 Hardwood: Bigleaf maple Black cottonwood Black locust California black oak California-laurel Canyon live oak Cherry Golden chinkapin Holly Oregon ash Oregon white oak Pacific madrone Red alder Tanoak White alder Total hardwoods 442,777 154,761 20,489 845 — 6,884 4,740 3,661 4,438 10,236 — 2,270 7,909 21,082 50,218 21,990 — 288,016 191,234 9,401 13,201 — — 289 1,653 931 4,171 5,115 325 5,185 452 45,438 8,102 — 2,521 3.04.9 307,013 98,222 10,550 — 286 5,241 1,653 1,868 2,833 5,553 202 1,811 4,478 14,228 37,275 12,111 134 208,791 33,380 2,983 — 891 144,256 11,435 8,385 — — — 739 348 1,903 1,817 — 2,654 5.06.9 219,417 63,013 8,400 113 — 1,910 1,182 454 913 3,739 110 951 3,864 7,357 28,050 5,970 — 156,404 111,801 4,931 2,983 94 — 97 695 150 495 2,126 148 2,834 115 26,112 2,056 — 1,768 7.08.9 170,789 45,529 5,703 78 61 1,474 1,522 1,107 174 1,955 — 269 2,692 5,868 22,675 1,951 — 125,261 91,969 3,096 3,348 — — 68 830 175 854 642 166 2,334 363 17,839 1,969 — 1,608 9.010.9 116,281 26,262 3,798 60 — 839 329 — 222 758 — 164 2,203 2,392 14,787 710 — 90,019 66,904 1,553 515 — — 257 174 — 390 554 113 2,193 61 14,966 1,263 — 1,076 11.012.9 15.016.9 85,620 17,656 2,249 42 38 537 224 179 114 485 — 193 1,445 1,690 9,831 628 — 67,964 48,444 1,350 1,272 — 43 34 166 33 777 111 96 1,784 110 11,995 1,168 — 582 58,251 10,361 1,776 — — 280 126 — 80 — — 71 1,106 1,142 5,467 313 — 47,890 34,288 1,545 624 — — 56 310 — 383 202 70 1,501 116 7,526 800 — 470 Thousand trees 13.014.9 17.018.9 36,439 6,320 1,313 25 20 297 54 — — 86 — 46 594 626 2,834 425 — 30,119 22,771 775 558 — — 42 285 — 244 164 18 1,138 67 3,298 471 25 264 Diameter class (inches at breast height) — = fewer than 500 trees found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Growing-stock trees are all live trees except cull trees (noncommercial species are classified as sound cull trees) 752,912 400,394 Total softwoods All species 238,486 16,055 25,990 — — 289 5,404 1,475 4,651 8,660 — 6,282 452 68,562 20,279 — 3,810 Softwood: Douglas-fir Grand fir Incense-cedar Jeffrey pine Knobcone pine Lodgepole pine Noble fir Pacific silver fir Ponderosa pine Port-Orford-cedar Redwood Sitka spruce Sugar pine Western hemlock Western redcedar Western white pine White fir Species 1.02.9 24,600 3,708 915 43 — 368 66 — — — — 25 381 211 1,580 119 — 20,892 15,867 583 365 15 — — 67 — 193 99 94 698 91 2,075 639 — 106 19.020.9 35,642 4,756 1,385 69 — 244 78 — — — — 21 614 467 1,625 253 — 30,885 23,473 960 416 11 — — 218 17 269 94 72 1,157 63 2,809 1,174 — 152 21.028.9 8,531 873 306 81 — 75 30 — — — — 17 72 108 147 36 — 7,658 5,520 84 156 — — — 25 — 122 14 5 622 20 372 707 — 12 29.0+ 2,258,272 783,979 102,435 1,900 1,481 27,893 18,658 24,140 21,241 48,482 605 10,273 38,568 106,654 265,006 116,510 134 1,474,294 995,013 51,767 57,813 119 43 1,132 10,566 3,128 14,454 19,596 1,108 28,381 1,910 234,370 41,608 25 13,262 All classes Table 8a—Estimated number of growing-stock trees on nonfederal timberland, by species and diameter class, western Oregon, January 1, 1997a b 34 170,828 67,157 13,394 544 1,075 8,668 738 293 1,184 1,556 — 39,704 — 103,671 45,210 1,320 1,973 738 — 4,528 39,642 10,259 101,108 33,907 6,405 — — 3,318 — — 1,706 624 331 21,523 — 67,200 42,705 380 890 — — 2,481 16,645 4,099 3.04.9 86,696 30,862 4,239 — 286 2,545 — 202 — 2,257 — 21,198 134 55,834 33,003 1,503 522 348 — 950 18,433 1,074 5.06.9 68,437 21,421 4,265 113 — 446 110 511 2,048 — 13,928 — 47,015 27,106 494 695 150 137 1,268 16,018 1,147 7.08.9 59,602 15,736 3,299 78 61 97 — — 203 850 90 11,059 — 43,866 28,964 419 830 175 95 1,587 11,012 786 9.010.9 13.014.9 45,162 10,399 2,002 — — 153 — — 108 828 68 7,241 — 34,763 22,072 211 111 — — 1,400 10,095 873 35,672 8,025 1,157 42 38 114 — — 93 491 — 6,091 — 27,647 17,886 279 166 33 43 1,119 7,551 570 Thousand trees 11.012.9 24,197 4,246 939 — — 47 — — 71 418 — 2,772 — 19,951 13,347 135 229 — — 824 4,901 516 15.016.9 9,736 108 200 — — 899 1,865 288 17.018.9 15,669 2,574 571 — 20 — — — 23 394 — 1,566 — 13,095 Diameter class (inches at breast height) — = fewer than 500 trees found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Growing-stock trees are all live trees except cull trees (noncommercial species are classified as sound cull trees). All species Total hardwoods Hardwood: Bigleaf maple Black cottonwood Black locust Cherry Golden chinkapin Holly Oregon ash Oregon white oak Pacific madrone Red alder White alder Total softwoods Softwood: Douglas-fir Grand fir Noble fir Pacific silver fir Ponderosa pine Sitka spruce Western hemlock Western redcedar Species 1.02.9 10,863 1,779 502 43 — — — — — 232 — 1,002 — 9,084 6,968 111 67 — — 420 1,064 456 19.020.9 15,691 1,852 696 69 — — — — — 275 — 813 — 13,840 10,577 81 151 17 14 442 1,671 887 21.028.9 3,278 308 161 57 — — — — 7 25 — 59 — 2,969 2,026 10 8 — 11 189 192 533 29.0+ Table 8b—Estimated number of growing-stock trees on nonfederal timberland, by species and diameter class, northwest Oregon, January 1, 1997a b 637,203 198,267 37,629 945 1,481 15,388 738 605 3,905 9,996 489 126,957 134 438,936 259,599 5,052 5,844 1,461 299 16,107 129,088 21,487 All classes 35 8,041 — — 1,729 4,204 3,250 4,569 — 33,559 55,349 Hardwood: Bigleaf maple Black cottonwood California black oak Cherry Golden chinkapin Oregon ash Oregon white oak Pacific madrone Red alder Total hardwoods 99,279 25,078 7,085 845 — 1,120 677 564 2,783 — 12,004 74,202 45,557 1,959 309 289 762 931 — 1,247 20,849 2,300 — 3.04.9 64,124 13,854 3,893 — 700 287 119 907 834 1,066 6,048 50,270 35,796 2,111 552 — 217 — — 294 10,423 878 — 5.06.9 56,906 11,159 2,365 — 129 262 984 269 519 272 6,359 45,748 35,424 1,283 100 97 — — — 300 7,868 675 — 7.08.9 45,029 9,650 1,194 — 472 — 1,384 67 983 — 5,549 35,380 27,626 699 160 68 — — 60 293 5,890 583 — 9.010.9 13.014.9 30,445 5,873 1,106 60 70 70 553 56 386 — 3,572 24,572 19,342 316 74 257 63 — — 498 3,733 289 — 19,667 2,647 693 — 42 — 216 36 208 — 1,452 17,020 12,494 405 84 — — — 236 401 3,254 146 — Thousand trees 11.012.9 14,347 2,326 599 — 90 34 — — 182 69 1,353 12,021 8,688 209 — 31 81 — 70 598 2,137 207 — 15.016.9 Diameter class (inches at breast height) — = fewer than 500 trees found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Growing-stock trees are all live trees except cull trees (noncommercial species are classified as sound cull trees). 147,431 92,081 Total softwoods All species 52,224 2,573 1,544 289 3,431 736 — 1,754 22,632 6,898 — Softwood: Douglas-fir Grand fir Incense-cedar Lodgepole pine Noble fir Pacific silver fir Ponderosa pine Sitka spruce Western hemlock Western redcedar Western white pine Species 1.02.9 8,988 1,266 369 25 75 — 57 23 103 — 615 7,722 6,003 85 86 42 85 — 77 95 1,173 53 25 17.018.9 6,512 619 279 — 37 — — 25 62 — 217 5,893 4,657 128 48 — — — — 278 694 88 — 19.020.9 9,830 1,141 378 — 42 — — 10 279 15 417 8,689 6,822 195 41 — 67 — 28 471 904 160 — 21.028.9 2,343 186 57 8 — — — 11 23 — 88 2,157 1,621 9 39 — 16 — 22 298 113 38 — 29.0+ 504,903 129,149 26,058 938 1,657 3,502 8,193 5,216 10,930 1,422 71,232 375,755 256,256 9,971 3,037 1,072 4,722 1,667 492 6,528 79,670 12,313 25 All classes Table 8c—Estimated number of growing-stock trees on nonfederal timberland, by species and diameter class, west-central Oregon, January 1, 1997a b 36 230,011 Total hardwoods 242,390 95,777 7,000 — 6,884 4,740 3,661 — 9,559 — 4,501 20,751 16,691 21,990 146,614 102,971 7,062 12,892 — — — 4,171 5,115 325 1,457 452 7,944 1,703 2,521 3.04.9 156,193 53,506 2,418 — 4,541 1,653 1,868 — 5,434 905 1,387 13,161 10,029 12,111 102,687 75,458 7,821 7,832 — — — 1,903 1,817 — 1,410 — 4,524 1,031 891 5.06.9 94,074 30,433 1,770 — 1,781 1,182 454 204 2,756 171 1,298 7,085 7,763 5,970 63,641 49,270 3,154 2,882 94 — — 358 2,126 148 1,266 115 2,226 234 1,768 7.08.9 66,158 20,143 1,210 — 1,002 1,522 1,107 77 571 — 859 5,778 6,066 1,951 46,015 35,378 1,979 3,188 — — — 699 642 166 454 363 938 600 1,608 9.010.9 13.014.9 40,674 9,990 690 — 769 329 — — 205 — 989 2,324 3,974 710 30,684 25,490 1,026 441 — — — 390 554 113 294 61 1,138 101 1,076 30,280 6,984 399 — 495 224 179 — 269 64 746 1,690 2,288 628 23,296 18,064 666 1,188 — 43 34 498 111 96 264 110 1,190 451 582 Thousand trees 11.012.9 19,707 3,789 237 — 190 126 — — — — 507 1,073 1,342 313 15,918 12,253 1,200 624 — — 25 313 202 70 79 116 488 78 470 15.016.9 2,480 373 — 222 54 — — 30 — 98 626 653 425 9,303 7,033 582 472 — — — 168 164 18 143 67 260 131 264 17.018.9 11,782 Diameter class (inches at breast height) — = fewer than 500 trees found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Growing-stock trees are all live trees except cull trees (noncommercial species are classified as sound cull trees). 434,653 24,116 — 9,746 8,652 16,871 2,070 20,727 — 7,084 51,483 17,256 72,005 Hardwood: Bigleaf maple Black cottonwood California black oak California-laurel Canyon live oak Cherry Golden chinkapin Oregon ash Oregon white oak Pacific madrone Red alder Tanoak All species 204,642 141,052 12,161 24,446 — — — 4,651 8,660 — — 452 6,288 3,121 3,810 Total softwoods Softwood: Douglas-fir Grand fir Incense-cedar Jeffrey pine Knobcone pine Lodgepole pine Ponderosa pine Port-Orford-cedar Redwood Sitka spruce Sugar pine Western hemlock Western redcedar White fir Species 1.02.9 7,225 1,310 135 — 332 66 — — — — 88 211 360 119 5,914 4,242 345 317 15 — — 193 99 94 — 91 317 95 106 19.020.9 10,120 1,763 311 — 201 78 — — — 11 61 452 396 253 8,357 6,074 683 375 11 — — 228 94 72 245 63 234 127 152 21.028.9 2,910 378 87 16 75 30 — — — — 24 108 — 36 2,532 1,873 64 118 — — — 90 14 5 134 20 66 137 12 29.0+ 456,563 38,748 16 26,236 18,658 24,140 2,352 39,550 1,152 17,642 104,742 66,817 116,510 659,603 479,158 36,744 54,776 119 43 59 13,662 19,596 1,108 5,746 1,910 25,612 7,808 13,262 All classes 1,116,166 Table 8d—Estimated number of growing-stock trees on nonfederal timberland, by species and diameter class, southwest Oregon, January 1, 1997a b 37 529 35 — — 15 5 5 4 19 — 8 14 46 117 23 1 290 Total softwoods Hardwood: Bigleaf maple Black cottonwood Black locust California black oak California-laurel Canyon live oak Cherry Golden chinkapin Holly Oregon ash Oregon white oak Pacific madrone Red alder Tanoak White alder Total hardwoods 1,513 426 54 1 — 13 8 3 5 29 — 5 23 52 209 24 — 1,088 762 37 13 — — 1 5 — 3 9 — 16 3 218 13 — 10 7.08.9 2,275 612 73 1 — 18 18 6 2 23 — 4 36 77 341 14 — 1,663 1,215 45 23 — — 6 9 — 8 4 1 29 1 286 26 — 14 9.010.9 2,612 592 88 1 — 16 6 — 4 13 — 4 46 47 359 8 — 2,020 1,492 36 7 — 1 2 3 — 9 7 1 41 4 379 22 — 16 11.012.9 — = less than 500,000 cubic feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Includes growing-stock trees 5.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger. 819 360 23 18 1 — 1 2 — 6 4 — 8 1 99 6 — 2 Softwood: Douglas-fir Grand fir Incense-cedar Jeffrey pine Knobcone pine Lodgepole pine Noble fir Pacific silver fir Ponderosa pine Port-Orford-cedar Redwood Sitka spruce Sugar pine Western hemlock Western redcedar Western white pine White fir All species 5.06.9 Species 15.016.9 2,807 570 71 2 — 17 6 5 2 14 — 6 48 39 348 12 — 2,237 1,580 57 21 — — 3 7 — 18 2 4 52 3 443 32 — 16 2,649 474 83 — — 11 4 — 3 — — 4 53 43 264 8 — 2,175 1,569 69 15 — — 2 15 — 14 5 4 65 2 370 27 1 17 Million cubic feet 13.014.9 2,193 349 75 1 — 17 3 — — 6 — 4 37 28 163 15 — 1,844 1,425 45 15 — — — 15 — 11 6 2 65 4 219 24 — 12 17.018.9 1,936 277 69 5 — 25 4 — — — — 2 23 11 132 6 — 1,659 1,286 45 15 1 — — 6 — 13 4 9 51 5 174 43 — 8 19.020.9 Diameter class (inches at breast height) 4,247 510 172 11 — 22 9 — — — — 3 70 39 162 21 — 3,737 2,929 121 30 — — — 22 — 26 8 10 113 5 346 114 — 12 21.028.9 2,463 232 116 24 — 19 6 — — — — 3 21 14 22 7 — 2,231 1,617 25 25 2 1 15 4 — 31 2 4 222 28 109 184 1 3 29.0+ 23,515 4,332 836 45 — 171 70 19 20 103 — 42 373 395 2,117 139 1 19,183 14,235 505 182 — — — 87 — 138 52 34 662 — 2,641 490 — 110 All classes Table 9a—Estimated net volume of growing-stock on nonfederal timberland, by species and diameter class, western Oregon, January 1, 1997a b 38 154 Total softwoods 248 94 510 153 26 1 — 3 2 11 — 110 — 357 183 6 5 — — 9 146 8 7.08.9 871 230 37 1 — 1 2 10 2 177 — 642 403 7 9 — — 19 192 10 9.010.9 1,080 252 46 — — 3 3 18 1 182 — 828 511 5 2 — — 24 273 13 11.012.9 — = less than 500,000 cubic feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. All species Total hardwoods 14 — — 4 — 6 — 69 1 84 3 1 — — 2 61 2 Softwood: Douglas-fir Grand fir Noble fir Pacific silver fir Ponderosa pine Sitka spruce Western hemlock Western redcedar Hardwood: Bigleaf maple Black cottonwood Black locust Cherry Oregon ash Oregon white oak Pacific madrone Red alder White alder 5.06.9 Species 15.016.9 1,238 277 37 2 — 2 3 15 — 219 — 961 594 14 7 — 1 34 294 17 1,148 201 47 — — 1 4 17 — 133 — 946 614 8 12 — — 37 261 16 Million cubic feet 13.014.9 985 145 35 — — — 1 21 — 88 — 840 622 6 10 — — 52 134 16 17.018.9 Diameter class (inches at breast height) 894 137 39 5 — — — 13 — 81 — 758 581 7 6 — — 31 102 31 19.020.9 1,935 213 95 11 — — — 28 — 78 — 1,722 1,343 10 18 — 1 45 220 86 21.028.9 873 92 55 19 — — 1 6 — 9 — 781 549 3 1 — 1 61 62 104 29.0+ Table 9b—Estimated net volume of growing-stock on nonfederal timberland, by species and diameter class, northwest Oregon, January 1, 1997a b 9,783 1,795 432 39 — 14 16 145 3 1,145 1 7,988 5,483 69 71 — 4 313 1,745 302 All classes 39 135 14 — 3 1 1 5 2 6 17 48 Total softwoods Hardwood: Bigleaf maple Black cottonwood California black oak Cherry Golden chinkapin Oregon ash Oregon white oak Pacific madrone Red alder Total hardwoods 392 75 16 — 1 1 9 2 3 2 39 317 250 7 1 1 — — 1 53 4 — 7.08.9 590 131 20 — 7 — 16 1 14 — 72 459 356 9 2 1 — 1 3 80 7 — 9.010.9 703 140 27 1 1 1 10 2 10 — 88 563 454 7 1 6 1 — 13 76 5 — 11.012.9 — = less than 500,000 cubic feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Includes growing-stock trees 5.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger. 183 99 5 2 — — — 1 25 2 — Softwood: Douglas-fir Grand fir Incense-cedar Lodgepole pine Noble fir Ponderosa pine Sitka spruce Western hemlock Western redcedar Western white pine All species 5.06.9 Species 15.016.9 659 86 21 — 1 — 5 2 8 — 49 573 425 18 2 — — 6 10 108 3 — 682 102 25 — 5 2 — — 12 2 56 580 440 8 — 1 2 2 26 91 8 — Million cubic feet 13.014.9 565 71 20 1 5 — 4 2 9 — 30 494 402 4 3 2 4 3 5 66 3 1 17.018.9 528 48 22 — 4 — — 2 6 — 15 480 394 9 3 — — — 21 49 5 — 19.020.9 Diameter class (inches at breast height) 1,173 125 44 — 5 — — 2 37 3 35 1,047 861 22 5 — 5 2 46 93 14 — 21.028.9 719 55 29 2 — — — 2 10 — 12 664 477 2 7 — 3 6 133 26 10 — 29.0+ Table 9c—Estimated net volume of growing-stock on nonfederal timberland, by species and diameter class, west-central Oregon, January 1, 1997a b 6,194 881 238 5 32 5 45 19 110 13 414 5,313 4,158 91 25 12 16 20 260 668 61 1 All classes 40 240 7 — 12 5 5 — 18 3 5 40 31 23 148 Total softwoods Hardwood: Bigleaf maple Black cottonwood California black oak California-laurel Canyon live oak Cherry Golden chinkapin Oregon ash Oregon white oak Pacific madrone Red alder Tanoak Total hardwoods 612 198 11 — 12 8 3 1 19 1 9 49 60 24 414 329 24 13 1 — — 2 9 — 6 1 18 2 10 7.08.9 814 252 15 — 11 18 6 1 7 — 13 75 92 14 562 456 29 21 — — — 7 4 1 6 3 13 8 14 9.010.9 829 200 15 — 14 6 — — 3 — 19 46 89 8 629 527 24 5 — — — 9 7 1 4 1 30 4 16 11.012.9 — = less than 500,000 cubic feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Includes growing-stock trees 5.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger. 388 177 15 17 — — — 6 4 — 4 — 13 2 2 Softwood: Douglas-fir Grand fir Incense-cedar Jeffrey pine Knobcone pine Lodgepole pine Ponderosa pine Port-Orford-cedar Redwood Sitka spruce Sugar pine Western hemlock Western redcedar White fir All species 5.06.9 Species 910 206 13 — 15 6 5 — 9 2 25 39 81 12 703 561 24 19 — 1 2 11 2 4 8 4 40 12 16 13.014.9 17.018.9 819 171 11 — 6 4 — — — — 25 40 76 8 648 515 53 15 — — 1 12 5 4 2 3 19 3 17 643 133 21 — 12 3 — — 2 — 7 28 44 15 510 402 35 12 — — — 8 6 2 8 2 18 5 12 Million cubic feet 15.016.9 513 92 9 — 21 4 — — — — 5 11 36 6 422 311 29 12 — — — 13 4 9 — 4 24 6 8 19.020.9 Diameter class (inches at breast height) 1,140 172 33 — 17 9 — — — 2 6 36 49 21 968 725 90 25 1 — — 22 8 10 23 5 33 15 12 21.028.9 871 85 31 2 19 6 — — — — 5 14 — 7 786 592 20 18 — — — 24 2 4 27 5 21 70 3 29.0+ Table 9d—Estimated net volume of growing-stock on nonfederal timberland, by species and diameter class, southwest Oregon, January 1, 1997a b 7,538 1,657 166 2 140 70 19 2 58 7 118 379 557 139 5,882 4,594 344 156 2 1 3 114 52 34 88 28 228 127 110 All classes Table 10a—Estimated net volume of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by species and diameter class, western Oregon, January 1, 1997a b Diameter class (inches at breast height) Species 9.010.9 11.012.9 13.014.9 15.016.9 17.018.9 19.020.9 21.028.9 29.0+ All classes Million board feet, Scribner rule Softwood: Douglas-fir Grand fir Incense-cedar Jeffrey pine Knobcone pine Lodgepole pine Noble fir Ponderosa pine Port-Orford-cedar Redwood Sitka spruce Sugar pine Western hemlock Western redcedar Western white pine White fir 3,086 118 33 — — 3 20 15 7 1 71 5 784 63 — 29 4,842 123 14 — — 17 11 23 15 2 123 3 1,287 60 — 44 5,830 231 44 — 2 7 25 53 5 10 179 10 1,709 102 — 53 6,325 293 38 — — 10 61 49 13 11 239 11 1,554 93 — 56 6,136 197 37 — — 9 60 40 18 7 259 5 976 83 6 44 5,787 210 40 1 — — 25 56 14 34 207 18 794 161 — 31 14,124 610 91 7 — — 101 113 28 39 479 21 1,642 456 — 46 8,470 136 91 — — — 19 175 7 23 1,117 26 563 789 — 13 54,599 1,917 389 8 2 46 322 523 107 128 2,673 98 9,310 1,807 6 317 Total softwoods 4,235 6,566 8,260 8,753 7,877 7,377 17,756 11,429 72,253 Hardwood: Bigleaf maple Black cottonwood California black oak California-laurel Canyon live oak Cherry Golden chinkapin Oregon ash Oregon white oak Pacific madrone Red alder Tanoak — — — — — — — — — — — — 366 3 30 15 — 15 39 5 108 133 1,319 23 304 8 31 17 12 8 48 11 115 115 1,527 36 358 — 19 12 — 12 — 7 133 132 1,269 27 275 5 33 9 — — 23 8 90 83 793 51 274 24 57 13 — — — 2 51 21 683 23 688 61 54 31 — — — 8 167 99 830 78 378 139 58 17 — — — 11 50 23 99 31 2,643 240 283 114 12 35 110 51 714 606 6,521 269 Total hardwoods — 2,057 2,232 1,968 1,370 1,148 2,017 807 11,599 4,235 8,623 10,491 10,721 9,248 8,525 19,773 12,236 83,852 All species — = less than 500,000 board feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Includes softwood sawtimber trees 9.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger, and hardwood sawtimber trees 11.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger. 41 Table 10b—Estimated net volume of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by species and diameter class, northwest Oregon, January 1, 1997a b Diameter class (inches at breast height) Species 9.010.9 11.012.9 13.014.9 15.016.9 17.018.9 19.020.9 21.028.9 29.0+ All classes Million board feet, Scribner rule Softwood: Douglas-fir Grand fir Noble fir Ponderosa pine Sitka spruce Western hemlock Western redcedar Total softwoods Hardwood: Bigleaf maple Black cottonwood Cherry Oregon ash Oregon white oak Pacific madrone Red alder Total hardwoods All species 1,052 20 20 — 47 528 24 1,689 17 7 — 68 931 36 2,222 59 25 1 117 1,147 55 2,516 34 51 — 131 1,106 55 2,724 27 40 — 203 607 58 2,661 35 25 — 121 462 122 6,508 43 81 7 188 1,054 349 2,860 15 5 7 305 320 447 22,231 250 254 15 1,179 6,155 1,146 1,690 2,749 3,626 3,892 3,659 3,426 8,229 3,957 31,229 — — — — — — — 192 — 10 3 41 3 667 163 8 8 5 35 — 961 212 — 5 7 40 — 639 128 — — 3 49 — 429 146 24 — — 32 — 419 430 61 — — 66 — 407 203 114 — 5 16 — 42 1,474 207 23 24 278 3 3,564 — 917 1,181 902 608 621 964 381 5,574 1,690 3,666 4,806 4,794 4,267 4,047 9,193 4,338 36,802 — = less than 500,000 board feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Includes softwood sawtimber trees 9.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger, and hardwood sawtimber trees 11.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger. 42 Table 10c—Estimated net volume of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by species and diameter class, west-central Oregon, January 1, 1997a b Diameter class (inches at breast height) Species 9.010.9 11.012.9 13.014.9 15.016.9 17.018.9 19.020.9 21.028.9 29.0+ All classes Million board feet, Scribner rule Softwood: Douglas-fir Grand fir Incense-cedar Lodgepole pine Noble fir Ponderosa pine Sitka spruce Western hemlock Western redcedar Western white pine 899 26 3 3 — 2 7 225 17 — 1,484 24 3 17 4 — 44 252 14 — 1,595 76 5 — — 19 36 416 7 — 1,800 34 — 5 10 8 102 376 30 — 1,739 19 8 9 20 10 19 292 10 6 1,784 40 7 — — — 86 225 17 — 4,178 103 13 — 20 8 187 441 50 — 2,476 9 24 — 14 30 677 133 38 — 15,955 332 64 34 68 77 1,158 2,360 183 6 Total softwoods 1,183 1,842 2,153 2,365 2,131 2,159 5,002 3,401 20,235 Hardwood: Bigleaf maple Black cottonwood California black oak Cherry Golden chinkapin Oregon ash Oregon white oak Pacific madrone Red alder — — — — — — — — — 114 3 2 5 30 1 26 — 328 90 — 3 — 20 3 19 — 217 116 — 9 7 — — 31 10 266 72 5 11 — 17 5 23 — 142 97 — 9 — — 2 8 — 71 164 — 14 — — 6 88 11 169 79 12 — — — 6 24 — 57 731 20 48 12 67 24 219 21 1,249 Total hardwoods — 509 353 438 276 186 452 178 2,392 1,183 2,351 2,506 2,803 2,407 2,345 5,454 3,579 22,627 All species — = less than 500,000 board feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Includes softwood sawtimber trees 9.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger, and hardwood sawtimber trees 11.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger 43 Table 10d—Estimated net volume of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by species and diameter class, southwest Oregon, January 1, 1997a b Diameter class (inches at breast height Species 9.010.9 11.012.9 13.014.9 15.016.9 17.018.9 19.020.9 21.028.9 29.0+ All classes Million board feet, Scribner rule Softwood: Douglas-fir Grand fir Incense-cedar Jeffrey pine Knobcone pine Lodgepole pine Ponderosa pine Port-Orford-cedar Redwood Sitka spruce Sugar pine Western hemlock Western redcedar White fir 1,136 71 31 — — — 13 7 1 17 5 31 21 29 1,668 81 10 — — — 23 15 2 11 3 104 11 44 2,013 96 39 — 2 7 33 5 10 26 10 146 40 53 2,010 224 38 — — 6 41 13 11 6 11 73 8 56 1,674 151 29 — — — 30 18 7 36 5 77 15 44 1,341 135 33 1 — — 56 14 34 — 18 107 22 31 3,438 464 77 7 — — 98 28 39 104 21 146 57 46 3,134 112 67 — — — 138 7 23 135 26 111 304 13 16,413 1,335 325 8 2 12 432 107 128 336 98 796 478 317 1,362 1,975 2,481 2,496 2,087 1,792 4,525 4,071 20,789 Hardwood: Bigleaf maple Black cottonwood California black oak California-laurel Canyon live oak Golden chinkapin Oregon ash Oregon white oak Pacific madrone Red alder Tanoak — — — — — — — — — — — 60 — 28 15 — 9 — 41 130 324 23 51 — 28 17 12 27 2 61 115 349 36 31 — 10 12 — — — 62 122 365 27 75 — 22 9 — 6 — 18 83 222 51 31 — 48 13 — — — 11 21 194 23 94 — 40 31 — — 2 13 88 255 78 97 13 58 17 — — — 9 23 — 31 438 13 234 114 12 42 4 217 582 1,708 269 Total hardwoods — 631 699 628 487 341 601 248 3,634 1,362 2,606 3,180 3,124 2,573 2,133 5,126 4,319 24,423 Total softwoods All species — = less than 500,000 board feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Includes softwood sawtimber trees 9.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger, and hardwood sawtimber trees 11.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger. 44 Table 11a—Estimated net volume of growing-stock and sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by class of timber, owner class, and species group, western Oregon, January 1, 1997a Species group Class of timber and owner class Average volume Cubic feet per acre Growing-stock:b Other public Forest industry Other private Total, growing-stock Softwoods Hardwoods All species – – – – – Million cubic feet– – – – – 5,160 3,235 2,983 3,683 11,483 4,017 703 2,038 1,591 4,386 13,521 5,608 3,404 19,183 4,332 23,515 Board feet per acre – – – – – Million cubic feet – – – – – Sawtimber (Scribner rule):c Other public Forest industry Other private 20,587 11,169 10,468 15,276 41,679 15,299 2,223 4,995 4,381 17,499 46,674 19,680 Total, sawtimber 12,137 72,253 11,599 83,852 a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. Includes growing-stock trees 5.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger. c Includes softwood sawtimber trees 9.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger and hardwood sawtimber trees 11.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger. b 45 Table 11b—Estimated net volume of growing-stock and sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by class of timber, owner class, and species group, northwest Oregon, January 1, 1997a Species group Class of timber and owner class Average volume Cubic feet per acre Growing-stock:b Other public Forest industry Other private Total, growing-stock Softwoods Hardwoods All species – – – – – Million cubic feet – – – – – 5,348 4,090 3,175 2,538 3,987 1,463 537 527 731 3,075 4,515 2,194 4,131 7,988 2,194 9,783 Board feet per acre – – – – – Million cubic feet – – – – – Sawtimber (Scribner rule):c Other public Forest industry Other private 20,524 14,888 12,424 10,089 14,968 6,171 1,692 1,468 2,414 11,781 16,436 8,585 Total, sawtimber 15,541 31,229 5,574 36,802 a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. Includes growing-stock trees 5.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger. c Includes softwood sawtimber trees 9.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger and hardwood sawtimber trees 11.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger b 46 Table 11c—Estimated net volume of growing-stock and sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by class of timber, owner class, and species group, west-central Oregon, January 1, 1997a Species group Class of timber and owner class Average volume Cubic feet per acre Growing-stock:b Other public Forest industry Other private Total, growing-stock Softwoods Hardwoods All species – – – – – Million cubic feet – – – – – 4,237 3,272 3,256 363 3,902 1,048 48 481 352 411 4,382 1,400 3,318 5,313 881 6,194 Board feet per acre – – – – – Million cubic feet – – – – – Sawtimber (Scribner rule):c Other public Forest industry Other private 19,062 11,780 11,642 1,692 14,545 3,999 157 1,228 1,007 1,849 15,773 5,006 Total, sawtimber 12,119 20,235 2,392 22,627 a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. Includes growing-stock trees 5.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger. c Includes softwood sawtimber trees 9.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger and hardwood sawtimber trees 11.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger. b 47 Table 11d—Estimated net volume of growing-stock and sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by class of timber, owner class, and species group, southwest Oregon, January 1, 1997a Species group Class of timber and owner class Average volume Cubic feet per acre Growing-stock:b Other public Forest industry Other private Total, growing-stock Softwoods Hardwoods All species – – – – – Million cubic feet – – – – – 5,028 2,664 2,068 783 3,594 1,142 117 1,031 427 900 4,625 1,570 2,684 5,882 1,657 7,538 Board feet per acre – – – – –Million cubic feet– – – – – Sawtimber (Scribner rule):c Other public Forest industry Other private 21,614 8,332 8,023 3,495 12,166 5,129 374 2,299 961 3,869 14,465 6,090 Total, sawtimber 8,694 20,789 3,634 24,423 a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. Includes growing-stock trees 5.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger. c Includes softwood sawtimber trees 9.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger and hardwood sawtimber trees 11.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger. b 48 Table 12a—Estimated net volume of growing-stock on nonfederal timberland, by species and owner class, western Oregon, January 1, 1997a b Species Other public Forest industry Other private All owners Million cubic feet Softwood: Douglas-fir Grand fir Incense-cedar Jeffrey pine Knobcone pine Lodgepole pine Noble fir Ponderosa pine Port-Orford-cedar Redwood Sitka spruce Sugar pine Western hemlock Western redcedar Western white pine White fir Total Hardwood: Bigleaf maple Black cottonwood California black oak California-laurel Canyon live oak Cherry Golden chinkapin Oregon ash Oregon white oak Pacific madrone Red alder Tanoak Total All species 2,881 33 9 — — — 27 8 4 — 81 4 582 40 — 13 8,244 297 101 2 1 — 60 38 31 31 436 16 1,915 238 — 73 3,111 175 72 — — 15 — 91 16 3 145 8 144 212 1 24 14,235 505 182 2 1 15 87 138 52 34 662 28 2,641 490 1 110 3,683 11,483 4,017 19,183 107 5 9 7 1 1 — — 10 26 537 1 357 15 37 55 14 8 94 17 150 197 986 108 372 26 126 9 4 12 10 25 213 172 594 30 836 45 171 70 19 20 103 42 373 395 2,117 139 703 2,038 1,591 4,332 4,386 13,521 5,608 23,515 — = less than 500,000 cubic feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Includes growing-stock trees 5 inches in d.b.h. and larger. 49 Table 12b—Estimated net volume of growing-stock on nonfederal timberland, by species and owner class, northwest Oregon, January 1, 1997a b Species Other public Forest industry Other private All owners Million cubic feet Softwood: Douglas-fir Grand fir Noble fir Ponderosa pine Sitka spruce Western hemlock Western redcedar Total Hardwood: Bigleaf maple Black cottonwood Cherry Oregon ash Oregon white oak Pacific madrone Red alder Total All species 1,844 22 27 — 52 555 38 2,490 22 44 3 222 1,124 82 1,149 25 — 1 39 66 182 5,483 69 71 4 313 1,745 302 2,538 3,987 1,463 7,988 90 — 1 — — 3 442 103 15 4 1 19 — 383 239 24 8 15 125 — 320 432 39 14 16 145 3 1,145 537 527 731 1,795 3,075 4,514 2,194 9,783 — = less than 500,000 cubic feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Includes growing-stock trees 5 inches in d.b.h. and larger. 50 Table 12c—Estimated net volume of growing-stock on nonfederal timberland, by species and owner class, west-central Oregon, January 1, 1997a b Species Other public Forest industry Other private All owners Million cubic feet Softwood: Douglas-fir Grand fir Incense-cedar Lodgepole pine Noble fir Ponderosa pine Sitka spruce Western hemlock Western redcedar Western white pine Total Hardwood: Bigleaf maple Black cottonwood California black oak Cherry Golden chinkapin Oregon ash Oregon white oak Pacific madrone Red alder Total All species 359 — — — — — — 5 — — 2,978 37 21 — 16 1 187 612 48 — 822 54 4 12 — 19 73 51 12 1 4,158 91 25 12 16 20 260 668 61 1 363 3,902 1,048 5,313 9 5 — — — — — — 35 131 — — 1 39 12 74 7 217 98 — 32 3 6 7 36 7 163 238 5 32 5 45 19 110 13 414 48 481 352 881 411 4,382 1,400 6,194 — = less than 500,000 cubic feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Includes growing-stock trees 5 inches in d.b.h. and larger. 51 Table 12d—Estimated net volume of growing-stock on nonfederal timberland, by species and owner class, southwest Oregon, January 1, 1997a b Species Other public Forest industry Other private All owners Million cubic feet Softwood: Douglas-fir Grand fir Incense-cedar Jeffrey pine Knobcone pine Lodgepole pine Ponderosa pine Port-Orford-cedar Redwood Sitka spruce Sugar pine Western hemlock Western redcedar White fir Total Hardwood: Bigleaf maple Black cottonwood California black oak California-laurel Canyon live oak Cherry Golden chinkapin Oregon ash Oregon white oak Pacific madrone Red alder Tanoak Total All species 679 11 9 — — — 8 4 — 29 4 23 2 13 2,775 238 80 2 1 — 34 31 31 26 16 179 107 73 1,140 96 67 — — 3 71 16 3 33 8 27 18 24 4,594 344 156 2 1 3 114 52 34 88 28 228 127 110 783 3,594 1,505 5,882 7 — 9 7 1 — — — 10 23 60 1 123 — 37 55 14 2 54 4 57 190 386 108 35 2 94 9 4 — 4 2 51 165 112 30 166 2 140 70 19 2 58 7 118 379 557 139 117 1,031 508 1,657 900 4,625 2,014 7,538 — = less than 500,000 cubic feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Includes growing-stock trees 5 inches in d.b.h. and larger. 52 Table 13a—Estimated net volume of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by species and owner class, western Oregon, January 1, 1997a b Species Other public Forest industry Other private All owners Million board feet, Scribner rule Softwood: Douglas-fir Grand fir Incense-cedar Jeffrey pine Knobcone pine Lodgepole pine Noble fir Ponderosa pine Port-Orford-cedar Redwood Sitka spruce Sugar pine Western hemlock Western redcedar Western white pine White fir Total Hardwood: Bigleaf maple Black cottonwood California black oak California-laurel Canyon live oak Cherry Golden chinkapin Oregon ash Oregon white oak Pacific madrone Red alder Tanoak Total All species 12,195 107 32 — — — 102 41 13 — 285 11 2,295 147 — 48 30,384 1,150 227 7 2 — 220 145 58 123 1,767 59 6,492 856 — 188 12,020 660 130 1 — 46 — 337 36 5 620 29 523 804 6 82 54,599 1,917 389 8 2 46 322 523 107 128 2,673 98 9,310 1,807 6 317 15,276 41,679 15,299 72,253 385 20 13 11 — — — — 23 39 1,731 — 1,057 77 67 86 12 — 101 5 319 301 2,762 209 1,202 142 203 17 1 35 9 46 371 267 2,028 60 2,643 240 283 114 12 35 110 51 714 606 6,521 269 2,223 4,995 4,381 11,599 17,499 46,674 19,680 83,852 — = less than 500,000 board feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Includes softwood sawtimber trees 9.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger and hardwood sawtimber trees 11.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger. 53 Table 13b—Estimated net volume of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by species and owner class, northwest Oregon, January 1, 1997a b Species Other public Forest industry Other private All owners Million board feet, Scribner rule Softwood: Douglas-fir Grand fir Noble fir Ponderosa pine Sitka spruce Western hemlock Western redcedar Total Hardwood: Bigleaf maple Black cottonwood Cherry Oregon ash Oregon white oak Pacific madrone Red alder Total All species 7,372 83 102 — 188 2,204 140 9,925 77 152 8 813 3,700 293 4,934 90 — 7 178 250 712 22,231 250 254 15 1,179 6,155 1,146 10,089 14,968 6,171 31,229 320 — — — — 3 1,369 345 77 — — 38 — 1,008 810 130 23 24 241 — 1,187 1,474 207 23 24 278 3 3,564 1,692 1,468 2,414 5,574 11,781 16,436 8,585 36,802 — = less than 500,000 board feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Includes softwood sawtimber trees 9.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger and hardwood sawtimber trees 11.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger. 54 Table 13c—Estimated net volume of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by species and owner class, west-central Oregon, January 1, 1997a b Species Other public Forest industry Other private All owners Million board feet, Scribner rule Softwood: Douglas-fir Grand fir Incense-cedar Lodgepole pine Noble fir Ponderosa pine Sitka spruce Western hemlock Western redcedar Western white pine Total Hardwood: Bigleaf maple Black cottonwood California black oak Cherry Golden chinkapin Oregon ash Oregon white oak Pacific madrone Red alder Total All species 1,676 — — — — — — 16 — — 11,120 119 56 — 68 4 853 2,180 144 — 3,159 212 7 34 — 73 306 164 39 6 15,955 332 64 34 68 77 1,158 2,360 183 6 1,692 14,545 3,999 20,235 44 20 — — — — — — 92 389 — — — 63 3 158 17 598 298 — 48 12 4 20 61 5 558 731 20 48 12 67 24 219 21 1,249 157 1,228 1,007 2,392 1,849 15,773 5,006 22,627 — = less than 500,000 board feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Includes softwood sawtimber trees 9.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger and hardwood sawtimber trees 11.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger. 55 Table 13d—Estimated net volume of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by species and owner class, southwest Oregon, January 1, 1997a b Species Other public Forest industry Other private All owners Million board feet, Scribner rule Softwood: Douglas-fir Grand fir Incense-cedar Jeffrey pine Knobcone pine Lodgepole pine Ponderosa pine Port-Orford-cedar Redwood Sitka spruce Sugar pine Western hemlock Western redcedar White fir Total Hardwood: Bigleaf maple Black cottonwood California black oak California-laurel Canyon live oak Golden chinkapin Oregon ash Oregon white oak Pacific madrone Red alder Tanoak Total All species 3,147 24 32 — — — 41 13 — 98 11 75 7 48 9,339 954 171 7 2 — 133 58 123 102 59 612 419 188 3,927 358 122 1 — 12 258 36 5 137 29 109 52 82 16,413 1,335 325 8 2 12 432 107 128 336 98 796 478 317 3,495 12,166 5,129 20,789 21 — 13 11 — — — 23 36 269 — 323 — 67 86 12 38 2 123 284 1,155 209 93 13 155 17 1 5 2 70 262 283 60 438 13 234 114 12 42 4 217 582 1,708 269 374 2,299 961 3,634 3,869 14,465 6,090 24,423 — = less than 500,000 board feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Includes softwood sawtimber trees 9.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger and hardwood sawtimber trees 11.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger. 56 Table 14a—Estimated net volume of growing-stock on nonfederal timberland, by forest type and stand-size class, western Oregon, January 1, 1997a b Forest type Large sawtimber Small sawtimber Poletimber Seedlingsapling All classes Million cubic feet Softwood: Douglas-fir Grand fir Incense-cedar Noble fir Pacific silver fir Ponderosa pine Port-Orford-cedar Redwood Sitka spruce Western hemlock Western redcedar White fir Total Hardwood: Apple Bigleaf maple Black cottonwood California black oak California-laurel Canyon live oak Cherry Oregon ash Oregon white oak Pacific madrone Red alder Tanoak Willow Total Nonstockedc All types 2,039 70 24 — — — — — 252 6 199 4 11,796 99 30 8 — 52 — 38 281 1,887 103 57 802 — 70 8 — — 24 — 9 142 — — 399 59 19 1 2 6 — — 3 45 3 8 15,035 227 143 17 2 58 24 38 544 2,080 305 69 2,593 14,351 1,054 546 18,544 — 63 — — — — — 11 1 — 71 25 — — 263 16 60 107 — — 3 273 107 1,857 118 — 3 100 — 31 16 22 2 — 68 307 593 96 — 2 16 7 — — 9 3 9 40 54 74 22 3 5 441 24 91 122 31 5 23 382 468 2,594 261 3 171 2,802 1,237 239 4,449 — 2,764 — 17,154 — 2,291 — 784 522 23,515 — = less than 500,000 cubic feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Includes growing-stock trees 5 inches in d.b.h. and larger. c Nonstocked areas are less than 10 percent stocked with live trees. Includes projected access-denied areas. 57 Table 14b—Estimated net volume of growing-stock on nonfederal timberland, by forest type and stand-size class, northwest Oregon, January 1, 1997a b Forest type Large sawtimber Small sawtimber Poletimber Seedlingsapling All classes Million cubic feet Softwoods: Douglas-fir Grand fir Noble fir Pacific silver fir Sitka spruce Western hemlock Western redcedar Total Hardwood: Apple Bigleaf maple Black cottonwood Cherry Oregon ash Oregon white oak Red alder Total Nonstockedc All types 843 — — — 14 6 193 4,567 21 8 — 200 1,404 25 115 — 8 — 9 105 — 103 — — 2 3 27 3 5,628 21 16 2 224 1,542 222 1,056 6,226 236 137 7,655 — 47 — — — 1 37 — 223 16 — 3 63 1,084 3 12 — 2 — 41 176 — 15 7 3 — 14 33 3 298 24 5 3 119 1,330 85 1,389 234 72 1,780 — — — — 347 1,141 7,614 470 210 9,783 — = less than 500,000 cubic feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Includes growing-stock trees 5 inches in d.b.h. and larger. c Nonstocked areas are less than 10 percent stocked with live trees. Includes projected access-denied areas. 58 Table 14c—Estimated net volume of growing-stock on nonfederal timberland, by forest type and stand-size class, west-central Oregon, January 1, 1997a b Forest type Large sawtimber Small sawtimber Poletimber Seedlingsapling All classes Million cubic feet Softwoods: Douglas-fir Grand fir Incense-cedar Noble fir Ponderosa pine Sitka spruce Western hemlock Western redcedar Total Hardwood: Bigleaf maple California black oak Oregon ash Oregon white oak Pacific madrone Red alder Total Nonstockedc All types 467 — 18 — — 204 — 6 3,620 36 — — 6 60 453 2 265 — — — — — 15 — 108 39 — 1 — — 12 — 4,460 75 18 1 6 264 480 8 695 4,178 280 160 5,313 16 — 11 — — — 18 21 — 120 — 292 48 — — 16 — 145 — — 9 7 5 9 82 21 20 143 5 445 27 450 209 30 717 — — — — 164 722 4,628 490 189 6,194 — = less than 500,000 cubic feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Includes growing-stock trees 5 inches in d.b.h. and larger. c Nonstocked areas are less than 10 percent stocked with live trees. Includes projected access-denied areas. 59 Table 14d—Estimated net volume of growing-stock on nonfederal timberland, by forest type and stand-size class, southwest Oregon, January 1, 1997a b Forest type Large sawtimber Small sawtimber Poletimber SeedlingAll sapling classes Million cubic feet Softwoods: Douglas-fir Grand fir Incense-cedar Ponderosa pine Port-Orford-cedar Redwood Sitka spruce Western hemlock Western redcedar White fir Total Hardwood: Apple Bigleaf maple California black oak California-laurel Canyon live oak Oregon white oak Pacific madrone Red alder Tanoak Willow Total Nonstockedc All types 728 70 6 — — — 34 — — 4 3,609 42 30 46 — 38 21 30 75 57 422 — 70 — 24 — — 21 — — 188 20 19 6 — — 1 7 — 8 4,947 131 125 52 24 38 56 59 75 69 842 3,948 537 249 5,576 — — — — — — — 33 25 — — 22 39 107 — 90 107 481 118 — — 39 31 16 22 11 307 273 96 — 2 — — — 9 19 49 32 22 3 2 61 70 122 31 119 464 819 261 3 58 963 794 137 1,952 — — — — 10 900 4,911 1,331 386 7,538 — = less than 500,000 cubic feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Includes growing-stock trees 5 inches in d.b.h. and larger. c Nonstocked areas are less than 10 percent stocked with live trees. 60 Table 15a—Estimated net volume of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by forest type and stand-size class, western Oregon, January 1, 1997a b Forest type Large sawtimber Small sawtimber Poletimber Seedlingsapling All classes Million board feet, Scribner rule Softwoods: Douglas-fir Grand fir Incense-cedar Jeffrey pine Noble fir Pacific silver fir Ponderosa pine Port-Orford-cedar Redwood Sitka spruce Western hemlock Western redcedar White fir Total Hardwood: Apple Bigleaf maple Black cottonwood California black oak California-laurel Canyon live oak Cherry Oregon ash Oregon white oak Pacific madrone Red alder Tanoak Willow Total Nonstockedc All types 10,047 352 54 — — — — — — 1,169 32 821 17 43,308 343 100 1 18 — 172 — 148 910 6,983 326 158 1,309 — 144 — 5 — — 39 — 44 323 — — 988 117 20 — — 2 14 — — 1 115 2 17 55,651 812 318 1 23 2 186 39 148 2,125 7,453 1,149 192 12,492 52,468 1,864 1,276 68,099 — 216 — — — — — 39 3 — 337 91 — — 946 75 158 342 — — 4 749 252 7,084 345 — 7 290 — 52 47 87 2 — 139 540 1,437 174 — 7 42 29 — — 28 7 36 80 62 210 37 6 14 1,494 104 211 389 115 9 78 970 854 9,068 646 6 685 9,956 2,775 543 13,958 — — — — 1,795 13,177 62,424 4,639 1,818 83,852 — = less than 500,000 board feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Includes softwood sawtimber trees 9.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger and hardwood sawtimber trees 11.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger. c Nonstocked areas are less than 10 percent stocked with live trees. Includes projected access denied areas. 61 Table 15b—Estimated net volume of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by forest type and stand-size class, northwest Oregon, January 1, 1997a b Forest type Large sawtimber Small sawtimber Poletimber SeedlingAll sapling classes Million board feet, Scribner rule Softwoods: Douglas-fir Grand fir Noble fir Pacific silver fir Sitka spruce Western hemlock Western redcedar Total Hardwood: Apple Bigleaf maple Black cottonwood Cherry Oregon ash Oregon white oak Red alder Total Nonstockedc All types 4,125 — — — 69 32 795 17,489 57 18 — 646 5,123 91 155 — 5 — 44 226 — 335 — — 2 — 92 2 22,104 57 23 2 758 5,472 889 5,022 23,424 430 430 29,306 — 192 — — — 3 168 — 831 75 — 4 178 4,136 7 40 — 2 — 73 372 — 42 29 7 — 40 118 7 1,105 104 9 4 294 4,794 363 5,224 495 236 6,318 — — — — 1,179 5,384 28,649 924 667 36,802 — = less than 500,000 board feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Includes softwood sawtimber trees 9.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger and hardwood sawtimber trees 11.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger. c Nonstocked areas are less than 10 percent stocked with live trees. Includes projected access-denied areas. 62 Table 15c—Estimated net volume of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland , by forest type and stand-size class, west-central Oregon, January 1, 1997a b Forest type Large sawtimber Small sawtimber Poletimber Seedlingsapling All classes Million board feet, Scribner rule Softwoods: Douglas-fir Grand fir Incense-cedar Ponderosa pine Sitka spruce Western hemlock Western redcedar Total Hardwood: Bigleaf maple California black oak Oregon ash Oregon white oak Pacific madrone Red alder Total Nonstockedc All types 2,318 — 38 — 959 — 26 13,559 129 — 20 183 1,766 7 458 — — — — 25 — 252 65 — — — 5 — 16,587 193 38 20 1,142 1,796 33 3,341 15,663 483 322 19,809 25 — 39 — — — 65 36 — 305 — 1,106 133 — — 42 — 405 — — 36 20 9 10 222 36 74 367 9 1,521 63 1,512 580 74 2,230 — — — — 588 3,404 17,176 1,063 396 22,627 — = less than 500,000 board feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Includes softwood sawtimber trees 9.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger and hardwood sawtimber trees 11.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger. c Nonstocked areas are less than 10 percent stocked with live trees. Includes projected access-denied areas. 63 Table 15d—Estimated net volume of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by forest type and stand-size class, southwest Oregon, January 1, 1997a b Forest type Large sawtimber Small sawtimber Poletimber Seedlingsapling All classes Million board feet, Scribner rule Softwoods: Douglas-fir Grand fir Incense-cedar Jeffrey pine Ponderosa pine Port-Orford-cedar Redwood Sitka spruce Western hemlock Western redcedar White fir Total Hardwood: Apple Bigleaf maple California black oak California-laurel Canyon live oak Oregon white oak Pacific madrone Red alder Tanoak Willow Total Nonstockedc All types 3,603 352 16 — — — — 141 — — 17 12,260 157 100 1 152 — 148 82 95 227 158 696 — 144 — — 39 — — 72 — — 401 52 20 — 14 — — 1 18 — 17 16,960 561 280 1 166 39 148 224 185 227 192 4,129 13,381 952 524 18,985 — — — — — — — 168 91 — — 50 122 342 — 266 252 1,842 345 — — 117 52 47 87 24 540 660 174 — 7 — — — 28 19 53 83 37 6 7 167 174 389 115 309 844 2,753 646 6 259 3,219 1,700 232 5,411 — — — — 28 4,388 16,600 2,652 756 24,423 — = less than 500,000 board feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Includes softwood sawtimber trees 9.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger and hardwood sawtimber trees 11.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger. c Nonstocked areas are less than 10 percent stocked with live trees. 64 Table 16a—Estimated net volume of growing-stock on nonfederal timberland, by forest type and owner class, western Oregon, January 1, 1997a b Forest type Other public Forest industry Other private All owners Million cubic feet Softwood: Douglas-fir Grand fir Incense-cedar Noble fir Pacific silver fir Ponderosa pine Port-Orford-cedar Redwood Sitka spruce Western hemlock Western redcedar White fir Total Hardwood: Apple Bigleaf maple Black cottonwood California black oak California-laurel Canyon live oak Cherry Oregon ash Oregon white oak Pacific madrone Red alder Tanoak Willow Total Nonstockedc Unclassifiedd All types 3,135 — — 8 — — — — 29 443 32 — 8,577 139 87 9 2 9 17 38 364 1,572 128 56 3,323 88 56 — — 49 7 — 151 66 146 13 15,035 227 143 17 2 58 24 38 544 2,080 305 69 3,648 10,995 3,900 18,544 — 70 — — — — 2 — — 45 621 — — 2 150 16 4 122 31 — — 216 229 1,180 190 — 3 221 7 86 — — 3 23 166 194 794 71 3 5 441 24 91 122 31 5 23 382 468 2,594 261 3 738 2,141 1,570 4,449 — — 8 376 60 77 69 453 4,386 13,521 5,608 23,515 — = less than 500,000 cubic feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Includes growing-stock trees 5 inches in d.b.h. and larger. c Nonstocked areas are less than 10 percent stocked with live trees. d Includes volume from access-denied project areas. 65 Table 16b—Estimated net volume of growing-stock on nonfederal timberland, by forest type and owner class, northwest Oregon, January 1, 1997a b Forest type Other public Forest industry Other private All owners Million cubic feet Softwood: Douglas-fir Grand fir Noble fir Pacific silver fir Sitka spruce Western hemlock Western redcedar Total Hardwood: Apple Bigleaf maple Black cottonwood Cherry Oregon ash Oregon white oak Red alder Total Nonstockedc Unclassifiedd All types 1,971 — 8 — 29 443 32 2,479 — 8 2 178 1,064 72 1,178 21 — — 18 35 117 5,628 21 16 2 224 1,542 222 2,484 3,802 1,369 7,655 — 70 — 2 — — 519 — 50 16 — — 2 352 3 178 7 3 3 117 459 3 298 24 5 3 119 1,330 591 420 769 1,780 — — 7 285 38 18 45 303 3,075 4,514 2,194 9,783 — = less than 500,000 cubic feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Includes growing-stock trees 5 inches in d.b.h. and larger. c Nonstocked areas are less than 10 percent stocked with live trees. d Includes volume from access-denied project areas. 66 Table 16c—Estimated net volume of growing-stock on nonfederal timberland, by forest type and owner class, west-central Oregon, January 1, 1997a b Forest type Other public Forest industry Other private All owners Million cubic feet Softwoods: Douglas-fir Grand fir Incense-cedar Noble fir Ponderosa pine Sitka spruce Western hemlock Western redcedar Total Hardwood: Bigleaf maple California black oak Oregon ash Oregon white oak Pacific madrone Red alder Total Nonstockedc Unclassifiedd All types 380 — — — — — — — 3,194 59 18 1 — 165 449 6 886 16 — — 6 99 31 2 4,460 75 18 1 6 264 480 8 380 3,892 1,041 5,313 — — — — — 32 40 — — 121 — 236 42 21 20 22 5 177 82 21 20 143 5 445 32 398 287 717 — — 2 91 12 59 14 150 411 4,382 1,400 6,194 — = less than 500,000 cubic feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Includes growing-stock trees 5 inches in d.b.h. and larger. c Nonstocked areas are less than 10 percent stocked with live trees. d Includes volume from access-denied project areas. 67 Table 16d—Estimated net volume of growing-stock on nonfederal timberland, by forest type and owner class, southwest Oregon, January 1, 1997a b Forest type Other public Forest industry Other private All owners Million cubic feet Softwood: Douglas-fir Grand fir Incense-cedar Ponderosa pine Port-Orford-cedar Redwood Sitka spruce Western hemlock Western redcedar White fir Total Hardwood: Apple Bigleaf maple California black oak California-laurel Canyon live oak Oregon white oak Pacific madrone Red alder Tanoak Willow Total Nonstockedc All types 784 — — — — — — — — — 2,904 80 68 9 17 38 22 58 50 56 1,259 51 56 43 7 — 34 — 26 13 4,947 131 125 52 24 38 56 59 75 69 784 3,302 1,490 5,576 — — — — — — 45 70 — — 2 60 4 122 31 92 229 592 190 — — 1 66 — — 27 189 157 71 3 2 61 70 122 31 119 464 819 261 3 116 1,323 514 1,952 — — 10 10 900 4,625 2,014 7,538 — = less than 500,000 cubic feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Includes growing-stock trees 5 inches in d.b.h. and larger. c Nonstocked areas are less than 10 percent stocked with live trees. 68 Table 17a—Estimated net volume of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by Forest type and owner class, western Oregon, January 1, 1997a b Forest type Other public Forest industry Other private All owners Million board feet, Scribner rule Softwood: Douglas-fir Grand fir Incense-cedar Jeffrey pine Noble fir Pacific silver fir Ponderosa pine Port-Orford-cedar Redwood Sitka spruce Western hemlock Western redcedar White fir Total Hardwood: Apple Bigleaf maple Black cottonwood California black oak California-laurel Canyon live oak Cherry Oregon ash Oregon white oak Pacific madrone Red alder Tanoak Willow Total Nonstockedc Unclassifiedd All types 12,754 — — — 18 — — — — 99 1,911 159 — 30,485 552 186 — 5 2 42 29 148 1,427 5,323 419 142 12,412 260 132 1 — — 143 10 — 598 219 572 50 55,651 812 318 1 23 2 186 39 148 2,125 7,453 1,149 192 14,941 38,761 14,398 68,099 — 281 — — — — 2 — — 112 2,162 — — 7 468 75 5 389 115 — — 602 416 4,110 440 — 7 745 29 206 — — 7 78 368 325 2,795 206 6 14 1,494 104 211 389 115 9 78 970 854 9,068 646 6 2,558 6,627 4,773 13,958 — — 36 1,250 187 322 223 1,572 17,499 46,674 19,680 83,852 — = less than 500,000 board feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Includes softwood sawtimber trees 9.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger and hardwood sawtimber trees 11.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger. c Nonstocked areas are less than 10 percent stocked with live trees. d Includes volume from access-denied project areas. 69 Table 17b—Estimated net volume of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by forest type and owner class, northwest Oregon, January 1, 1997a b Forest type Other public Forest industry Other private All owners Million board feet, Scribner rule Softwood: Douglas-fir Grand fir Noble fir Pacific silver fir Sitka spruce Western hemlock Western redcedar Total Hardwood: Apple Bigleaf maple Black cottonwood Cherry Oregon ash Oregon white oak Red alder Total Nonstockedc Unclassifiedd All types 7,552 — 18 — 99 1,911 159 9,581 — 5 2 577 3,454 238 4,971 57 — — 82 108 492 22,104 57 23 2 758 5,472 889 9,738 13,857 5,710 29,306 — 281 — 2 — — 1,759 — 191 75 — — 5 1,317 7 633 29 7 4 288 1,718 7 1,105 104 9 4 294 4,794 2,043 1,588 2,687 6,318 — — 28 963 113 75 140 1,038 11,781 16,436 8,585 36,802 — = less than 500,000 board feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Includes softwood sawtimber trees 9.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger and hardwood sawtimber trees 11.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger. c Nonstocked areas are less than 10 percent stocked with live trees. d Includes volume from access-denied project areas. 70 Table 17c—Estimated net volume of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by forest type and owner class, west-central Oregon, January 1, 1997a b Forest type Other public Forest industry Other private All owners Million board feet, Scribner rule Softwood: Douglas-fir Grand fir Incense-cedar Ponderosa pine Sitka spruce Western hemlock Western redcedar 1,752 — — — — — — 11,573 170 38 — 761 1,684 26 3,261 23 — 20 381 111 7 16,587 193 38 20 1,142 1,796 33 1,752 14,252 3,804 19,809 — — — — — 97 111 — — 327 — 787 111 36 74 40 9 637 222 36 74 367 9 1,521 Total 97 1,226 908 2,230 Nonstockedc Unclassifiedd — — 8 286 47 247 55 533 1,849 15,773 5,006 22,627 Total Hardwood: Bigleaf maple California black oak Oregon ash Oregon white oak Pacific madrone Red alder All types — = less than 500,000 board feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Includes softwood sawtimber trees 9.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger and hardwood sawtimber trees 11.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger. c Nonstocked areas are less than 10 percent stocked with live trees. d Includes volume from access-denied project areas. 71 Table 17d—Estimated net volume of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by forest type and owner class, southwest Oregon, January 1, 1997a b Forest type Other public Forest industry Other private All owners Million board feet, Scribner rule Softwood: Douglas-fir Grand fir Incense-cedar Jeffrey pine Ponderosa pine Port-Orford-cedar Redwood Sitka spruce Western hemlock Western redcedar White fir Total Hardwood: Apple Bigleaf maple California black oak California-laurel Canyon live oak Oregon white oak Pacific madrone Red alder Tanoak Willow Total Nonstockedc All types 3,450 — — — — — — — — — — 9,331 382 148 — 42 29 148 90 185 154 142 4,179 179 132 1 123 10 — 134 — 73 50 16,960 561 280 1 166 39 148 224 185 227 192 3,450 10,651 4,883 18,985 — — — — — — 112 306 — — 7 166 5 389 115 270 416 2,006 440 — — 1 170 — — 40 316 441 206 6 7 167 174 389 115 309 844 2,753 646 6 419 3,813 1,178 5,411 — — 28 28 3,869 14,465 6,090 24,423 — = less than 500,000 board feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Includes softwood sawtimber trees 9.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger and hardwood sawtimber trees 11.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger. c Nonstocked areas are less than 10 percent stocked with live trees. 72 Table 18a—Estimated net volume of timber on nonfederal timberland, by class of timber and species group, western Oregon, January 1, 1997a b Class of timber Softwood species Hardwood species All species Million cubic feet Growing-stock trees: Sawtimber trees Saw-log portion Upper stem portion Total, sawtimber Poletimber trees All growing-stock trees Cull trees: Sound cull Rotten cull Total, cull trees All timber 16,958 608 2,366 638 19,323 1,246 17,566 3,004 20,570 1,617 1,328 2,945 19,183 4,332 23,514 38 112 161 200 199 341 150 361 540 19,333 4,693 24,054 — = less than 500,000 cubic feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Includes growing-stock trees 5 inches in d.b.h. and larger. Table 18b—Estimated net volume of timber on nonfederal timberland, by class of timber and species group, northwest Oregon, January 1, 1997a b Class of timber Softwood species Hardwood species All species Million cubic feet Growing-stock trees: Sawtimber trees Saw-log portion Upper stem portion Total, sawtimber Poletimber trees All growing-stock trees Cull trees: Sound cull Rotten cull Total, cull trees All timber 7,232 246 1,094 223 8,326 469 7,478 1,317 8,795 510 477 987 7,988 1,794 9,782 7 34 35 80 42 114 41 115 156 8,029 1,909 9,938 — = less than 500,000 cubic feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Includes growing-stock trees 5 inches in d.b.h. and larger. 73 Table 18c—Estimated net volume of timber on nonfederal timberland, by class of timber and species group, westcentral Oregon, January 1, 1997a b Class of timber Softwood species Hardwood species All species Million cubic feet Growing-stock trees: Sawtimber trees Saw-log portion Upper stem portion Total, sawtimber Poletimber trees All growing-stock trees Cull trees: Sound cull Rotten cull Total, cull trees All timber 4,694 166 484 144 5,178 310 4,860 628 5,488 452 253 705 5,312 881 6,193 2 8 21 33 23 41 10 54 65 5,322 935 6,257 — = less than 500,000 cubic feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Includes growing-stock trees 5 inches in d.b.h. and larger. Table 18d—Estimated net volume of timber on nonfederal timberland, by class of timber and species group, southwest Oregon, January 1, 1997a b Class of timber Softwood species Hardwood species All species Million cubic feet Growing-stock trees: Sawtimber trees Saw-log portion Upper-stem portion Total, sawtimber Poletimber trees All growing-stock trees Cull trees: Sound cull Rotten cull Total, cull trees All timber 74 5,032 196 788 271 5,820 467 5,228 1,059 6,287 654 598 1,252 5,882 1,657 7,539 29 70 105 87 134 157 99 192 291 5,981 1,849 7,830 — = less than 500,000 cubic feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Includes growing-stock trees 5 inches in d.b.h. and larger. Table 19a—Estimated current net annual growth of growing-stock on nonfederal timberland, by forest type and owner class, western Oregon, January 1, 1997a b Forest type Other public Forest industry Other private All owners Thousand cubic feet Softwood: Douglas-fir Grand fir Incense-cedar Jeffrey pine Noble fir Pacific silver fir Ponderosa pine Port-Orford-cedar Redwood Sitka spruce Western hemlock Western redcedar White fir Total Hardwood: Apple Bigleaf maple Black cottonwood California black oak California-laurel Canyon live oak Cherry Oregon ash Oregon white oak Pacific madrone Red alder Tanoak Willow Total Nonstockedc Unclassifiedd All types 101,817 — — — 969 — — — — 1,430 11,360 278 — 385,693 4,391 3,744 — 1,037 180 176 1,265 735 12,626 74,958 4,674 2,514 98,654 3,517 1,753 38 — — 1,946 221 — 3,435 3,651 2,511 148 586,164 7,907 5,497 38 2,006 180 2,122 1,486 735 17,491 89,969 7,464 2,662 115,854 491,993 115,875 723,722 — 1,500 — — — — 194 — — 783 20,981 — — 174 6,697 455 178 3,412 486 — — 3,508 4,518 38,500 10,731 — 42 5,326 312 1,692 — — 139 439 4,723 7,304 27,938 2,213 276 215 13,523 767 1,870 3,412 486 333 439 8,231 12,605 87,418 12,944 276 23,458 68,658 50,403 142,518 — — 211 16,546 1,073 1,579 1,284 18,125 139,312 577,408 168,930 885,649 — = less than 500 cubic feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Includes growing-stock trees 5 inches in d.b.h. and larger. c Nonstocked areas are less than 10 percent stocked with live trees. d Includes volume from access-denied project areas. 75 Table 19b—Estimated current net annual growth of growing-stock on nonfederal timberland, by forest type and owner class, northwest Oregon, January 1, 1997a b Forest type Other public Forest industry Other private All owners Thousand cubic feet Softwood: Douglas-fir Grand fir Noble fir Pacific silver fir Sitka spruce Western hemlock Western redcedar Total Hardwood: Apple Bigleaf maple Black cottonwood Cherry Oregon ash Oregon white oak Red alder Total Nonstockedc Unclassifiedd All types 75,937 — 969 — 1,430 11,360 278 97,112 — 912 180 8,080 54,515 3,563 33,588 966 — — 325 2,672 1,507 206,638 966 1,881 180 9,835 68,548 5,348 89,974 164,363 39,057 293,394 — 1,500 — 194 — — 18,454 — 1,424 455 — — 30 8,986 42 3,226 312 139 70 3,287 13,751 42 6,150 767 333 70 3,316 41,191 20,147 10,894 20,827 51,869 — — 204 13,232 641 298 845 13,530 110,122 188,692 60,824 359,638 — = less than 500 cubic feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Includes growing-stock trees 5 inches in d.b.h. and larger. c Nonstocked areas are less than 10 percent stocked with live trees. d Includes volume from access-denied project areas. 76 Table 19c—Estimated current net annual growth of growing-stock on nonfederal timberland, by forest type and owner class, west-central Oregon, January 1, 1997a b Forest type Other public Forest industry Other private All owners Thousand cubic feet Softwood: Douglas-fir Grand fir Incense-cedar Noble fir Ponderosa pine Sitka spruce Western hemlock Western redcedar Total Hardwood: Bigleaf maple California black oak Oregon ash Oregon white oak Pacific madrone Red alder Total Nonstockedc Unclassifiedd All types 8,761 — — — — — — — 146,170 2,595 387 125 — 3,995 18,034 168 26,665 909 — — 424 2,227 640 155 181,596 3,504 387 125 424 6,221 18,674 322 8,761 171,473 31,020 211,254 — — — — — 1,095 2,775 — — 2,422 — 8,971 2,073 184 369 1,095 386 5,395 4,848 184 369 3,516 386 15,461 1,095 14,167 9,502 24,764 — — 7 3,314 333 1,280 340 4,595 9,856 188,962 42,135 240,953 — = less than 500 cubic feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Includes growing-stock trees 5 inches in d.b.h. and larger. c Nonstocked areas are less than 10 percent stocked with live trees. d Includes volume from access-denied project areas. 77 Table 19d—Estimated current net annual growth of growing-stock on nonfederal timberland, by forest type and owner class, southwest Oregon, January 1, 1997a b Forest type Other public Forest industry Other private All owners Thousand cubic feet Softwood: Douglas-fir Grand fir Incense-cedar Jeffrey pine Ponderosa pine Port-Orford-cedar Redwood Sitka spruce Western hemlock Western redcedar White fir Total Hardwood: Apple Bigleaf maple California black oak California-laurel Canyon live oak Oregon white oak Pacific madrone Red alder Tanoak Willow Total Nonstockedc All types 17,119 — — — — — — — — — — 142,411 1,796 3,357 — 176 1,265 735 551 2,409 944 2,514 38,401 1,642 1,753 38 1,522 221 — 884 339 850 148 197,930 3,438 5,110 38 1,698 1,486 735 1,435 2,748 1,794 2,662 17,119 156,157 45,798 219,074 — — — — — — 783 1,432 — — 174 2,498 178 3,412 486 1,057 4,518 20,543 10,731 — — 27 1,508 — — 341 6,918 8,791 2,213 276 174 2,525 1,685 3,412 486 1,398 12,219 30,766 12,944 276 2,215 43,596 20,074 65,885 — — 98 98 19,334 199,753 65,971 285,058 — = less than 500 cubic feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Includes growing-stock trees 5 inches in d.b.h. and larger. c Nonstocked areas are less than 10 percent stocked with live trees. 78 Table 20a—Estimated gross annual growth of growing-stock on nonfederal timberland, by owner class and species group, western Oregon, January 1, 1997a Species group Class of timber and owner class Average volume Cubic feet per acre Growing-stock:b Other public Forest industry Other private Total, growing-stock a b Softwoods Hardwoods All species – – – – – Thousand cubic feet – – – – – 188 153 105 131,346 561,140 146,623 28,910 79,860 51,365 160,256 641,001 197,988 145 839,110 160,135 999,245 Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. Includes growing-stock trees 5.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger. Table 20b—Estimated gross annual growth of growing-stock on nonfederal timberland, by owner class and species group, northwest Oregon, January 1, 1997a Species group Class of timber and owner class Average volume Cubic feet per acre Growing-stock:b Other public Forest industry Other private Total, growing-stock a b Softwoods Hardwoods All species – – – – – Thousand cubic feet – – – – – 218 192 104 101,344 189.024 49,470 24,132 23,597 22,732 125,476 212,621 72,202 173 339,839 70,461 410,299 Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. Includes growing-stock trees 5.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger. 79 Table 20c—Estimated gross annual growth of growing-stock on nonfederal timberland, by owner class and species group, west-central Oregon, January 1, 1997a Species group Class of timber and owner class Average volume Cubic feet per acre Growing-stock:b Other public Forest industry Other private Total, growing-stock a b Softwoods Hardwoods All species – – – – – Thousand cubic feet– – – – – 122 155 116 10,015 188,053 37,674 1,839 19,055 12,095 11,854 207,108 49,769 144 235,742 32,989 268,731 Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. Includes growing-stock trees 5.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger. Table 20d—Estimated gross annual growth of growing-stock on non-federal timberland, by owner class and species group, southwest Oregon, January 1, 1997a Species group Class of timber and owner class Average volume Cubic feet per acre Growing-stock:b Other public Forest industry Other private Total, growing-stock a b 80 Softwoods Hardwoods All species – – – – – Thousand cubic feet – – – – – 128 127 100 19,987 184,063 59,479 2,939 37,208 16,538 22,926 221,272 76,017 114 263,529 56,685 320,214 Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. Includes growing-stock trees 5.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger. Table 21a—Estimated current net annual growth of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by forest type and owner class, western Oregon, January 1, 1997a b Forest type Other public Forest industry Other private All owners Thousand board feet, Scribner rule Softwood: Douglas-fir Grand fir Incense-cedar Jeffrey pine Noble fir Pacific silver fir Ponderosa pine Port-Orford-cedar Redwood Sitka spruce Western hemlock Western redcedar White fir Total Hardwood: Apple Bigleaf maple Black cottonwood California black oak California-laurel Canyon live oak Cherry Oregon ash Oregon white oak Pacific madrone Red alder Tanoak Willow Total Nonstockedc Unclassifiedd All types 474,257 — — — 2,646 — — — — 7,096 54,624 1,614 — 1,568,053 16,891 13,253 — 1,715 293 1,026 3,290 3,885 57,453 316,172 11,847 4,929 432,070 10,377 5,602 188 — — 5,740 466 — 16,111 6,659 10,621 688 2,474,381 27,268 18,856 188 4,361 293 6,766 3,756 3,885 80,660 377,455 24,081 5,617 540,237 1,998,808 488,525 3,027,569 — 7,177 — — — — 381 — — 2,458 87,420 — — 1,167 21,005 2,455 100 10,418 1,418 — — 12,929 23,041 170,778 29,566 — 113 20,677 511 5,075 — — 218 1,555 13,605 22,110 112,236 6,285 767 1,280 48,859 2,966 5,174 10,418 1,418 599 1,555 26,534 47,610 370,434 35,850 767 97,437 272,877 183,152 553,466 — — 1,067 87,443 3,967 7,930 5,034 95,373 637,673 2,360,195 683,574 3,681,442 — = less than 500 board feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Includes softwood sawtimber trees 9.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger and hardwood sawtimber trees 11.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger. c Nonstocked areas are less than 10 percent stocked with live trees. d Includes volume from access-denied project areas. 81 Table 21b—Estimated current net annual growth of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by forest type and owner class, northwest Oregon, January 1, 1997a b Forest type Other public Forest industry Other private All owners Thousand board feet, Scribner rule Softwood: Douglas-fir Grand fir Noble fir Pacific silver fir Sitka spruce Western hemlock Western redcedar Total Hardwood: Apple Bigleaf maple Black cottonwood Cherry Oregon ash Oregon white oak Red alder Total Nonstockedc Unclassifiedd All types 358,282 — 2,646 — 7,096 54,624 1,614 414,181 — 1,715 293 34,332 228,152 6,683 172,494 3,159 — — 1,375 3,848 7,556 944,958 3,159 4,361 293 42,803 286,623 15,853 424,261 685,357 188,432 1,298,050 — 7,177 — 381 — — 78,785 — 5,935 2,455 — — 79 37,011 113 14,579 511 218 120 10,184 63,750 113 27,691 2,966 599 120 10,263 179,546 86,344 45,480 89,476 221,300 — — 1,032 74,193 2,343 3,986 3,375 78,179 510,605 805,030 281,893 1,597,529 — = less than 500 board feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Includes softwood sawtimber trees 9.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger and hardwood sawtimber trees 11.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger. c Nonstocked areas are less than 10 percent stocked with live trees. d Includes volume from access-denied project areas. 82 Table 21c—Estimated current net annual growth of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by forest type and owner class, west-central Oregon, January 1, 1997a b Forest type Other public Forest industry Other private All owners Thousand board feet, Scribner rule Softwood: Douglas-fir Grand fir Incense-cedar Ponderosa pine Sitka spruce Western hemlock Western redcedar Total Hardwood: Bigleaf maple California black oak Oregon ash Oregon white oak Pacific madrone Red alder Total Nonstockedc Unclassifiedd All types 44,080 — — — — — — 623,097 8,298 1,229 — 20,614 80,578 854 117,318 1,757 — 2,083 10,389 2,812 698 784,495 10,056 1,229 2,083 31,003 83,389 1,552 44,080 734,670 135,058 913,808 — — — — — 5,143 7,340 — — 8,824 — 38,705 6,072 297 1,435 2,593 2,896 20,352 13,413 297 1,435 11,417 2,896 64,200 5,143 54,869 33,645 93,657 — — 35 14,316 1,257 7,545 1,292 21,861 49,222 803,855 176,248 1,029,326 — = less than 500 board feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Includes softwood sawtimber trees 9.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger and hardwood sawtimber trees 11.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger. c Nonstocked areas are less than 10 percent stocked with live trees. d Includes volume from access-denied project areas. 83 Table 21d—Estimated current net annual growth of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by forest type and owner class, southwest Oregon, January 1, 1997a b Forest type Other public Forest industry Other private All owners Thousand board feet, Scribner rule Softwood: Douglas-fir Grand fir Incense-cedar Jeffrey pine Ponderosa pine Port-Orford-cedar Redwood Sitka spruce Western hemlock Western redcedar White fir Total Hardwood: Apple Bigleaf maple California black oak California-laurel Canyon live oak Oregon white oak Pacific madrone Red alder Tanoak Willow Total Nonstockedc All types 71,895 — — — — — — — — — — 530,775 8,593 12,024 — 1,026 3,290 3,885 2,507 7,443 4,309 4,929 142,258 5,461 5,602 188 3,657 466 — 4,347 — 2,367 688 744,928 14,054 17,626 188 4,683 3,756 3,885 6,854 7,443 6,676 5,617 71,895 578,781 165,035 815,711 — — — — — — 2,458 3,492 — — 1,167 7,730 100 10,418 1,418 4,026 23,041 95,062 29,566 — — 25 4,778 — — 829 19,214 28,133 6,285 767 1,167 7,755 4,878 10,418 1,418 4,855 44,714 126,688 35,850 767 5,950 172,528 60,031 238,509 — — 367 367 77,846 751,309 225,433 1,054,588 — = less than 500 board feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Includes softwood sawtimber trees 9.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger and hardwood sawtimber trees 11.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger. c Nonstocked areas are less than 10 percent stocked with live trees. 84 Table 22a—Estimated average annual mortality of growing-stock on nonfederal timberland, by forest type and owner class, western Oregon, January 1, 1997a b Forest type Other public Forest industry Other private All owners Thousand cubic feet Softwood: Douglas-fir Grand fir Incense-cedar Jeffrey pine Noble fir Pacific silver fir Ponderosa pine Port-Orford-cedar Redwood Sitka spruce Western hemlock Western redcedar White fir Total Hardwood: Apple Bigleaf maple Black cottonwood California black oak California-laurel Canyon live oak Cherry Oregon ash Oregon white oak Pacific madrone Red alder Tanoak Willow Total Nonstockedc All types 13,575 — — — 15 — — — — 103 1,709 152 — 35,065 1,182 471 — 10 5 106 105 302 2,413 9,747 737 374 15,782 502 528 1 — — 272 196 — 1,230 240 914 53 64,422 1,684 999 1 25 5 378 301 302 3,747 11,695 1,803 427 15,555 50,516 19,717 85,788 — 458 — — — — 8 — — 344 5,750 — — 4 747 64 12 561 85 — 1 1,403 2,047 10,367 987 — 9 1,766 40 609 — — 9 127 897 1,337 6,449 396 4 13 2,971 104 621 561 85 17 128 2,300 3,729 22,566 1,383 4 6,560 16,279 11,643 34,482 — 1,697 457 2,154 22,115 68,492 31,817 122,424 — = less than 500 cubic feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Includes growing-stock trees 5 inches in d.b.h. and larger. c Nonstocked areas are less than 10 percent stocked with live trees. 85 Table 22b—Estimated average annual mortality of growing-stock on nonfederal timberland, by forest type and owner class, northwest Oregon, January 1, 1997a b Forest type Other public Forest industry Other private All owners Thousand cubic feet Softwood: Douglas-fir Grand fir Noble fir Pacific silver fir Sitka spruce Western hemlock Western redcedar Total Hardwood: Apple Bigleaf maple Black cottonwood Cherry Oregon ash Oregon white oak Red alder Total Nonstockedc All types 8,708 — 15 — 103 1,709 152 11,516 — 10 5 1,282 7,137 463 5,052 87 — — 57 117 724 25,276 87 25 5 1,442 8,962 1,338 10,688 20,411 6,036 37,135 — 458 — 8 — — 4,965 — 366 64 — — 8 3,458 9 1,545 40 9 12 581 3,634 9 2,369 104 17 12 589 12,057 5,431 3,896 5,830 15,158 — 70 141 211 16,119 24,377 12,007 52,504 — = less than 500 cubic feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Includes growing-stock trees 5 inches in d.b.h. and larger. c Nonstocked areas are less than 10 percent stocked with live trees. 86 Table 22c—Estimated average annual mortality of growing-stock on nonfederal timberland, by forest type and owner class, west-central Oregon, January 1, 1997a b Forest type Other public Forest industry Other private All owners Thousand cubic feet Softwood: Douglas-fir Grand fir Incense-cedar Ponderosa pine Sitka spruce Western hemlock Western redcedar Total Hardwood: Bigleaf maple California black oak Oregon ash Oregon white oak Pacific madrone Red alder Total Nonstockedc All types 1,831 — — — — — — 12,030 368 52 — 972 2,283 17 4,221 67 — 32 956 120 13 18,083 435 52 32 1,928 2,403 30 1,831 15,722 5,409 22,963 — — — — — 198 125 — — 582 — 2,023 220 188 115 105 9 1,728 344 188 115 687 9 3,949 198 2,730 2,365 5,293 — 4 83 87 2,029 18,456 7,857 28,343 — = less than 500 cubic feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Includes growing-stock trees 5 inches in d.b.h. and larger. 87 Table 22d—Estimated average annual mortality of growing stock on nonfederal timberland, by forest type and owner class, southwest Oregon, January 1, 1997a b Forest type Other public Forest industry Other private All owners Thousand cubic feet Softwood types: Douglas-fir Grand fir Incense-cedar Jeffrey pine Ponderosa pine Port-Orford-cedar Redwood Sitka spruce Western hemlock Western redcedar White fir Total Hardwood types: Apple Bigleaf maple California black oak California-laurel Canyon live oak Oregon white oak Pacific madrone Red alder Tanoak Willow Total Nonstockedc All types 2,701 — — — — — — — — — — 10,107 793 184 — 36 35 102 79 304 257 253 4,681 323 310 — 175 57 — 140 1 168 13 17,489 1,116 494 — 211 92 102 219 305 425 265 2,701 12,150 5,867 20,718 — — — — — — 234 349 — — 2 246 7 535 74 678 1,496 4,155 842 — — 1 351 — — 197 1,156 882 287 4 2 247 358 535 74 876 2,885 5,386 1,129 4 582 8,035 2,878 11,495 — — 63 63 3,283 20,185 8,808 32,276 — = less than 500 cubic feet or none found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Includes growing-stock trees 5 inches in d.b.h. and larger. c Nonstocked areas are less than 10 percent stocked with live trees. 88 Table 23a—Estimated average annual mortality of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by forest type and owner class, western Oregon, January 1, 1997a b Forest type Other public Forest industry Other private All owners Thousand board feet, Scribner rule Softwood: Douglas-fir Grand fir Incense-cedar Jeffrey pine Noble fir Pacific silver fir Ponderosa pine Port-Orford-cedar Redwood Sitka spruce Western hemlock Western redcedar White fir Total Hardwood: Apple Bigleaf maple Black cottonwood California black oak California-laurel Canyon live oak Cherry Oregon ash Oregon white oak Pacific madrone Red alder Tanoak Willow Total Nonstockedc All types 47,201 — — — 27 — — — — 278 6,217 695 — 109,426 4,438 596 — — 3 433 50 1,211 8,508 28,733 1,673 631 50,314 1,229 802 3 — — 741 44 — 3,805 691 3,559 189 206,941 5,667 1,398 3 27 3 1,174 93 1,211 12,591 35,642 5,927 820 54,419 155,702 61,375 271,496 — 1,726 — — — — 6 — — 737 18,229 — — 12 2,065 299 14 1,688 284 — — 3,608 2,397 29,851 2,229 — 23 6,656 184 1,267 — — 16 469 1,585 1,226 21,961 958 9 35 10,447 483 1,281 1,688 284 22 469 5,193 4,359 70,041 3,187 9 20,697 42,447 34,355 97,499 — 287 953 1,240 75,116 198,436 41,445 370,235 — = less than 500 board feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Includes softwood sawtimber trees 9.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger and hardwood sawtimber trees 11.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger. c Nonstocked areas are less than 10 percent stocked with live trees. 89 Table 23b—Estimated average annual mortality of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by forest type and owner class, northwest Oregon, January 1, 1997a b Forest type Other public Forest industry Other private All owners Thousand board feet, Scribner rule Softwood: Douglas-fir Grand fir Noble fir Pacific silver fir Sitka spruce Western hemlock Western redcedar Total, softwood types Hardwood: Apple Bigleaf maple Black cottonwood Cherry Oregon ash Oregon white oak Red alder Total, hardwood types Nonstockedc All types 27,549 — 27 — 278 6,217 695 39,898 — — 3 3,684 20,262 828 19,713 154 — — 264 304 3,070 87,160 154 27 3 4,226 26,783 4,593 34,767 64,675 23,504 122,947 — 1,726 — 6 — — 14,957 — 1,284 299 — — 18 10,661 23 5,960 184 16 20 1,129 13,351 23 8,969 483 22 20 1,148 38,969 16,689 12,263 20,684 49,635 — 266 424 690 51,456 77,204 44,612 173,272 — = less than 500 board feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Includes softwood sawtimber trees 9.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger and hardwood sawtimber trees 11.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger. c Nonstocked areas are less than 10 percent stocked with live trees. 90 Table 23c—Estimated average annual mortality of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by forest type and owner class, west-central Oregon, January 1, 1997a b Forest type Other public Forest industry Other private All owners Thousand board feet, Scribner rule Softwood: Douglas-fir Grand fir Incense-cedar Ponderosa pine Sitka spruce Western hemlock Western redcedar Total, softwood types Hardwood: Bigleaf maple California black oak Oregon ash Oregon white oak Pacific madrone Red alder Total, hardwood types Nonstockedc All types 7,632 — — — — — — 37,473 678 101 — 4,300 7,880 78 13,266 56 — 103 3,029 387 37 58,370 734 101 103 7,329 8,267 116 7,632 50,510 16,879 75,020 — — — — — 539 305 — — 1,543 — 5,988 696 406 449 173 16 5,758 1,001 406 449 1,715 16 12,285 539 7,835 7,498 15,872 — 21 311 332 8,171 58,366 24,688 91,224 — = less than 500 board feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Includes softwood sawtimber trees 9.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger and hardwood sawtimber trees 11.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger. c Nonstocked areas are less than 10 percent stocked with live trees. 91 Table 23d—Estimated average annual mortality of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by forest type and owner class, southwest Oregon, January 1, 1997a b Forest type Other public Forest industry Other private All owners Thousand board feet, Scribner rule Softwood: Douglas-fir Grand fir Incense-cedar Jeffrey pine Ponderosa pine Port-Orford-cedar Redwood Sitka spruce Western hemlock Western redcedar White fir Total, softwood types Hardwood: Apple Bigleaf maple California black oak California-laurel Canyon live oak Oregon white oak Pacific madrone Red alder Tanoak Willow Total, hardwood types Nonstockedc All types 12,020 — — — — — — — — — — 32,055 3,760 495 — 433 50 1,211 523 592 767 631 17,336 1,019 802 3 637 44 — 512 — 452 189 61,410 4,779 1,296 3 1,070 93 1,211 1,035 592 1,219 820 12,020 40,517 20,992 73,529 — — — — — — 737 2,733 — — 12 476 14 1,688 284 2,047 2,397 13,202 2,229 — — 1 860 — — 283 1,210 2,853 958 9 12 477 874 1,688 284 2,330 4,343 18,787 3,187 9 3,469 22,349 6,173 31,992 — — 288 288 15,489 62,866 27,453 105,809 — = less than 500 board feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Includes softwood sawtimber trees 9.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger and hardwood sawtimber trees 11.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger. c Nonstocked areas are less than 10 percent stocked with live trees. 92 93 6 — 850 Nonstockede Unclassifiedf Total, all ages 4,386 — — 467 77 22 21 165 660 1,100 573 575 141 — 198 241 — 108 — — 38 — — — — — — Million cubic feet 17,449 — — 1,936 251 103 64 352 2,058 3,940 2,570 2,570 662 — 979 1,247 — 575 — — 191 — — — — — — 4,177 37 56 237 82 513 612 879 637 552 332 136 37 21 17 11 18 — — — — — — — — — — Million Thousand acres board feetd Area 13,521 8 376 1,094 591 79 170 1,405 2,647 2,931 2,515 1,038 281 89 87 94 115 — — — — — — — — — — Million cubic feet 46,674 36 1,250 3,979 2,564 229 293 2,803 7,595 10,690 10,195 4,375 1,331 201 336 449 348 — — — — — — — — — — Million board feetd Growingstock Sawtimber volume volume Forest industry 1,882 68 20 240 45 171 217 232 170 297 187 97 75 16 10 15 17 3 — — 2 — — — — — — Thousand acres Area 5,608 69 77 948 182 19 239 304 490 1,143 936 467 439 98 31 27 70 — — — 69 — — — — — — Million cubic feet Growingstock volume Other private Area 19,680 218 322 3,383 622 74 676 703 1,468 3,836 3,497 1,787 1,854 387 96 81 285 — — — 392 — — — — — — 6,910 111 75 545 148 723 886 1,229 965 1,031 584 296 122 36 51 52 36 12 — — 7 — — — — — — Million Thousand board feetd acres Sawtimber volume — = less than 500 acres, 500,000 cubic feet, or 500,000 board feet. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Includes growing-stock trees 5.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger. c Includes softwood sawtimber trees 9.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger, and hardwood sawtimber trees 11.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger. d Scribner rule. e Nonstocked areas are less than 10 percent stocked with live trees. f Includes volume from access-denied project areas. 68 21 39 56 117 158 183 66 63 10 — 24 26 — 9 — — 5 — — — — — — Thousand acres Area Uneven aged: <100 100+ Even aged: 0-9 10-19 20-29 30-39 40-49 50-59 60-69 70-79 80-89 90-99 100-109 110-119 120-129 130-139 140-149 150-159 160-169 170-179 180-189 190-199 200-299 300+ Stand age Growingstock Sawtimber volume volume Other public 23,515 77 453 2,509 850 120 430 1,874 3,796 5,173 4,025 2,080 861 187 316 362 185 108 — — 106 — — — — — — Million cubic feet 83,852 254 1,572 9,297 3,436 405 1,034 3,858 11,121 18,466 16,262 8,732 3,848 588 1,412 1,777 633 575 — — 583 — — — — — — Million board feetd Growingstock Sawtimber volume volume All owners Table 24a—Estimated area, net volume of growing-stock, and net volume of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by stand age and owner class, western Oregon, January 1, 1997a b c 94 5 — 574 Nonstockede Unclassifiedf Total, all ages 3,075 — — 302 — 8 15 130 566 1,003 438 362 141 — 38 73 — — — — — — — — — — — Million cubic feet 11,781 — — 1,215 — 39 39 297 1,766 3,578 1,910 1,668 662 — 188 418 — — — — — — — — — — — 1,101 15 44 9 — 137 109 241 182 147 137 59 20 — 1 — — — — — — — — — — — — Million Thousand acres board feetd Area 4,514 7 285 31 — 13 32 400 859 845 1,248 571 219 — 4 — — — — — — — — — — — — Million cubic feet 16,437 28 963 111 — 49 57 819 2,578 3,116 5,130 2,522 1,046 — 19 — — — — — — — — — — — — Million board feetd Growingstock Sawtimber volume volume Forest industry 693 22 3 69 5 74 77 93 66 127 47 49 49 7 1 — 4 — — — — — — — — — — Thousand acres Area 2,194 38 18 300 26 11 114 104 210 457 259 240 344 47 9 — 18 — — — — — — — — — — Million cubic feet Growingstock volume Other private Area 8,585 113 75 1,215 120 50 417 263 658 1,725 1,090 965 1,557 215 37 — 86 — — — — — — — — — — 2,370 42 47 118 5 220 228 399 385 435 238 145 79 7 10 8 4 — — — — — — — — — — Million Thousand board feetd acres Sawtimber volume — = less than 500 acres, 500,000 cubic feet, or 500,000 board feet. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Includes growing-stock trees 5.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger. c Includes softwood sawtimber trees 9.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger, and hardwood sawtimber trees 11.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger. d Scribner rule. e Nonstocked areas are less than 10 percent stocked with live trees. f Includes volume from access-denied project areas 40 — 8 42 64 137 161 54 38 10 — 7 8 — — — — — — — — — — — Thousand acres Area Uneven aged: <100 >100 Even aged: 0-09 10-19 20-29 30-39 40-49 50-59 60-69 70-79 80-89 90-99 100-109 110-119 120-129 130-139 140-149 150-159 160-169 170-179 180-189 190-199 200-299 300+ Stand age Growingstock Sawtimber volume volume Other public 9,783 45 303 632 26 32 160 634 1,635 2,306 1,944 1,173 704 47 51 73 18 — — — — — — — — — — Million cubic feet 36,802 140 1,038 2,541 120 137 513 1,379 5,002 8,419 8,130 5,155 3,265 215 243 418 86 — — — — — — — — — — Million board feetd Growingstock Sawtimber volume volume All owners Table 24b—Estimated area, net volume of growing-stock, and net volume of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by stand age and owner class, northwest Oregon, January 1, 1997a b c 95 — — — — 98 Uneven aged: <100 100+ Nonstockede Unclassifiedf Total, all ages 411 — — — — — 7 11 — 32 135 126 — — — 63 — — — — 38 — — — — — — Million cubic feet 1,849 — — — — — 25 13 — 97 660 574 — — — 288 — — — — 191 — — — — — — 1,339 14 12 63 18 171 213 259 218 218 95 28 9 4 7 6 4 — — — — — — — — — — Million Thousand acres board feetd Area 4,382 2 91 529 184 9 54 444 791 1,302 620 166 53 4 25 79 29 — — — — — — — — — — Million cubic feet 15,773 8 286 2,288 819 45 98 846 2,321 4,954 2,600 651 268 8 98 404 79 — — — — — — — — — — Million board feetd Growingstock Sawtimber volume volume Forest industry 431 29 16 65 18 52 37 43 48 45 57 7 4 — 1 — 8 — — — — — — — — — — Thousand acres Area 1,400 12 59 268 94 6 42 55 121 276 370 47 11 — 5 — 33 — — — — — — — — — — Million cubic feet Growingstock volume Other private Area 5,006 47 247 1,028 313 19 102 116 399 949 1,440 160 39 — 7 — 140 — — — — — — — — — — 1,867 43 28 128 36 231 264 328 266 272 164 50 13 4 9 15 12 — — — 5 — — — — — — Million Thousand board feetd acres Sawtimber volume — = less than 500 acres, 500,000 cubic feet, or 500,000 board feet. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Includes growing-stock trees 5.0 inches in d.b.h. and the larger. c Includes softwood sawtimber trees 9.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger, and hardwood sawtimber trees 11.0 inches in d.b.h and larger. d Scribner rule. e Nonstocked areas are less than 10 percent stocked with live trees. f Includes volume from access-denied project area. 8 14 26 — 9 12 15 — — — 9 — — — — 5 — — — — — — Thousand acres Area Even aged: 0-09 10-19 20-29 30-39 40-49 50-59 60-69 70-79 80-89 90-99 100-109 110-119 120-129 130-139 140-149 150-159 160-169 170-179 180-189 190-199 200-299 300+ Stand age Growingstock Sawtimber volume volume Other public 6,194 14 150 797 278 15 103 510 913 1,609 1,126 339 65 4 29 142 62 — — — 38 — — — — — — Million cubic feet 22,627 55 533 3,316 1,133 64 225 975 2,720 5,999 4,700 1,385 307 8 105 692 218 — — — 191 — — — — — — Million board feetd Growingstock Sawtimber volume volume All owners Table 24c—Estimated area, net volume of growing-stock, and net volume of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by stand age and owner class, west-central Oregon, January 1, 1997a b c 96 28 21 — 179 Uneven aged: <100 100+ Nonstockede Total, all ages 900 — 165 77 14 — 25 93 65 — 87 — — 160 106 — 108 — — — — — — — — — Million cubic feet 3,869 — 720 251 64 — 41 291 265 — 327 — — 792 541 — 575 — — — — — — — — — 1,736 8 165 64 204 291 379 237 187 99 50 8 17 8 5 14 — — — — — — — — — — Million Thousand acres board feetd Area 4,625 — 534 407 56 84 561 997 784 648 301 8 85 59 15 86 — — — — — — — — — — Million cubic feet 14,465 — 1,580 1,745 136 138 1,139 2,696 2,620 2,465 1,203 18 192 220 45 269 — — — — — — — — — — Million board feetd Growingstock Sawtimber volume volume Forest industry 759 17 106 22 45 103 95 56 124 83 42 22 9 8 15 6 3 — — 2 — — — — — — Thousand acres Area 2,014 18 380 62 3 83 145 159 410 307 180 84 51 18 27 19 — — — 69 — — — — — — Million cubic feet Growingstock volume Area 6,090 58 1,140 188 4 158 323 411 1,163 966 661 259 173 53 81 60 — — — 392 — — — — — — 2,673 26 299 107 272 395 501 314 324 182 101 30 26 32 29 20 12 — — 2 — — — — — — Million Thousand board feetd acres Sawtimber volume Other private — = less than 500 acres, 500,000 cubic feet, or 500,000 board feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Includes growing-stock trees 5.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger. c Includes softwood sawtimber trees 9.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger, and hardwood trees 11.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger. d Scribner rule. e Nonstocked areas are less than 10 percent stocked with live trees. 23 1 27 21 13 — 10 — — 17 9 — 9 — — — — — — — — — Thousand acres Area Even aged: 0-09 19-Oct 20-29 30-39 40-49 50-59 60-69 70-79 80-89 90-99 100-109 110-119 120-129 130-139 140-149 150-159 160-169 170-179 180-189 190-199 200-299 300+ Stand age Growingstock Sawtimber volume volume Other public 7,538 18 1,080 546 73 166 730 1,249 1,258 955 568 93 137 237 147 104 108 — — 69 — — — — — — Million cubic feet 24,423 58 3,441 2,184 204 295 1,503 3,398 4,048 3,432 2,191 276 365 1,064 667 329 575 — — 392 — — — — — — Million board feetd Growingstock Sawtimber volume volume All owners Table 24d—Estimated area, net volume of growing-stock, and net volume of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by stand age and owner class, southwest Oregon, January 1, 1997a b c 97 160,256 All species 22,115 8,474 39,497 1,437 1,342 — — — — — 94 — — — 534 — 38,060 28,415 — — — — — — — — — — 1,619 — 8,026 — — — Average annual removals 640,880 79,739 9,656 427 427 1,655 173 484 2,980 694 1,901 3,742 53,659 3,941 561,140 411,698 13,509 2,929 41 34 — 2,754 — 1,526 1,324 872 17,537 725 98,674 6,103 — 3,414 67,774 22,290 2,492 68 228 239 72 97 916 95 1,311 2,002 14,204 566 45,484 27,041 1,907 541 18 3 — — 244 292 147 234 2,726 132 10,703 1,075 — 422 Current Average gross annual annual growth mortality 472,520 57,635 12,100 — 635 713 — 870 426 100 285 3,643 41,653 1,802 414,885 253,027 12,374 715 — — — 207 139 2,391 1,707 2,792 22,594 5,409 91,047 16,928 — 5,415 Other private 197,988 51,365 10,103 515 2,696 282 60 458 169 570 3,710 4,769 26,988 1,045 146,623 115,716 7,377 2,173 39 — 665 — — 4,261 505 247 4,447 251 5,562 4,868 30 482 31,325 14,669 2,448 104 1,174 44 29 104 154 93 1,328 1,537 7,502 152 16,656 11,087 1,341 495 1 — 160 — — 626 121 18 740 50 787 1,036 4 190 Current Average gross annual annual growth mortality Thousand cubic feet Average annual removals Forestry industry — = less than 500 cubic feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Includes growing-stock trees 5.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger. 28,910 695 16 99 27 13 6 — — 36 317 7,262 3 Hardwood: Bigleaf maple 2,299 Black cottonwood 115 California black oak 80 California-laurel 221 Canyon live oak 25 Cherry 102 Golden chinkapin — Oregon ash — Oregon white oak 179 Pacific madrone 328 Red alder 25,554 Tanoak 8 Total 13,641 9,659 267 72 — — — — 66 48 46 — 609 15 2,526 238 — 96 131,346 Total Softwood: Douglas-fir 104,041 Grand fir 1,669 Incense-cedar 129 Jeffrey pine — Knobcone pine — Lodgepole pine — Mountain hemlock 1,374 Noble fir — Ponderosa pine 115 Port-Orford-cedar 63 Redwood — Sitka spruce 2,991 Sugar pine 252 Western hemlock 19,494 Western redcedar 1,017 Western white pine — White fir 201 Species Current Average gross annual annual growth mortality Other public 136,299 14,296 2,834 — 425 — — 513 144 112 765 2,922 8,963 87 122,003 86,040 2,734 580 — — — — — 912 — — 3,356 — 22,841 2,590 — 2,951 Average annual removals 999,123 160,014 22,058 1,056 3,203 2,158 258 1,044 3,149 1,264 5,790 8,839 106,201 4,993 839,110 631,455 22,556 5,231 80 34 665 4,128 — 5,902 1,892 1,120 24,975 1,228 123,730 11,987 30 4,097 121,214 45,433 5,635 189 1,502 310 113 207 1,070 187 2,675 3,856 28,967 721 75,781 47,787 3,514 1,108 18 3 160 — 311 965 314 252 4,074 196 14,016 2,348 4 709 Current Average gross annual annual growth mortality All owners Table 25a—Estimated gross annual growth, average annual mortality, and average annual removals of growing-stock on nonfederal timberland, by species and owner class, western Oregon, January 1, 1997a b 648,316 73,368 16,277 — 1,059 713 — 1,382 779 211 1,049 6,565 51,150 1,889 574,948 367,482 15,108 1,295 — — — 207 139 3,302 1,707 2,792 27,568 5,409 121,914 19,518 — 8,366 Average annual removals 98 125,476 All species 16,119 6,834 636 — 6 — 4 60 6,128 9,285 6,109 237 — 66 — 273 2,368 233 22,794 — — — — — — — — 22,794 13,308 — — — — 1,619 7,867 — Average annual removals 212,500 23,475 2,467 427 118 53 202 — 20,210 189,024 110,897 986 — 2,311 131 10,895 61,391 2,414 25,465 7,091 867 68 83 6 168 — 5,899 18,374 9,416 122 — 179 6 1,579 6,689 383 149,239 27,154 5,548 — 180 — 95 — 21,924 122,085 82,003 — 207 139 — 4,043 33,921 2,624 Other private 72,202 22,732 6,137 466 405 387 2,194 — 13,144 49,470 40,350 1,117 — — 57 1,071 2,891 3,984 12,136 6,860 1,785 96 88 64 737 — 4,091 5,275 3,869 256 — — 11 111 181 847 Current Average gross annual annual growth mortality Thousand cubic feet Average annual removals Forestry industry Current Average gross annual annual growth mortality — = less than 500 cubic feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Includes growing-stock trees 5.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger. 24,132 2,019 — 102 — 8 14 21,989 101,344 77,679 506 — 1,374 — 2,352 18,470 963 Total Hardwood: Bigleaf maple Black cottonwood Cherry Oregon ash Oregon white oak Pacific madrone Red alder Total Softwood: Douglas-fir Grand fir Mountain hemlock Noble fir Ponderosa pine Sitka spruce Western hemlock Western redcedar Species Current Average gross annual annual growth mortality Other public 37,306 8,365 1,885 — 288 — 419 — 6,257 28,941 23,195 225 — — — 2,159 928 2,433 Average annual removals 410,178 70,339 10,623 892 624 440 2,404 14 55,343 339,839 228,925 2,609 — 3,684 188 14,319 82,752 7,361 53,720 20,785 3,288 165 178 70 909 60 16,117 32,934 19,393 615 — 245 17 1,964 9,237 1,463 Current Average gross annual annual growth mortality All owners Table 25b—Estimated gross annual growth, average annual mortality, and average annual removals of growing-stock on nonfederal timberland, by species and owner class, northwest Oregon, January 1, 1997a b 209,339 35,519 7,434 — 467 — 514 — 28,716 173,820 117,656 225 207 139 — 7,820 42,716 5,056 Average annual removals 99 11,854 All species 2,029 524 34 16 — — — — — — 474 1,505 1,486 — — — — — — 19 — — 14,315 1,436 1,342 — — — 94 — — — — 12,879 12,720 — — — — — — 159 — — Average annual removals 207,108 19,055 4,101 — — 222 1,152 539 986 16 12,041 188,053 149,133 1,847 519 — 443 8 5,585 28,858 1,661 — 19,050 4,651 791 — — — 387 68 396 100 2,909 14,398 9,533 266 85 — 66 16 974 3,224 235 — Current Average gross annual annual growth mortality 133,021 10,237 4,049 — — 690 163 -— 398 4,570 122,784 65,760 4,441 — — — — 15,368 28,166 8,909 — Other private 49,769 12,095 3,130 — 495 53 120 123 776 111 7,285 37,674 29,503 2,161 160 549 — 1,157 2,086 1,612 414 30 8,154 3,281 478 — 297 15 105 24 210 44 2,107 4,874 2,942 525 49 141 — 109 512 497 94 4 Current Average gross annual annual growth mortality Thousand cubic feet Average annual removals Forestry industry — = less than 500 cubic feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Includes growing-stock trees 5.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger. 1,839 138 115 — — — — — — 1,587 10,015 9,857 — — — — — — 158 — — Total Hardwood: Bigleaf maple Black cottonwood California black oak Cherry Golden chinkapin Oregon ash Oregon white oak Pacific madrone Red alder Total Softwood: Douglas-fir Grand fir Incense-cedar Lodgepole pine Noble fir Ponderosa pine Sitka spruce Western hemlock Western redcedar Western white pine Species Current Average gross annual annual growth mortality Other public 53,307 834 354 — 90 — — — 296 95 — 52,472 28,318 887 — — — — 1,197 21,913 157 — Average annual removals 268,731 32,989 7,368 115 495 275 1,273 662 1,762 127 20,913 235,742 188,493 4,008 679 549 443 1,165 7,671 30,628 2,075 30 29,233 8,456 1,303 16 297 15 492 92 606 144 5,490 20,777 13,962 791 134 141 66 124 1,487 3,741 328 4 Current Average gross annual annual growth mortality All owners Table 25c—Estimated gross annual growth, average annual mortality, and average annual removals of growing-stock on nonfederal timberland, by species and owner class, west-central Oregon, January 1, 1997a b 200,643 12,508 5,745 — 90 690 258 — 296 492 4,570 188,135 106,798 5,328 — — — — 16,565 50,238 9,066 — Average annual removals 100 22,926 All species 3,967 1,117 25 — 99 27 13 — — — 32 257 661 3 2,850 2,064 30 72 — — — 48 46 — 336 15 139 5 96 2,387 — — — — — — — — — — — — — 2,387 2,387 — — — — — — — — — — — — — Average annual removals 221,272 37,208 3,089 — 427 1,655 173 145 1,827 103 713 3,726 21,409 3,941 184,063 151,669 10,676 2,410 41 34 — 1,388 1,324 872 1,057 725 8,425 2,028 3,414 23,259 10,548 834 — 228 239 72 14 528 21 747 1,901 5,396 566 12,711 8,092 1,519 456 18 3 — 270 147 234 172 132 790 457 422 Current Average gross annual annual growth mortality 190,261 20,245 2,162 — 546 713 — — — 100 — 1,609 13,483 1,631 170,016 106,115 7,933 715 — — — 2,391 1,707 2,792 3,183 5,409 28,961 5,396 5,415 Other private 76,017 16,538 836 50 2,201 282 60 — 49 59 740 4,658 6,559 1,045 59,479 45,863 4,099 2,013 39 — 116 3,046 505 247 1,290 251 1,059 469 482 11,035 4,528 185 8 877 44 29 — 49 5 382 1,494 1,304 152 6,507 4,275 560 446 1 — 20 506 121 18 116 50 109 95 190 Current Average gross annual annual growth mortality Thousand cubic feet Average annual removals Forestry industry — = less than 500 cubic feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Includes growing-stock trees 5.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger. 2,939 142 — 80 221 25 — — — 170 314 1,978 8 19,987 16,505 1,164 129 — — — 115 63 — 638 252 865 54 201 Total Hardwood: Bigleaf maple Black cottonwood California black oak California-laurel Canyon live oak Cherry Golden chinkapin Oregon ash Oregon white oak Pacific madrone Red alder Tanoak Total Softwood: Douglas-fir Grand fir Incense-cedar Jeffrey pine Knobcone pine Lodgepole pine Ponderosa pine Port-Orford-cedar Redwood Sitka spruce Sugar pine Western hemlock Western redcedar White fir Species Current Average gross annual annual growth mortality Other public 45,687 5,097 595 — 246 — — — — 112 — 1,525 2,620 — 40,590 34,526 1,621 580 — — — 912 — — — — — — 2,951 Average annual removals 320,214 56,685 4,067 50 2,708 2,158 258 145 1,876 162 1,624 8,698 29,946 4,993 263,529 214,037 15,938 4,552 80 34 116 4,549 1,892 1,120 2,985 1,228 10,350 2,551 4,097 38,261 16,192 1,044 8 1,205 310 113 14 577 26 1,161 3,652 7,361 721 22,069 14,432 2,109 974 18 3 20 824 314 252 624 196 1,038 557 709 Current Average gross annual annual growth mortality All owners Table 25d—Estimated gross annual growth, average annual mortality, and average annual removals of growing-stock on nonfederal timberland, by species and owner class, southwest Oregon, January 1, 1997a b 238,335 25,342 2,757 — 793 713 — — — 211 — 3,134 16,102 1,631 212,993 143,029 9,554 1,295 — — — 3,302 1,707 2,792 3,183 5,409 28,961 5,396 8,366 Average annual removals 101 710,815 All species 75,116 24,353 1,862 77 159 37 — — — — 78 509 21,631 — 50,763 38,305 727 252 — — — — 255 222 137 — 1,760 51 7,913 809 — 333 185,849 4,618 4,618 — — — — — — — — — — — 181,231 136,416 — — — — — — — — — — 7,315 — 37,501 — — — Average annual removals 2,557,180 276,666 48,747 2,568 1,108 2,335 195 — 3,793 212 4,121 12,450 195,383 5,754 2,280,514 1,671,631 56,592 9,221 115 120 — — 10,533 6,607 2,604 4,295 79,690 2,915 405,044 22,727 — 8,421 203,286 51,644 6,215 333 405 369 39 — 614 17 2,829 2,731 37,185 907 151,643 93,134 6,587 1,213 53 6 — — 994 1,074 279 927 10,236 519 32,248 3,499 — 874 Current Average gross annual annual growth mortality Current Average gross annual annual growth mortality Other private 1,989,003 192,229 27,902 — 254 2,334 — 744 — — 468 6,469 150,370 3,689 1,796,774 1,087,421 55,406 1,275 — — — 805 — 11,421 4,640 11,051 118,091 31,594 394,790 63,934 — 16,346 778,384 177,273 38,565 2,896 3,169 616 16 5,585 239 1,344 8,437 10,395 104,661 1,350 601,111 480,193 27,961 5,976 191 — 2,777 — — 19,401 1,584 549 20,396 1,209 18,288 20,445 132 2,011 98,547 41,281 8,389 548 1,497 79 3 335 112 170 1,915 1,832 26,194 208 57,265 38,706 5,048 802 3 — 396 — — 2,241 192 23 2,981 184 2,236 3,876 14 564 Thousand board feet, Scribner rule Average annual removals Forestry industry 546,241 44,896 5,357 — 541 — — — — — 1,380 5,513 31,834 270 501,345 360,234 11,568 1,663 — — — — — 3,582 0 0 18,764 0 86,937 8,490 — 10,107 Average annual removals — = less than 500 board feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Includes softwood sawtimber trees 9.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger and hardwood sawtimber trees 11.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger. 100,282 7,897 675 136 258 — — — — 428 453 90,435 — 610,533 489,881 5,854 525 — — — — 5,782 725 269 — 13,710 1,090 88,103 3,733 — 860 Total Hardwood: Bigleaf maple Black cottonwood California black oak California-laurel Canyon live oak Cherry Golden chinkapin Oregon ash Oregon white oak Pacific madrone Red alder Tanoak Total Softwood: Douglas-fir Grand fir Incense-cedar Jeffrey pine Knobcone pine Lodgepole pine Mountain hemlock Noble fir Ponderosa pine Port-Orford-cedar Redwood Sitka spruce Sugar pine Western hemlock Western redcedar Western white pine White fir Species Current Average gross annual annual growth mortality Other public 4,046,379 554,221 95,209 6,139 4,413 3,209 211 5,585 4,032 1,556 12,986 23,297 390,480 7,104 3,492,158 2,641,704 90,407 15,722 306 120 2,777 — 16,315 26,733 4,457 4,844 113,796 5,213 511,435 46,905 132 11,292 376,949 117,277 16,466 957 2,061 485 42 335 725 187 4,822 5,072 85,010 1,115 259,671 170,146 12,361 2,267 56 6 396 — 1,249 3,536 609 950 14,978 753 42,396 8,184 14 1,771 Current Average gross annual annual growth mortality All owners 2,721,094 241,743 37,876 — 795 2,334 — 744 — — 1,848 11,982 182,204 3,959 2,479,351 1,584,071 66,974 2,938 — — — 805 — 15,003 4,640 11,051 144,170 31,594 519,228 72,424 — 26,453 Average annual removals Table 26a—Estimated gross annual growth, average annual mortality, and average annual removals of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by species and owner class, western Oregon, January 1, 1997a b 102 560,814 All species 51,456 19,140 1,645 — — — — 63 17,432 32,316 22,164 681 — 255 — — 887 7,538 791 108,871 — — — — — — — — 108,871 65,087 — — — — 7,315 36,469 — — Average annual removals 883,598 85,166 12,598 2,568 — — 407 — 69,592 798,432 471,091 4,204 8,714 — — 337 47,115 257,657 9,313 80,413 17,577 2,432 333 — — 298 — 14,513 62,836 35,937 372 — 711 — 19 5,421 19,238 1,139 Average annual removals Current Average gross annual annual growth mortality Other private 620,444 91,981 16,754 — — — — — 75,227 528,463 345,538 — 805 — — 17,991 147,405 8,719 8,005 325,520 103,237 29,820 2,582 5,263 795 6,440 — 58,337 222,283 187,374 4,177 — — — 341 4,558 8,570 17,263 45,172 24,173 6,471 505 279 100 1,153 — 15,665 21,000 15,499 997 — — — 53 483 670 3,298 Thousand board feet, Scribner rule Current Average gross annual annual growth mortality Forestry industry 155,065 25,244 4,531 — — — 821 — 19,893 129,821 100,248 1,211 — — — 10,587 4,527 7,848 5,400 Average annual removals — = less than 500 board feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Includes softwood sawtimber trees 9.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger and hardwood sawtimber trees 11.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger. 86,036 6,748 — — — — 21 79,267 474,778 Total Hardwood: Bigleaf maple Black cottonwood Cherry Oregon ash Oregon white oak Pacific madrone Red alder Total Softwood: Douglas-fir 367,334 Grand fir 2,466 Mountain hemlock 5,782 Noble fir — Pacific silver fir — Ponderosa pine — Sitka spruce 10,883 Western hemlock 84,801 Western redcedar 3,513 Species Current Average gross annual annual growth mortality Other public 1,769,932 274,439 49,166 5,150 5,263 795 6,847 21 207,196 1,495,493 1,025,799 10,846 14,497 — — 678 62,556 351,028 30,089 177,041 60,889 10,548 838 279 100 1,451 63 47,610 116,152 73,600 2,050 — 966 — 72 6,790 27,446 5,229 884,380 117,225 21,285 — — — 821 — 95,120 767,155 510,873 1,211 805 — — 35,892 188,401 16,567 13,406 Current Average Average gross annual annual annual growth mortality removals All owners Table 26b—Estimated gross annual growth, average annual mortality, and average annual removals of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by species and owner class, northwest Oregon, January 1, 1997a b 103 57,391 All species 8,171 1,393 146 77 — — — — — — 1,170 6,778 6,714 — — — — — — 64 — — 68,916 4,618 4,618 — — — — — — — — 64,298 63,266 — — — — — — 1,032 — — Average annual removals 862,458 71,469 21,555 — — — 2,459 128 2,093 152 45,083 790,989 630,321 6,323 1,869 — 1,818 61 28,163 117,288 5,146 — 60,007 11,570 1,857 — — — 355 11 906 155 8,285 48,437 31,963 512 238 — 283 49 4,259 10,465 667 — Average annual removals Current Average gross annual annual growth mortality Other private 549,354 25,970 7,300 — — 744 — — 468 — 17,458 523,384 276,866 18,219 — — — — 83,888 113,707 30,705 201,320 36,564 6,708 — 810 321 112 480 934 101 27,097 164,756 130,509 8,791 378 2,162 — 5,664 10,298 5,354 1,469 132 25,990 9,655 1,406 — 546 56 95 67 350 30 7,104 16,335 9,890 2,072 89 315 — 441 2,062 1,130 322 14 Thousand board feet, Scribner rule Current Average gross annual annual growth mortality Forestry industry 213,323 1,623 826 — 190 — — — 560 47 — 211,701 117,439 3,032 — — — — 8,178 82,410 641 — Average annual removals — = less than 500 board feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Includes softwood sawtimber trees 9.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger and hardwood sawtimber trees 11.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger. 6,100 682 675 — — — — — — 4,744 51,291 50,526 — — — — — — 765 — — Total Hardwood: Bigleaf maple Black cottonwood California black oak Cherry Golden chinkapin Oregon ash Oregon white oak Pacific madrone Red alder Total Softwood: Douglas-fir Grand fir Incense-cedar Lodgepole pine Noble fir Ponderosa pine Sitka spruce Western hemlock Western redcedar Western white pine Species Current Average gross annual annual growth mortality Other public 1,121,169 114,133 28,944 675 810 321 2,571 608 3,027 253 76,924 1,007,036 811,355 15,114 2,247 2,162 1,818 5,725 38,462 123,408 6,615 132 94,168 22,618 3,409 77 546 56 450 78 1,257 185 16,560 71,550 48,567 2,584 328 315 283 490 6,321 11,658 989 14 Current Average gross annual annual growth mortality All owners 831,593 32,210 12,744 — 190 744 — — 1,027 47 17,458 799,383 457,571 21,251 — — — — 92,066 197,149 31,346 Average annual removals Table 26c—Estimated gross annual growth, average annual mortality, and average annual removals of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by species and owner class, west-central Oregon, January 1, 1997a b 104 92,609 All species 15,489 3,820 72 — 159 37 — — — 78 446 3,029 — 11,670 9,427 45 252 — — — 222 137 — 874 51 311 17 333 8,063 — — — — — — — — — — — — 8,063 8,063 — — — — — — — — — — — — — Average annual removals 811,125 120,032 14,594 — 1,108 2,335 195 1,334 84 1,621 12,298 80,709 5,754 691,093 570,220 46,066 7,352 115 120 — 6,209 2,604 4,295 4,411 2,915 30,098 8,268 8,421 62,866 22,497 1,925 — 405 369 39 259 7 1,625 2,576 14,386 907 40,369 25,234 5,703 974 53 6 — 1,005 279 927 556 519 2,545 1,693 874 Average annual removals Current Average gross annual annual growth mortality Other private 827,211 74,278 3,848 — 254 2,334 — — — — 6,469 57,685 3,689 752,932 465,017 37,188 1,275 — — — 11,421 4,640 11,051 16,212 31,594 133,678 24,510 16,346 251,544 37,472 2,037 314 2,359 616 16 127 69 1,063 10,294 19,227 1,350 214,072 162,310 14,993 5,598 191 — 616 13,396 1,584 549 5,539 1,209 4,364 1,713 2,011 27,384 7,453 512 43 951 79 3 16 3 412 1,802 3,424 208 19,930 13,318 1,979 713 3 — 81 1,747 192 23 437 184 436 256 564 Thousand board feet, Scribner rule Current Average gross annual annual growth mortality Forestry industry 183,253 18,029 — — 351 — — — — — 5,467 11,941 270 165,224 142,547 7,325 1,663 — — — 3,582 — — — — — — 10,107 Average annual removals — = less than 500 board feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Includes softwood sawtimber trees 9.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger and hardwood sawtimber trees 11.0 inches in d.b.h. and larger. 8,145 468 — 136 258 — — — 428 432 6,424 — 84,464 72,021 3,388 525 — — — 725 269 — 2,828 1,090 2,537 220 860 Total Hardwood: Bigleaf maple Black cottonwood California black oak California-laurel Canyon live oak Golden chinkapin Oregon ash Oregon white oak Pacific madrone Red alder Tanoak Total Softwood: Douglas-fir Grand fir Incense-cedar Jeffrey pine Knobcone pine Lodgepole pine Ponderosa pine Port-Orford-cedar Redwood Sitka spruce Sugar pine Western hemlock Western redcedar White fir Species Current Average gross annual annual growth mortality Other public 1,027,101 37,472 2,037 314 2,359 616 16 127 69 1,063 10,294 19,227 1,350 989,629 804,551 64,447 13,475 306 120 616 20,330 4,457 4,844 12,778 5,213 36,999 10,201 11,292 92,308 3,848 — 605 2,334 — — — — 11,936 69,626 3,959 926,219 615,627 44,512 2,938 — — — 15,003 4,640 11,051 16,212 31,594 133,678 24,510 26,453 105,739 1,018,526 33,770 2,509 43 1,515 485 42 275 10 2,114 4,823 20,839 1,115 71,969 47,979 7,727 1,939 56 6 81 2,974 609 950 1,867 753 3,292 1,966 1,771 Current Average Average gross annual annual annua growth mortality removals All owners Table 26d—Estimated gross annual growth, average annual mortality, and average annual removals of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by species and owner class, southwest Oregon, January 1, 1997a b Table 27a—Estimated changes in area of nonfederal timberland, by owner class, western Oregon, 1986-87, 1997a b Description of change Other public Forest industry Other private All owners Thousand acres Timberland area published in 1986-87 862 4,047 1,869 6,778 New estimate of timberland area for 1986-87, based on remeasured plot only 775 3,998 1,854 6,627 28 31 125 184 Adjusted timberland area for 1986-87 803 4,029 1,979 6,811 Area change (1986-87,1997) due to: Changes in land class— Timberland to rights-of-way Timberland to urban Timberland to agriculture Timberland to other nonforest Nonforest to timberland Other forest to timberland -16 — — -7 — 9 -47 -9 — -8 14 8 -26 -25 -22 -28 84 23 -89 -34 -22 -44 98 40 Net change -14 -42 6 -51 Changes in ownership— From other public From forest industry From other private -22 18 27 22 -92 237 — 74 -264 — — — Net change 23 167 -190 — Timberland area in 1997, based on remeasured plots only 812 4,153 1,794 6,760 Timberland area in 1997, based on all sampled plots 850 4,179 1,880 6,909 Adjustments to 1986-87 area: Updates to owner or land classc — = less than 500 acres found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Negative values are losses of timberland, and positive values are gains of timberland. c The classification of owner or land class assigned to a plot in 1986-87 was verified in the 1997 inventory. In some cases, updates were made to the 1986-87 data. 105 Table 27b—Estimated changes in area of nonfederal timberland, by owner class, northwest Oregon, 1986, 1997a b Description of change Other public Forest industry Other private All owners Thousand acres Timberland area published in 1986 590 1,134 643 2,367 New estimate of timberland area for 1986, based on remeasured plot only 550 1,023 668 2,242 Adjustments to 1986 area: Updates to owner or land classc 8 15 62 85 Adjusted timberland area for 1986 558 1,038 730 2,327 -5 — — -7 — 9 -14 — — — — — -7 -8 -15 -8 38 6 -27 -8 -15 -15 38 15 Net change -3 -14 6 -11 Changes in ownership— From other public From forest industry From other private -7 9 — 7 -19 82 — 10 -82 — — — Net change 2 70 -72 — Timberland area in 1997, based on remeasured plots only 558 1,095 664 2,317 Timberland area in 1997, based on all sampled plots 574 1,104 691 2,368 Area change (1986-97) due to: Changes in land class— Timberland to rights-of-way Timberland to urban Timberland to agriculture Timberland to other nonforest Nonforest to timberland Other forest to timberland — = less than 500 acres found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Negative values are losses of timberland, and positive values are gains of timberland. c The classification of owner or land class assigned to a plot in 1986 was verified in the 1997 inventory. In some cases, updates were made to the 1986 data. 106 Table 27c—Estimated changes in area of nonfederal timberland, by owner class, west-central Oregon, 1987, 1997a b Description of change Other public Forest industry Other private All owners Thousand acres Timberland area published in 1987 109 1,270 449 1,828 New estimate of timberland area for 1987 based on remeasured plot only 72 1,289 485 1,847 Adjustments to 1987 area: Updates to owner or land classc 20 8 6 34 Adjusted timberland area for 1987 92 1,297 491 1,881 -12 — — — — -19 — — — — -14 -8 — 12 — -45 -8 — 12 8 -12 -19 -10 -41 -5 9 9 5 -30 88 — 21 -97 — — — 13 63 -76 — Timberland area in 1997, based on remeasured plots only 93 1,340 406 1,839 Timberland area in 1997, based on all sampled plots 97 1,339 430 1,867 Area change (1987-97) due to: Changes in land class— Timberland to rights-of-way Timberland to urban Timberland to agriculture Nonforest to timberland Other forest to timberland Net change Changes in ownership— From other public From forest industry From other private Net change — = less than 500 acres found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Negative values are losses of timberland and positive values are gains of timberland. c The classification of owner or land class assigned to a plot in 1987 was verified in the 1997 inventory. In some cases, updates were made to the 1987 data. 107 Table 27d—Estimated changes in area of nonfederal timberland, by owner class, southwest Oregon, 1986, 1997a b Description of change Other public Forest industry Other private All owners Thousand acres Timberland area published in 1986 163 1,643 777 2,583 New estimate of timberland area for 1986 based on remeasured plot only 152 1,686 700 2,538 Adjustments to 1986 area: Updates to owner or land classc — 7 57 64 Adjusted timberland area for 1986 152 1,693 757 2,602 — — — — — — -13 -9 — -8 14 8 -5 -9 -7 -21 34 16 -18 -18 -7 -29 48 24 — -8 8 0 -9 — 18 9 -43 67 — 43 -85 — — — 9 33 -42 — Timberland area in 1997, based on remeasured plots only 161 1,718 723 2,602 Timberland area in 1997, based on all sampled plots 179 1,736 759 2,809 Area change (1986-97) due to: Changes in land class— Timberland to rights-of-way Timberland to urban Timberland to agriculture Timberland to other nonforest Nonforest to timberland Other forest to timberland Net change Changes in ownership— From other public From forest industry From other private Net change — = less than 500 acres found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Negative values are losses of timberland, and positive values are gains of timberland. c The classification of owner or land class assigned to a plot in 1986 was verified in the 1997 inventory. In some cases, updates were made to the 1986 data. 108 109 -31 Net change 3,683 Total volume in 1997, based on all sample plots 11,483 11,785 1,188 6,129 -191 -4,750 612 166 -171 617 -106 4,017 3,687 145 1,542 -50 -1,347 -581 — 139 -720 134 243 51 -151 -8 3,988 3,456 Other private 19,183 19,088 2,110 8,969 -317 -6,542 — — — — -78 316 73 -455 -11 17,056 15,619 703 748 198 264 -42 -24 6 -23 10 19 34 9 25 — — 511 610 Other public Million cubic feet All owners 2,038 2,009 103 906 -115 -688 145 23 -80 202 16 5 11 — -3 1,747 2,047 Forest industry 1,591 1,603 254 470 -43 -173 -151 — 70 -221 105 61 50 -6 — 1,395 1,752 Other private Hardwood species 4,332 4,360 555 1,641 -200 -885 — — — — 155 75 86 -6 3,650 4,408 All owners — = less than 500,000 cubic feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Negative values are losses of timberland, and positive values are gains of timberland. c The classification of owner or land class assigned to a plot in 1986-87 was verified in the 1997 inventory. In some cases, updates were made to the 1986-87 data. 3,615 777 Total volume in 1997, based on remeasured plots only Net change 1,297 -76 -444 -166 32 103 Changes in owner— From other public From forest industry From other private Growth, mortality, and harvest— Periodic gross growth Periodic mortality Periodic removals -106 Net change 54 8 -165 -3 10,091 2,977 19 14 -139 — 9,300 Forest industry 2,864 Other public Volume changes due to: Changes in land class c — Nonforest to timberland Other forest to timberland Timberland to nonforest Timberland to other forest Volume published in 1986-87 Estimate of 1986-87 volume, Based on remeasured plots only Description Softwood species Table 28a—Estimated changes in net volume of growing-stock on nonfederal timberland, by species group and owner class, western Oregon, 1986-87, 1997a b 110 2,538 Total volume in 1997 based on all sample plots 3,987 4,051 581 2,094 -76 -1,437 169 63 -32 138 -77 1,463 1,474 160 499 -19 -320 -127 — 11 -138 111 117 48 -54 1,330 1,269 Other private 7,988 7,969 1,429 3,594 -137 -2,028 — — — — 21 135 62 -176 6,519 5,871 537 561 190 222 -26 -6 -23 -23 — — 22 1 25 -4 350 411 Other public Million cubic feet All owners 527 562 -66 267 -26 -307 85 23 -15 77 5 5 — — 561 647 Forest industry 731 714 111 219 -16 -92 -62 — 15 -77 -9 14 25 -48 674 803 Other private Hardwood species — = less than 500,000 cubic feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Negative values are losses of timberland, and positive values are gains of timberland. c The classification of owner or land class assigned to a plot in 1986 was verified in the 1997 inventory. In some cases, updates were made to the 1986 data. 2,444 689 1,001 -42 -270 -42 -63 21 — Total volume in 1997, based on remeasured plots only Net change Growth, mortality, and harvest— Periodic gross growth Periodic mortality Periodic removals Net change Changes in owner— From other public From forest industry From other private -14 Net change 11 — -88 3,378 1,811 6 14 -34 2,924 Forest industry 1,679 Other public Volume changes due to: Changes in land classc — Nonforest to timberland Other forest to timberland Timberland to nonforest Volume published in 1986 Estimate of 1986 volume, based on remeasured plots only Description Softwood species 1,795 1,838 234 708 -69 -405 — — — — 18 20 50 -52 1,585 1,861 All owners Table 28b—Estimated changes in net volume of growing-stock on nonfederal timberland, by species group and owner class, northwest Oregon, 1986, 1997a b 111 -93 -101 11 72 -18 Net change Changes in owner— From other public From forest industry From other private Net change 363 Total volume in 1997 based on all sample plots 3,902 4,074 581 1,949 -57 -1,311 317 101 -49 265 -13 1,048 807 -148 415 -3 -560 -299 — 38 -337 -10 21 -31 1,265 983 Other private 5,313 5,265 355 2,450 -81 -2,014 — — — — -115 65 -180 5,025 4,592 48 56 -1 17 — -18 16 — 10 6 5 8 -3 36 76 Other public Million cubic feet All owners 481 502 55 199 -33 -111 82 — -10 92 -40 — -40 404 511 Forest industry 352 396 90 106 -7 -9 -98 — — -98 -14 20 -34 419 444 Other private Hardwood species — = less than 500,000 cubic feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Negative values are losses of timberland, and positive values are gains of timberland. c The classification of owner or land class assigned to a plot in 1987 was verified in the 1997 inventory. In some cases, updates were made to the 1987 data. 384 -78 Total volume in 1997, based on remeasured plots only Net change 87 -22 -143 12 -105 Volume changes due to: Changes in land classc— Nonforest to timberland Timberland to nonforest Growth, mortality, and harvest— Periodic gross growth Periodic mortality Periodic removals 3,189 572 32 -45 2,976 Forest industry 634 Other public Volume published in 1987 Estimate of 1987 volume, based on remeasured plots only Description Softwood species 881 953 144 322 -40 -138 — — — — -50 28 -78 860 1,031 All owners Table 28c—Estimated changes in net volume of growing-stock on nonfederal timberland, by species group and owner class, west-central Oregon, 1987, 1997a b 112 29 Net change 783 Total volume in 1997, based on all sample plots 3,594 3,661 27 2,087 -58 -2,002 125 2 -91 214 -16 1,505 1,406 133 629 -28 -468 -154 — 91 -245 34 105 3 -66 -8 1,394 1,204 Other private 5,882 5,854 327 2,925 -98 -2,500 — — — — 17 116 11 -94 -16 5,511 5,156 Other public 117 131 11 26 -15 -- 13 — — 13 — — — — — 131 123 Million cubic feet All owners 1,031 944 114 440 -56 -270 -45 -23 -55 33 -10 — 11 -18 -3 840 889 Forest industry 508 493 54 145 -19 -72 32 23 55 -46 18 27 25 -28 -6 413 505 Other private Hardwood species — = less than 500,000 cubic feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Negative values are losses of timberland, and positive values are gains of timberland. c The classification of owner or land class assigned to a plot in 1986 was verified in the 1997 inventory. In some cases, updates were made to the 1986 data. 787 167 Total volume in 1997, based on remeasured plots only Net change 210 -12 -31 -2 — 31 Changes in owner— From other public From forest industry From other private Growth, mortality, and harvest— Periodic gross growth Periodic mortality Periodic removals — Net change 12 8 -28 -8 3,525 592 — — — — 3,400 Forest industry 551 Other public Volume changes due to: Changes in land classc — Nonforest to timberland Other forest to timberland Timberland to nonforest Timberland to other forest Volume published in 1986 Estimate of 1986 volume, based on remeasured plots only Description Softwood species 1,657 1,569 177 610 -91 -342 — — — — 8 27 36 -46 -9 1,384 1,516 All owners Table 28d—Estimated changes in net volume of growing-stock on nonfederal timberland, by species group and owner class, southwest Oregon, 1986, 1997a b 113 -195 Net change 15,276 Total volume in 1997, based on all sample plots 41,679 42,786 3,060 23,543 -427 -20,056 2,840 817 -633 2,656 -452 All owners Other public 15,299 13,960 1,005 6,496 -96 -5,395 2,645 — 537 -3,182 636 923 244 -501 -30 14,964 12,363 72,253 71,722 7,404 35,656 -772 -27,480 — — — — -366 1,101 317 -1,748 -36 64,685 58,531 2,223 2,421 805 951 -91 -55 10 -36 13 33 40 27 36 -23 — 1,567 1,803 Million board feet, Scribner rule Other private 4,995 4,891 462 2,795 -205 -2,128 348 36 -189 501 -151 9 23 -180 -3 4,232 5,107 Forest industry 4,381 4,580 1,105 1,606 -64 -437 -358 — 176 -534 86 163 170 -247 — 3,747 3,888 Other private Hardwood species 11,599 11,892 2,372 5,352 -359 -2,621 — — — — -25 199 229 -450 -3 9,546 10,799 All owners — = less than 500,000 board feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Negative values are losses of timberland, and positive values are gains of timberland. c The classification of owner or land class assigned to a plot in 1986-87 was verified in the 1997 inventory. In some cases, updates were made to the 1986-87 data. 14,975 3,339 Total volume in 1997, based on remeasured plots only Net change 5,617 -249 -2,029 -817 96 526 Changes in owner— From other public From forest industry From other private Growth, mortality, and harvest— Periodic gross growth Periodic mortality Periodic removals -551 137 15 -598 -6 37,339 12,382 41 58 -649 — 34,383 Forest industry 11,786 Other public Net change Volume changes due to: Changes in land classc — Nonforest to timberland Other forest to timberland Timberland to nonforest Timberland to other forest Volume published in 1986-87 Estimate of 1986-87 volume, based on remeasured plots only Description Softwood species Table 29a—Estimated changes in net volume of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by species group and owner class, western Oregon, 1986-87, 1997a b 114 -196 Net change 10,089 9,646 2,968 14,968 15,106 2,473 8,489 -167 -5,849 733 266 -110 577 -335 6,171 6,170 715 2,235 -47 -1,473 -537 — 40 -577 534 482 237 -185 — 5,353 4,931 Other private Other public 31,229 30,922 6,262 15,010 -305 -8,443 — — — — 183 537 295 -649 — 24,476 21,594 1,692 1,739 743 786 -43 — — — — — 27 — 36 -9 — 968 1,032 Million board feet, Scribner rule All owners 1,468 1,538 -154 884 -12 -1,026 199 — -36 235 9 9 — — — 1,484 1,785 Forest industry 2,414 2,534 624 885 -36 -225 -199 — 36 -235 112 14 147 -49 — 1,996 2,119 Other private Hardwood species 5,574 5,811 1,214 2,556 -91 -1,251 — — — — 148 23 183 -58 — 4,448 4,937 All owners — = less than 500,000 board feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Negative values are losses of timberland, and positive values are gains of timberland. c The classification of owner or land class assigned to a plot in 1986 was verified in the 1997 inventory. In some cases, updates were made to the 1986 data. Total volume in 1997, based on all sample plots Total volume in 1997, based on remeasured plots only Net change 4,286 -92 -1,226 -266 70 — Changes in owner— From other public From forest industry From other private Growth, mortality, and harvest— Periodic gross growth Periodic mortality Periodic removals -16 35 — -370 — 12,234 6,889 20 58 -94 — 10,326 Forest industry 6,337 Other public Net change Volume changes due to: Changes in land classc — Nonforest to timberland Other forest to timberland Timberland to nonforest Timberland to other forest Volume published in 1986 Estimate of 1986 volume, based on remeasured plots only Description Softwood species Table 29b—Estimated changes in net volume of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by species group and owner class, northwest Oregon, 1986, 1997a b 115 -534 Net change 1,692 Total volume in 1997, based on all sample plots 14,545 15,308 2,029 7,564 -116 -5,419 1,582 544 -204 1,242 -77 3,999 3,173 -318 1,852 — -2,170 -1,464 — 177 -1,641 -11 100 -111 4,966 3,722 Other private Other public 20,235 20,289 1,372 9,887 -227 -8,288 — — — — -624 208 -832 19,538 17,813 157 163 -7 48 — -55 32 — 13 19 12 27 -15 126 276 Million board feet, Scribner rule All owners 1,228 1,238 177 556 -86 -293 210 — -13 223 -121 — -121 972 1,279 Forest industry 1,007 1,154 349 381 -14 -18 -242 — — -242 -66 88 -154 1,112 981 Other private Hardwood species — = less than 500,000 board feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Negative values are losses of timberland, and positive values are gains of timberland. c The classification of owner or land class assigned to a plot in 1987 was verified in the 1997 inventory. In some cases, updates were made to the 1987 data. 1,808 -338 471 -111 -698 -118 Total volume in 1997, based on remeasured plots only Net change Growth, mortality, and harvest— Periodic gross growth Periodic mortality Periodic removals Net change -544 27 399 21 -555 Volume changes due to: Changes in land classc — Nonforest to timberland Timberland to nonforest Changes in owner— From other public From forest industry From other private 11,774 2,798 87 -164 11,079 Forest industry 3,012 Other public Volume published in 1987 Estimate of 1987 volume, based on remeasured plots only Description Softwood species 2,392 2,555 519 985 -100 -366 — — — -175 115 -290 2,210 2,536 All owners Table 29c—Estimated changes in net volume of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by species group and owner class, westcentral Oregon, 1987, 1997a b 116 3,495 Total volume in 1997, based on all sample plots 12,166 12,372 -1,444 7,488 -144 -8,788 524 7 -320 837 -40 5,129 4,617 503 2,408 -49 -1,856 644 — 320 -964 115 341 7 -203 -30 4,643 3,710 Other private Other public 20,789 20,511 -233 10,756 -240 -10,749 — — — — 75 355 22 -266 -36 20,668 19,124 374 505 54 102 -48 — -22 -36 — 14 — — — — — 475 495 Million board feet, Scribner rule All owners 2,299 2,114 439 1,354 -106 -809 -61 36 -140 43 -39 — 23 -59 -3 1,775 2,043 Forest industry 961 891 132 340 -14 -194 83 — 140 -57 40 61 23 -44 — 638 788 Other private Hardwood species — = less than 500,000 board feet found. a Totals may be off because of rounding; data subject to sampling error. b Negative values are losses of timberland, and positive values are gains of timberland. c The classification of owner or land class assigned to a plot in 1986 was verified in the 1997 inventory. In some cases, updates were made to the 1986 data. 3,522 707 859 -47 -105 120 -7 — 127 Total volume in 1997, based on remeasured plots only Net change Growth, mortality, and harvest— Periodic gross growth Periodic mortality Periodic removals Net change Changes in owner— From other public From forest industry From other private — Net change 14 15 -63 -6 13,330 2,695 — — — — 12,978 Forest industry 2,437 Other public Volume changes due to: Changes in land classc — Nonforest to timberland Other forest to timberland Timberland to nonforest Timberland to other forest Volume published in 1986 Estimate of 1986 volume based on remeasured plots only Description Softwood species Table 29d—Estimated changes in net volume of sawtimber on nonfederal timberland, by species group and owner class, southwest Oregon, 1986, 1997a b 3,634 3,511 624 1,796 -168 -1,004 — — — — 1 61 46 -103 -3 2,888 3,326 All owners Table 30a—Estimated timber harvest volume by year and owner class, western Oregon, 1997 Year USFS BLM Private Public Total Thousand board feet, Scribner rule 1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 2,222,200 2,280,600 2,366,600 2,599,500 2,179,400 2,046,900 2,459,074 2,233,410 1,814,053 2,049,449 2,623,989 2,598,350 1,984,502 1,509,173 1,910,866 1,788,847 2,040,835 2,168,621 1,562,313 1,185,197 950,757 1,699,479 1,879,568 2,078,332 2,321,819 2,085,180 2,237,581 1,938,334 1,012,450 999,821 617,125 416,174 256,299 197,895 189,543 203,961 1,084,495 1,344,172 1,614,900 1,227,995 1,200,955 1,064,993 1,430,983 1,179,693 1,013,675 1,304,362 1,385,358 1,454,916 999,822 609,454 1,052,513 981,535 812,808 923,242 781,453 662,418 299,863 750,760 879,704 875,121 1,016,923 1,069,962 1,398,767 988,006 654,249 431,595 469,987 338,713 82,980 124,655 253,967 127,305 3,557,388 3,286,876 3,469,082 3,451,309 3,517,276 3,364,464 3,740,345 3,465,667 3,212,384 3,386,347 3,214,309 3,050,196 2,974,586 3,068,680 2,989,498 3,063,233 3,064,153 2,773,817 2,561,131 2,225,969 2,850,924 2,813,621 2,850,422 2,938,941 3,079,296 2,808,655 2,778,066 3,079,577 2,692,540 2,670,437 2,766,905 2,856,275 2,585,910 2,910,499 2,508,241 2,630,328 167,607 208,981 241,998 251,468 221,193 140,259 170,051 214,099 156,778 171,094 257,286 313,586 230,936 179,855 220,595 231,824 252,314 247,221 199,690 234,277 184,197 272,591 280,835 297,838 237,788 239,977 307,711 226,284 167,096 121,466 163,497 139,998 150,177 129,962 139,223 209,178 7,031,690 7,120,629 7,692,580 7,530,272 7,118,824 6,616,616 7,800,453 7,092,869 6,196,890 6,911,252 7,480,942 7,417,048 6,189,846 5,367,162 6,173,472 6,065,439 6,170,110 6,112,901 5,104,587 4,307,861 4,285,741 5,536,451 5,890,529 6,190,232 6,655,826 6,203,774 6,722,125 6,232,201 4,526,335 4,223,319 4,017,514 3,751,160 3,075,366 3,363,011 3,090,974 3,170,772 Source: Oregon Timber Harvest Report, Oregon Department of Forestry. 117 Table 30b—Estimated timber harvest volume by year and owner class, northwest Oregon, 1997 Year USFS BLM Private Public Total Thousand board feet, Scribner rule 1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 390,900 412,900 422,100 480,100 421,800 375,100 472,784 446,991 360,446 318,842 464,717 494,720 358,458 283,323 361,446 306,621 270,352 394,212 394,749 292,298 196,266 360,466 426,389 422,075 497,467 364,695 407,889 270,180 156,296 210,406 113,020 66,929 34,484 30,013 23,373 44,040 150,941 123,382 154,902 129,863 154,143 143,530 183,634 121,992 146,307 154,795 176,670 198,424 127,570 53,861 121,695 127,970 88,488 94,543 106,620 102,440 29,294 105,212 98,300 111,711 109,714 117,999 142,893 123,888 72,173 69,918 74,348 49,007 15,765 14,832 19,067 16,725 593,205 660,941 705,875 754,899 712,167 637,594 855,550 810,336 723,979 848,997 666,540 675,907 617,685 644,605 734,873 662,834 797,421 733,429 576,885 517,775 618,724 672,437 677,769 742,857 831,087 855,502 880,307 1,003,233 753,843 879,975 941,818 965,834 971,388 1,089,748 926,616 901,271 Source: Oregon Timber Harvest Report, Oregon Department of Forestry. 118 98,180 138,316 123,532 102,707 104,513 74,514 109,425 104,378 65,948 83,576 133,711 172,267 81,617 83,401 123,960 120,577 107,762 139,334 110,079 151,906 89,897 185,646 195,983 160,313 145,355 134,218 186,547 111,663 87,122 73,338 88,955 74,513 109,108 102,902 93,762 146,230 1,233,226 1,335,539 1,406,409 1,467,569 1,392,623 1,230,738 1,621,393 1,483,697 1,296,680 1,406,210 1,441,638 1,541,318 1,185,330 1,065,190 1,341,974 1,218,002 1,264,023 1,361,518 1,188,333 1,064,419 934,181 1,323,761 1,398,441 1,436,956 1,583,623 1,472,414 1,617,636 1,508,964 1,069,434 1,233,637 1,218,141 1,156,283 1,130,745 1,237,495 1,062,818 1,108,266 Table 30c—Estimated timber harvest volume by year and owner class, westcentral Oregon, 1997 Year USFS BLM Private Public Total Thousand board feet, Scribner rule 1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1,126,000 1,046,400 1,052,500 1,229,400 993,900 884,200 1,097,238 1,063,764 845,337 960,677 1,189,473 1,200,929 926,782 680,076 933,300 865,863 967,128 1,044,832 732,494 510,394 504,793 759,576 891,787 1,003,342 1,005,530 1,000,567 1,060,179 843,579 385,025 431,269 290,348 207,833 116,892 74,137 55,156 51,019 266,583 398,909 520,535 319,528 304,721 226,602 311,176 356,449 242,087 309,960 397,117 395,050 291,626 159,346 243,989 247,095 286,638 239,701 200,386 194,710 138,474 193,705 237,292 243,155 282,627 292,213 357,182 243,721 185,727 129,965 122,927 62,036 26,140 29,093 64,823 33,188 1,393,768 1,292,728 1,300,874 1,205,070 1,318,737 1,344,033 1,413,593 1,116,404 1,134,695 1,159,383 1,142,425 1,209,016 1,054,447 1,182,762 1,110,348 1,021,685 991,032 936,352 876,792 772,497 1,072,732 1,037,228 1,060,570 1,025,507 1,072,671 991,357 1,029,179 1,103,195 997,735 897,356 958,544 975,049 874,093 939,452 880,002 868,264 16,631 19,535 25,736 47,428 28,222 10,363 17,641 26,406 24,142 16,643 52,154 32,632 39,502 35,069 42,138 48,487 43,058 29,798 37,501 30,382 25,376 35,168 46,550 42,910 29,341 29,532 42,166 50,670 20,497 21,793 37,530 16,861 20,680 9,039 19,837 20,124 2,802,982 2,757,572 2,899,645 2,801,426 2,645,580 2,465,198 2,839,648 2,563,023 2,246,261 2,446,663 2,781,169 2,837,627 2,312,357 2,057,253 2,329,775 2,183,130 2,287,856 2,250,683 1,847,173 1,507,983 1,741,375 2,025,677 2,236,199 2,314,914 2,390,169 2,313,669 2,488,706 2,241,165 1,588,984 1,480,383 1,409,349 1,261,779 1,037,805 1,051,721 1,019,818 972,595 Source: Oregon Timber Harvest Report, Oregon Department of Forestry. 119 Table 30d—Estimated timber harvest volume by year and owner class, southwest Oregon, 1997 Year USFS BLM Private Public Total Thousand board feet, Scribner rule 1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 705,300 821,300 892,000 890,000 763,700 787,600 889,052 722,655 608,270 769,930 969,799 902,701 699,262 545,774 616,120 616,363 803,355 729,577 435,070 382,505 249,698 579,437 561,392 652,915 818,822 719,918 769,513 824,575 471,129 358,146 213,757 141,412 104,923 93,745 111,014 108,902 666,971 821,881 939,463 778,604 742,091 694,861 936,173 701,252 625,281 839,607 811,571 861,442 580,626 396,247 686,829 606,470 437,682 588,998 474,447 365,268 132,095 451,843 544,112 520,255 624,582 659,750 898,692 620,397 396,349 231,712 272,712 227,670 41,075 80,730 170,077 77,392 1,570,415 1,333,207 1,462,333 1,491,340 1,486,372 1,382,837 1,471,202 1,538,927 1,353,710 1,377,967 1,405,344 1,165,273 1,302,454 1,241,313 1,144,277 1,378,714 1,275,700 1,104,036 1,107,454 935,697 1,159,468 1,103,956 1,112,083 1,170,577 1,175,538 961,796 868,580 973,149 940,962 893,106 866,543 915,392 740,429 881,299 701,623 860,793 Source: Oregon Timber Harvest Report, Oregon Department of Forestry. 120 52,796 51,130 92,730 101,333 88,458 55,382 42,985 83,315 66,688 70,875 71,421 108,687 109,817 61,385 54,497 62,760 101,494 78,089 52,110 51,989 68,924 51,777 38,302 94,615 63,092 76,227 78,998 63,951 59,477 26,335 37,012 48,624 20,389 18,021 25,624 42,824 2,995,482 3,027,518 3,386,526 3,261,277 3,080,621 2,920,680 3,339,412 3,046,149 2,653,949 3,058,379 3,258,135 3,038,103 2,692,159 2,244,719 2,501,723 2,664,307 2,618,231 2,500,700 2,069,081 1,735,459 1,610,185 2,187,013 2,255,889 2,438,362 2,682,034 2,417,691 2,615,783 2,482,072 1,867,917 1,509,299 1,390,024 1,333,098 906,816 1,073,795 1,008,338 1,089,911 This page has been left blank intentionally. Document continues on next page. . This page has been left blank intentionally. Document continues on next page. . This page has been left blank intentionally. Document continues on next page. . The Forest Service of the U.S. Department of Agriculture is dedicated to the principle of multiple use management of the Nation’s forest resources for sustained yields of wood, water, forage, wildlife, and recreation. Through forestry research, cooperation with the States and private forest owners, and management of the National Forests and National Grasslands, it strives—as directed by Congress—to provide increasingly greater service to a growing Nation. The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) prohibits discrimination in all its programs and activities on the basis of race, color, national origin, gender, religion, age, disability, political beliefs, sexual orientation, or marital or family status. (Not all prohibited bases apply to all programs.) 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