United States Department of Agriculture Forest Service Northern Research Station Resource Bulletin NRS-74 Missouri Timber Industry: An Assessment of Timber Product Output and Use 2009 Ronald J. Piva Thomas B. Treiman Abstract In 2009, there were 401 active primary wood-processing mills in Missouri, 12 more mills than in 2006. However, between those years, the number of sawmills that process more than 1 million board feet decreased by 20 mills, and the total volume processed decreased by more than 20 percent. Industrial roundwood harvested decreased by 18 percent, from 125.5 million cubic feet in 2006 to 102.6 million cubic feet in 2009. Of the harvested volume, 95.6 million cubic feet was used by primary wood-processing mills in Missouri and 7.0 million cubic feet was sent to primary wood-processing mills in other states and countries. Saw logs accounted for 90 percent of the total harvest. The harvesting of industrial roundwood produced 71.6 million cubic feet of harvest residues. Primary wood-processing mills generated 1.5 million green tons of mill residues. Five percent of the mill residues generated were not used for other secondary uses. Cover Photo Log truck. Photo used with permission of Missouri Department of Conservation. Manuscript received for publication June 2012 Published by: For additional copies: U.S. Forest Service Northern Research Station 11 Campus Blvd, Suite 200 Newtown Square, PA 19073-3294 U.S. Forest Service Publications Distribution 359 Main Road Delaware, OH 43015-8640 Fax: 740-368-0152 January 2013 Visit our Web site: www.nrs.fs.fed.us Contents Introduction........................................................................................................................ 1 The Authors..................................................................................................................... 1 Study Methods................................................................................................................... 2 Primary Timber Industry in Missouri............................................................................... 4 Industrial Roundwood..................................................................................................... 4 Saw Logs........................................................................................................................ 8 Other Products................................................................................................................ 8 Timber Removals............................................................................................................ 9 Harvest Intensity........................................................................................................... 10 Primary Mill Residues................................................................................................... 12 Acknowledgments........................................................................................................... 12 Literature Cited................................................................................................................ 13 Appendix.......................................................................................................................... 14 Definition of Terms........................................................................................................ 14 Common and Scientific Names of Tree Species by Species Group............................. 18 Tables........................................................................................................................... 23 INTRODUCTION Missouri’s primary wood products manufacturing industry1 employs 17,700 workers and has a total value of shipments of $5.9 billion (U.S. Census Bureau 2007). Given the importance of this industry to the economy of Missouri, this bulletin analyzes recent forest industry trends and reports the results of a detailed study of forest industry, industrial roundwood production, and associated primary mill wood and bark residue in 2009. Such detailed information is necessary for intelligent planning and decisionmaking in wood procurement, economic research, forest resources management, and forest industry development. The last published report of timber product output and use in Missouri was for a 2006 study and is used here as a basis for comparison. When new surveys are completed, errors and omissions from previous surveys are corrected. As a result of our ongoing efforts to improve the survey’s efficiency and reliability, changes may have been made to the previous survey’s data. All comparisons and analysis in this report are based on the reprocessed data from earlier surveys, which may not match earlier published data. Rows and columns of supporting tables may not sum due to rounding, but data in each table cell are accurately displayed. Information about the forest land resources of Missouri is available at the Forest Inventory and Analysis Web site at: http://nrs.fs.fed.us/fia/data-tools/statereports/MO. The Authors RONALD J. PIVA, a forester, works for the Forest Inventory and Analysis program at the Northern Research Station in St. Paul, MN. He received a B.S. in forest management from the University of MissouriColumbia in 1984 and joined the Forest Service in 1987. THOMAS B. TREIMAN, a natural resource economist, works at the Missouri Department of Conservation’s Conservation Research Center, Columbia, MO. He received a Ph.D. in natural resource economics from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. 1North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) 321–wood product manufacturing, and NAICS 322–paper manufacturing. 1 STUDY METHODS This study was a cooperative effort between the Forestry Division of the Missouri Department of Conservation (MDC) and the Forest Inventory and Analysis (FIA) unit at the Northern Research Station (NRS) of the U.S. Forest Service. The FIA program is responsible for providing forest resource statistics for all ownerships across the United States, including timber product outputs. MDC Forestry Division personnel surveyed all known primary wood-using mills, using questionnaires supplied by NRS, to obtain a 100-percent response rate. The questionnaires were designed to determine the size and composition of the State’s primary wood-using industry, its use of roundwood, and its generation and disposition of wood residues. Completed questionnaires were sent to the NRS for processing and analysis. As part of data processing, all industrial roundwood volumes reported on the questionnaires were converted to standard units of measure using regional conversion factors (Table 1). Timber removals by source of material and harvest residues generated during logging were estimated from standard product volumes using factors developed from logging utilization studies previously conducted by the NRS. To provide a complete assessment of Missouri’s timber product output, data on the State’s industrial roundwood receipts were loaded into a regional timber removals database where they were supplemented with data on out-of-State uses of Missouri roundwood. Certain terms used in this report—retained, exports, imports, production, and receipts— have specialized meanings and relationships unique to the FIA program that surveys timber product output (TPO) (Fig. 1). Figure 1.—The movement of industrial roundwood. 2 3 0.158 0.2 20 -- -- 1 1 0.21804 -- -- 0.2322 -- 1.14 1.38 Doyle scale MBF 0.17604 -- -- 0. 1817 -- 1.04 1.08 Scribner scale MBF 0.0329193 0.04167 4.348 -- 0.4167 -- 0.2174 Green tons 0.079 0.1 10 0.079 1 0.5 0.5 Standard cords Reported unit of measure 7.9 1 1,000 6.7 -- -- -- Thousand pieces 1 0.79 0.0079 1 0.079 0.158 0.158 Thousand cubic feet Reported volume times conversion factor = standard volume. For example, a sawmill reports receiving 100 green tons of industrial roundwood; to convert to MBF International ¼-inch rule, 100 X 0.2174 = 21.74 MBF International ¼-inch rule. a (Thousand cubic feet) Cabin logs, excelsior/shavings, and miscellaneous products (Thousand pieces) Posts (Pieces) Poles (Thousand cubic feet) Mine timbers (Standard cords) Pulp and composite products, and industrial fuelwood (MBF International ¼-inch rule) Veneer logs and cooperage (MBF International ¼-inch rule) Saw logs and handles Product (Standard unit of measure) International ¼-inch rule MBF Table 1.—Conversion factors from reported unit of measure to standard unit of measurea PRIMARY TIMBER INDUSTRY IN Missouri Industrial Roundwood Mill receipts • Missouri’s active primary wood-using industry included 366 sawmills, 9 cooperage mills, 9 post and pole mills, 5 charcoal plants, and 12 mills that produced other miscellaneous products (Table 2, Fig. 2). Figure 2.—Missouri Forest Inventory Units and approximate locations of active primary wood-using mills, 2009. 4 • The total number of sawmills in the State increased from 356 in 2006 to 366 in 2009. However, the number of large sawmills (mills sawing more than 5 million board feet per year) fell from 38 in 2006 to 25 in 2009, and the number of medium sawmills (mills sawing between 1 and 5 million board feet per year) fell from 151 to 144. Many of these mills were still active, but not operating at full capacity. • All of the other mill types increased in number except for pulp mills, which remained at 1, and handle mills, which fell from 4 in 2006 to 1 in 2009. • Receipts of industrial roundwood at Missouri primary wood-using mills totaled 102.9 million cubic feet in 2009, a decrease of 21 percent from the 129.7 million cubic feet received in 2006 (Table 3). • Ninety-three percent of the industrial roundwood processed by Missouri’s primary wood-using mills was harvested from forests within the State. Arkansas and Illinois each supplied 2 percent of the industrial roundwood consumed by Missouri mills, with the remainder coming from Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Nebraska, Ohio, Oklahoma, Tennessee, West Virginia, and Wisconsin (Table 4). • Ninety-three percent of the industrial roundwood processed by Missouri primary woodusing mills was made up of hardwoods. Red oaks and white oaks combined accounted for 80 percent of the total volume processed. Other important species processed were black walnut, hickories, shortleaf pine, eastern redcedar, and cottonwood. Industrial roundwood production (harvest) • Industrial roundwood production decreased by 18 percent, from 125.5 million cubic feet in 2006 to 102.6 million cubic feet in 2009 (Table 5, Fig. 3). Industrial Roundwood Production! (million cubic feet)! Saw logs! Other products! 150! 125! 100! 75! 50! 25! 0! 1991! 1994! 1997! 2000! Survey Year! 2003! 2006! 2009! Figure 3.—Industrial roundwood production by product and survey year, Missouri (Hackett et al. 1993, Piva and Jones 1997, Piva et al. 2000, Piva and Treiman 2003, Treiman and Piva 2005, Treiman et al. 2008). 5 • Ninety-three percent of industrial roundwood harvested in Missouri was retained for processing by primary wood-using mills in the State. Mills in Kentucky and Iowa received 43 and 26 percent, respectively, of Missouri’s industrial roundwood exports. (Table 6). Nine percent of Missouri’s industrial roundwood exports (predominantly black walnut and white oak) went to other countries. • The Eastern Ozarks Forest Inventory Unit produced 45.1 million cubic feet of industrial roundwood, 44 percent of total State production, followed by the Southwestern Ozark unit (21.1 million cubic feet, 21 percent of total), the Prairie unit (16.1 million cubic feet, 16 percent of total), the Riverborder unit (11.6 million cubic feet, 11 percent of total), and the Northwestern Ozark unit (8.7 million cubic feet, 8 percent of total). • The Southwestern Ozark unit, with a 6-percent increase, was the only unit in the State that reported an increase in production of industrial roundwood from 2006 to 2009. Industrial roundwood production decreased by 19 percent in the Eastern Ozark unit between 2006 and 2009, by 22 percent in the Northwestern Ozark unit, by 28 percent in the Prairie unit, and by 31 percent in the Riverborder unit (Fig. 4). Industrial Roundwood Production! (million cubic feet)! 2006! 2009! 60! 45! 30! 15! 0! Eastern Ozark Southwestern Northwestern Prairie unit! Riverborder unit! unit! Ozark unit! Ozark unit! Forest Inventory Unit! Figure 4.—Industrial roundwood production by Forest Inventory Unit, Missouri, 2006 and 2009. 6 • Red oaks and white oaks combined accounted for nearly 75 percent of the total industrial roundwood harvested. Black walnut (5 percent), hickory (5 percent), shortleaf pine (4 percent), and eastern redcedar (3 percent) were other major species groups harvested (Table 7, Fig. 5). Industrial Roundwood Production! (million cubic feet)! 50! 40! 30! 20! 10! 0! Shortleaf pine! Eastern redcedar! Other softwoods! Red oak group! White oak Black walnut! group! Species Group! Hickory! Cottonwood! Sycamore! Other hardwoods! Figure 5.—Industrial roundwood production by species group, Missouri, 2009. Industrial Roundwood Production! (million cubic feet)! • The production of saw logs accounted for 89 percent of total industrial roundwood production. Pulp and composite products and veneer logs were second in production, accounting for 4 percent and 3 percent of the total volume, respectively (Table 8, Fig. 6). Softwood! 100! Hardwood! 80! 60! 40! 20! 0! Saw logs! Cooperage! Pulpwood! Other prodcuts! Product! Figure 6.—Industrial roundwood production by product, Missouri, 2009. 7 Saw Logs • Receipts at Missouri sawmills totaled 536.8 million board feet in 2009, a decrease of 17 percent from 648.8 million board feet in 2006 (Table 9). Sawmills in the Eastern Ozark unit processed 44 percent (235.7 million board feet) of the State’s total saw log receipts. • Even though the number of total sawmills reported in 2009 increased from 356 mills in 2006 to 366 mills in 2009, the number of mills that processed more than 1 million board feet decreased by 20 mills. Many of these mills were still operating in 2009, but at a lower production capacity, thus moving them to a lower production size category. • Saw log production decreased by 16 percent between 2006 and 2009, from 618.3 million board feet to 517.7 million board feet. • Three-quarters of the saw logs produced in Missouri in 2009 were from the red oak or white oak species groups. Other important species groups for saw log production in Missouri were hickory (5 percent of total), black walnut (4 percent of total), shortleaf pine (3 percent of total), and cottonwood (3 percent of total) (Fig. 7). 2006! 350! 2009! Saw Log Production! (million board feet)! 300! 250! 200! 150! 100! 50! 0! Shortleaf pine! Eastern redcedar! Other softwoods! Red oak group! White oak Hickory! group! Species Group! Black walnut! Cottonwood! Sycamore! Other hardwoods! Figure 7.—Saw log production by species group, Missouri, 2006 and 2009. Other Products • Cooperage, at 3.8 million cubic feet, was the second most harvested product from Missouri’s forests in 2009. Cooperage production fell by 28 percent from 2006 to 2009. Only white oaks are used for cooperage in Missouri. • Despite having only one pulp mill in the State, pulpwood is the third most harvested product. More than 95 percent of the 3.0 million cubic feet harvested went to mills in other states. See Piva (in prep) for the results of a separate Northern Region pulpwood study conducted for 2009. 8 • The remaining 3 percent of the industrial roundwood produced in Missouri was sent to cabin log mills, veneer mills, post and pole mills, industrial fuelwood mills, handle mills, charcoal plants, and excelsior/shavings mills. • Residential fuelwood is not included in this report. Timber Removals • During the harvest of industrial roundwood from Missouri’s forests in 2009, 102.6 million cubic feet of wood material was used for primary wood products and another 71.6 million cubic feet of wood material was left on the ground as harvest residues (Tables 10 and 13, Fig. 8). Growing-stock sources Sawtimber-size trees Poletimber-size trees Logging residue Logging
slash" 29%" Not utilizedharvest residues Logging residue 12% Non-growing-stock sources Saplings, limbwood, cull, dead trees, and nonforest trees Logging slash Sawtimber 46% Utilizedindustrial roundwood Saplings, limbwood, cull, dead trees, and nonforest trees 11% Poletimber 2% Figure 8.—Distribution of timber removals for industrial roundwood by source of material, Missouri, 2009. • Growing-stock sources (merchantable material), at 104.3 million cubic feet, were the largest component of removals for industrial roundwood production. Eighty-one percent of the growing stock removed was used for products and 19 percent was left as logging residue. Sawtimber-size trees accounted for 95 percent of the growing-stock volume used for products. • Non-growing-stock sources of industrial roundwood amounted to 69.8 million cubic feet of wood material removed. Only 27 percent of this material was used for products; the remainder was left on the ground as logging slash. Nearly 70 percent of the nongrowing-stock material used for industrial roundwood products came from cull trees. The remainder came from nonforest trees, dead trees, limbwood, and saplings. 9 • Fifty-five percent of the total growing-stock material removed from Missouri’s timberland came from the Eastern Ozark unit, followed by the Southwest Ozark unit with 20 percent, the Prairie unit with 15 percent, the Riverborder unit with 11 percent, and the Northwest Ozark unit with 9 percent (Table 11). • Nearly 400.0 million board feet was removed from Missouri’s sawtimber inventory. The red oak and white oak groups accounted for 75 percent of the total sawtimber volume removed (Table 12). Harvest Intensity • Statewide in 2009, FIA reported 34.3 cubic feet of annual net growth of live trees per acre per year on forest land (total annual net growth of live trees divided by forest land area) and 10.5 cubic feet of harvest-related live tree removals per acre per year on forest land (total annual harvest removals of live trees divided by forest land area) (Moser et al. 2010). These are the average net growth and average harvest removals each year from 2005 through 2009. • Based on this TPO study for Missouri, the current removals for the year 2009 averaged 11.3 cubic feet of total harvest removals per acre of forest land. Seventy-two of Missouri’s 114 counties (63 percent) had less than 10.0 cubic feet of harvest removals per acre of forest land. Only five counties had more than 25.0 cubic feet of harvest removals per acre of forest land (Fig. 9). (For reference, a cord of roundwood contains about 80 cubic feet of wood.) • The Eastern Ozark unit had the greatest harvest intensity: 17.9 cubic feet of wood removals per acre of forest land. The second greatest intensity was in the Southwestern Ozark unit with 12.5 cubic feet of removals per forest land acre, followed by the Prairie unit (8.4 cubic feet/acre), the Riverborder unit (7.9 cubic feet/acre), and the Northwestern Ozark unit (5.7 cubic feet/acre). • Missouri’s net volume of live trees on forest land in 2009 was 20.4 billion cubic feet (Moser et al. 2010). The 174.2 million cubic feet of total wood material removed because of harvesting (Table 10) represents only 0.8 percent of the total live volume of trees on forest land. 10 Figure 9.—Harvest intensity for industrial roundwood production, Missouri, 2009. 11 Primary Mill Residues • In converting industrial roundwood into products, Missouri’s primary woodusing industries generated a combined 1.5 million green tons of coarse wood residue (slabs, edgings, and veneer cores), fine wood residue (sawdust and veneer clippings), and bark residue (Table 14, Fig. 10). • Thirty-four percent of mill residues generated were used to make charcoal. Fiber products and industrial fuelwood each consumed 11 percent of mill residues; residential fuelwood consumed 5 percent; and all other uses, such as livestock bedding, mulch, and small dimension lumber, consumed 34 percent. Only 5 percent of residues generated went unused (Fig. 11). Bark residue 21% Fine residue 29% Not used! 5%! Fiber products! 11%! Coarse residue 50% Figure 10.—Distribution of residues generated by primary wood-using mills by type of residue, Missouri, 2009. Other uses! 34%! Residential fuel! 5%! Charcoal! 34%! Industrial fuel! 11%! Figure 11.—Distribution of residues generated by primary wood-using mills by method of disposal, Missouri, 2009. • The most common disposal method for coarse wood residue and sawdust was for the production of charcoal; more than 35 percent of the combined total went for this use. More than 50 percent of the bark residue went for miscellaneous uses such as mulch and animal bedding. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS Special thanks are given to the primary wood-using firms for supplying information for this study and to the Missouri Department of Conservation, Forestry Division, whose cooperation in canvassing survey respondents is greatly appreciated. Figures 2 and 8 were created by Brian Walters, forester with FIA in St. Paul, MN. 12 LITERATURE CITED Hackett, R.L.; Jones, S.G.; Piva, R.J. 1993. Missouri timber industry – assessment of timber product output and use, 1991. Resour. Bull. NC-151. St. Paul, MN: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, North Central Forest Experiment Station. 46 p. Moser, W.K.; Barnett, C.H.; Hansen, M.H.; Treiman, T.B. 2010. Missouri’s forest resources, 2009. Res. Note. NRS-80. Newtown Square, PA: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Northern Research Station. 4 p. [Available only online at: http://nrs.fs.fed.us/pubs/36829] Piva, R.J. In prep. Pulpwood production in the Northern Region, 2009. Resour. Bull. Newtown Square, PA: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Northern Research Station. xx p. Piva, R.J.; Jones, S.G. 1997. Missouri timber industry – an assessment of timber product output and use, 1994. Resour. Bull. NC-184. St. Paul, MN: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, North Central Forest Experiment Station. 54 p. Piva, R.J.; Treiman, T.B. 2003. Missouri timber industry – an assessment of timber product output and use, 2000. Resour. Bull. NC-223. St. Paul, MN: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, North Central Research Station. 75 p. Piva, R.J.; Jones, S.G.; Barnickol, L.W.; Treiman, T.B. 2000. Missouri timber industry – an assessment of timber product output and use, 1997. Resour. Bull. NC-197. St. Paul, MN: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, North Central Research Station. 53 p. Treiman, T.B.; Piva, R.J. 2005. Missouri timber industry – an assessment of timber product output and use, 2003. Resour. Bull. NC-250. St. Paul, MN: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, North Central Research Station. 74 p. Treiman, T.B.; Tuttle, J.G.; Piva, R.J. 2008. Missouri timber industry – an assessment of timber product output and use, 2006. 75 p. [Available only online at: http://mdc4.mdc. mo.gov/Documents/18636.pdf ]. U.S. Census Bureau. 2007. 2007 economic census. http://www.census.gov/econ/census07/ [Accessed May 2, 2012]. 13 APPENDIX Definition of Terms Board foot. Unit of measure applied to roundwood. It relates to lumber that is 1 foot long, 1 foot wide, and 1 inch thick (or its equivalent). Bolt. A short log no more than 8 feet long, to be sawn for lumber, peeled or sliced for veneer, shaved for excelsior, or converted into shingles, cooperage stock, dimension stock, blocks, blanks, or other products. Central stem. The portion of a tree between a 1-foot stump and the minimum 4.0-inch top diameter outside bark, or point where the central stem breaks into limbs. Coarse mill residue. Wood residue suitable for chipping such as slabs, edgings, and veneer cores. Commercial species. Tree species presently or prospectively suitable for industrial wood products. (Note: Excludes species of typically small size, poor form, or inferior quality such as hophornbeam, Osage-orange, and redbud.) Cull removals. Net volume of rough and rotten trees plus the net volume in sections of the central stem of growing-stock trees that do not meet regional merchantability standards but are harvested for industrial roundwood products. Diameter at breast height (d.b.h.). The outside bark diameter at 4.5 feet above the forest floor on the uphill side of the tree. For determining breast height, the forest floor includes the duff layer that may be present, but does not include unincorporated woody debris that may rise above the ground line. Doyle rule. A simple log rule or formula for estimating the board-foot volume of logs based on a 4-inch slabbing allowance to square the log. This rule is used in the Eastern and Southern United States. Exports. The volume of roundwood utilized by mills outside the state where the timber was harvested. Fine mill residue. Wood residue not suitable for chipping, such as sawdust and veneer clippings. 14 Forest land. Land at least 10-percent stocked with trees of any size, or formerly having had such tree cover, and not currently developed for nonforest use. (Note: Stocking is measured by comparing specified standards with basal area and/or number of trees, age or size, and spacing.) The minimum area for classification of forest land is 1 acre. Roadside, streamside, and shelterbelt strips of timber must have a crown width of at least 120 feet to qualify as forest land. Unimproved roads and trails, streams or other bodies of water, or clearings in forest areas shall be classified as forest if less than 120 feet wide. Growing-stock removals. The growing-stock volume removed from timberland by harvesting industrial roundwood products. (Note: Includes sawtimber removals, poletimber removals, and logging residues.) Growing-stock tree. A live timberland tree of commercial species that meets specified standards of size, quality, and merchantability. (Note: Excludes rough, rotten, and dead trees.) Growing-stock volume. Net volume of growing-stock trees 5.0 inches d.b.h. and larger, from 1 foot above the ground to a minimum 4.0-inch top diameter outside bark of the central stem or to the point where the central stem breaks into limbs. Hardwoods. Dicotyledonous trees, usually broad-leaved and deciduous. Harvest residues. The total net volume of unused portions of trees cut or killed by logging. (Note: Includes both logging residues and logging slash.) Industrial fuelwood. A roundwood product, with or without bark, used to generate energy at manufacturing facilities and schools, correctional institutions, or electric generating plants. Imports. The volume of roundwood delivered to a mill or group of mills in a specific state but harvested outside that state. Industrial roundwood exports. The quantity of industrial roundwood harvested in a geographical area and transported to other geographical areas. Industrial roundwood imports. The quantity of industrial roundwood received from other geographical areas. Industrial roundwood products. Saw logs, pulpwood, veneer logs, poles, commercial posts, pilings, cooperage logs, particleboard bolts, shaving bolts, lath bolts, charcoal bolts, and chips from roundwood used for pulp or board products. Industrial roundwood production. The quantity of industrial roundwood harvested in a geographic area plus all industrial roundwood exported to other geographical areas. Industrial roundwood receipts. The quantity of industrial roundwood received by commercial mills in a geographic area plus all industrial roundwood imported from other geographical areas. 15 Industrial roundwood retained. The quantity of industrial roundwood harvested from and processed by commercial mills within the same geographical area. International ¼-inch rule. A log rule or formula for estimating the board-foot volume of logs, allowing ½ inch of taper for each 4-foot length and assuming ¼ inch of kerf. This rule is used as the U.S. Forest Service standard log rule in the Eastern United States. Limbwood removals. Net volume of all portions of a tree other than the central stem (including forks, large limbs, tops, and stumps) harvested for industrial roundwood products. Logging residue. The net volume of unused portions of the merchantable central stem of growing-stock trees cut or killed by logging. Logging slash. The net volume of unused portions of the unmerchantable (non-growing-stock) sections of trees cut or killed by logging. Merchantable sections. Refers to sections of the central stem of growing-stock trees that meet either pulpwood or saw log specifications. Net volume. Gross volume less deductions for rot, sweep, or other defects affecting use for roundwood products. Noncommercial species. Trees species of typically small size, poor form, or inferior quality that normally do not develop into trees suitable for industrial roundwood products. Noncommercial species are listed in the volume tables as rough trees. Nonforest land. Land that has never supported forests, and land formerly forested where use for timber management is precluded by development for other uses. (Note: Includes areas used for crops, active Christmas tree plantations, orchards, nurseries, improved pasture, residential areas, city parks, improved roads of any width and adjoining clearings, powerline clearings of any width, and 1- to 39.9-acre areas of water classified by the Bureau of the Census as land.) If intermingled in forest areas, unimproved roads and nonforest strips must be more than 120 feet wide and more than 1 acre to qualify as nonforest land. Nonforest land removals. Net volume of trees on nonforest lands harvested for industrial roundwood products. Poletimber. A growing-stock tree at least 5.0 inches d.b.h. but smaller than sawtimber size (9.0 inches d.b.h. for softwoods, 11.0 inches d.b.h. for hardwoods). Poletimber removals. Net volume in the merchantable central stem of poletimber trees harvested for industrial roundwood products. Primary wood-using mills. Mills receiving roundwood or chips from roundwood for processing into products such as lumber, veneer, and pulp. 16 Primary wood-using mill residue. Wood materials (coarse and fine) and bark generated at manufacturing plants that process industrial roundwood into principal products. These residues include wood products obtained incidental to production of principal products and wood materials not utilized for some product. Production. The quantity of roundwood material harvested in a geographic area plus all roundwood material exported to other geographical areas. Receipts. The quantity of roundwood material received by commercial mills in a geographic area plus all roundwood material imported from other geographical areas. Retained. Roundwood volume harvested from and processed by mills within the same state. Rotten tree. A tree that does not meet regional merchantability standards because of excessive unsound cull. Rough tree. A tree that does not meet regional merchantability standards because of excessive sound cull (includes forks, sweep and crook, and large branches or knots), including noncommercial tree species. Roundwood. Logs, bolts, or other round sections cut from trees (including chips from roundwood). Sapling. A live tree between 1.0 and 5.0 inches d.b.h. Saw log portion. That portion of the central stem of sawtimber trees between the stump and the saw log top. Saw log top. The point on the central stem of sawtimber trees above which a saw log cannot be produced. The minimum saw log top is 7.0 inches diameter outside bark for softwoods and 9.0 inches diameter outside bark for hardwoods. Sawtimber removals. As used in Table 10, sawtimber removals refers to the net volume in the merchantable central stem of sawtimber-size trees harvested for industrial roundwood products. (Note: includes the saw log and upper stem portions of sawtimber-size trees.) When referring to the sawtimber volume removed from timberland as in Table 12, sawtimber removals refers to the net volume in the saw log portion of sawtimber-size trees harvested for roundwood products or left on the ground as harvest residue, and is usually expressed in thousands of board feet (International ¼-inch rule). Sawtimber tree. A growing-stock tree containing at least a 12-foot saw log or two noncontiguous saw logs 8 feet or longer, and meeting regional specifications for freedom from defect. Softwoods must be at least 9.0 inches d.b.h. and hardwoods must be at least 11.0 inches d.b.h. Sawtimber volume. Net volume in the saw log portion of sawtimber trees. 17 Softwoods. Coniferous trees, usually evergreen, having needles or scale-like leaves. Timber product output. The volume of roundwood products produced from an area’s forests. Timberland. Forest land that is producing, or is capable of producing, in excess of 20 cubic feet per acre per year of industrial roundwood products under natural conditions, is not withdrawn from timber utilization by statute or administrative regulation, and is not associated with urban or rural development. Tree. A woody perennial plant, typically large, with a single well-defined stem carrying a more or less definite crown; sometimes defined as attaining a minimum diameter of 3 in. (7.6 cm) and a minimum height of 15 ft (4.6 m) at maturity. For FIA, any plant on the tree list in the current field manual is measured as a tree. Upper stem portion. That portion of the central stem of sawtimber trees between the saw log top and the minimum top diameter of 4.0 inches outside bark, or to the point where the central stem breaks into limbs. Common and Scientific Names of Tree Species by Species Group Softwoods Eastern redcedarJuniperus virginiana Shortleaf pinePinus echinata White pinePinus strobus Other Pines Austrian pinePinus nigra Scotch pinePinus sylvestris Virginia pinePinus virginiana Bald cypressTaxodium distichum Hardwoods Ash White ashFraxinus americana Black ashFraxinus nigra 18 Green ashFraxinus pennsylvanica Blue ashFraxinus quadrangulata American basswood Tilia americana American beechFagus grandifolia River birchBetula nigra Black cherryPrunus serotina Black walnutJuglans nigra Eastern cottonwood Populus deltoides Elm Winged elmUlmus alata American elmUlmus americana Siberian elmUlmus pumila Slippery elmUlmus rubra Rock elmUlmus thomasii Hickory Mockernut hickory Carya alba Bitternut hickory Carya cordiformis Pignut hickory Carya glabra PecanCarya illinoensis Shellbark hickory Carya laciniosa Shagbark hickory Carya ovata Black hickoryCarya texana 19 Hard maple Black mapleAcer nigrum Sugar mapleAcer saccharum Soft maple BoxelderAcer negundo Red mapleAcer rubrum Silver mapleAcer saccharinum Red oak group Scarlet oakQuercus coccinea Northern pin oak Quercus ellipsoidalis Southern red oak Quercus falcata Cherrybark oak Quercus falcata var. pagodifolia Shingle oakQuercus imbricaria Blackjack oakQuercus marilandica Pin oakQuercus palustris Willow oak Quercus phellos Northern red oak Quercus rubra Shumard oakQuercus shumardii var. shumardii Black oakQuercus velutina White oak group White oakQuercus alba Swamp white oak Quercus bicolor Overcup oakQuercus lyrata 20 Bur oakQuercus macrocarpa Swamp chestnut oak Quercus michauxii Chinkapin oak Quercus muehlenbergii Chestnut oakQuercus prinus Post oakQuercus stellata SweetgumLiquidambar styraciflua American sycamore Platanus occidentalis Tupelo/gum Water tupeloQuercus aquatica Swamp tupelo Nyssa sylvatica var. biflora Blackgum (black tupelo) Nyssa sylvatica var. sylvatica Yellow-poplarLiriodendron tulipifera Other hardwoods Ohio buckeyeAesculus glabra AilanthusAilanthus altissima Mimosa, silktree Albizia julibrissin ServiceberryAmelanchier sp. PawpawAsimina triloba Chittamwood, gum bumelia Bumelia lanuginosa American hornbeam, musclewood Carpinus caroliniana Northern catalpa Catalpa speciosa SugarberryCeltis laevigata HackberryCeltis occidentalis 21 Eastern redbud Cercis canadensis Flowering dogwood Cornus florida Hawthorn spp. Crataegus spp. Common persimmon Diospyros virginiana WaterlocustGleditsia aquatica HoneylocustGleditsia triacanthos Kentucky coffeetree Gymnocladus dioicus ButternutJuglans cinerea Osage-orangeMaclura pomifera Apple spp.Malus spp. White mulberry Morus alba Red mulberryMorus rubra Eastern hophornbeam Ostrya virginiana American plum, wild plum Prunus americana Black locustRobinia pseudoacacia Peachleaf willow Salix amygdaloides Black willowSalix nigra SassafrasSassafras albidum 22 Tables Table 1.–Conversion factors from reported unit of measure to standard unit of measure (This table is in the Study Methods section.) Table 2.–Number of active primary wood-using mills by mill type and survey year, Missouri Table 3.–Industrial roundwood receipts, in million cubic feet, by mill type, softwoods and hardwoods, and survey year, Missouri Table 4.–Industrial roundwood receipts, in thousand cubic feet, by species group and state of origin, Missouri, 2009 Table 5.–Industrial roundwood production, in million cubic feet, by product, softwoods and hardwoods, and survey year, Missouri Table 6.–Industrial roundwood production, in thousand cubic feet, by species group and state of destination, Missouri, 2009 Table 7.–Industrial roundwood production, in thousand cubic feet, by Forest Inventory Unit, county, and species group, Missouri, 2009 Table 8.–Industrial roundwood production by Forest Inventory Unit, species group, and product, Missouri, 2009 Table 9.–Saw log receipts and production, in thousand board feet, by Forest Inventory Unit and species group, Missouri, 2006 and 2009 Table 10.–Wood material harvested for industrial roundwood, in thousand cubic feet, by Forest Inventory Unit, source of material, and species group, Missouri, 2009 Table 11.–Growing-stock removals from timberland for industrial roundwood, in thousand cubic feet, by Forest Inventory Unit, county, and species group, Missouri, 2009 Table 12.–Sawtimber removals from timberland for industrial roundwood, in thousand board feet, by Forest Inventory Unit, county, and species group, Missouri, 2009 Table 13.–Harvest residue generated by industrial roundwood harvesting, in thousand cubic feet, by Forest Inventory Unit, county, and species group, Missouri, 2009 Table 14.–Disposition of residues produced at primary wood-using mills, in thousand green tons, by Forest Inventory Unit, disposition, residue type, and softwoods and hardwoods, Missouri, 2009 23 24 1991 17 172 206 395 20 4 1 14 6 17 14 76 471 1987 13 169 228 410 20 5 1 15 6 23 11 81 491 and mill size 1946 1958 1969 1980 Sawmills Largea 2 5 7 8 Mediumb 43 103 117 163 Smallc 2,548 882 425 315 Total 2,593 990 549 486 Other Mills Cooperage mills 85 36 36 30 Veneer mills 6 3 4 4 Pulp mills -2 2 2 d Charcoal 3 60 52 36 Handle mills 19 12 7 10 Post and pole mills 6 14 22 28 Other productse 94 44 9 3 Total 213 171 132 113 All mills 2,806 1,161 681 599 a Annual lumber production in excess of 5 million board feet. b Annual lumber production from 1 million to 5 million board feet. c Annual lumber production less than 1 million board feet. d Includes only those charcoal operations using roundwood. e Includes plants producing excelsior, cabin logs, mine timbers, etc. 12 1 1 14 5 9 7 49 461 32 189 191 412 1994 Survey Year Mill type 8 1 1 10 6 7 5 38 455 35 212 170 417 1997 9 1 1 6 4 7 9 37 440 31 185 187 403 2000 8 1 1 4 5 8 6 33 404 34 170 167 371 2003 Table 2. -- Num ber of act ive prim ary wood-using m ills by m ill t ype and survey year, Missouri Table 2.—Number of active primary wood-using mills by mill type and survey year, Missouri 8 -1 4 4 8 8 33 389 38 151 167 356 2006 9 -1 5 1 9 10 35 401 25 144 197 366 2009 25 100.1 4.6 5.0 3.0 3.4 116.2 7.7 0.0 -2.6 1.2 11.5 Sawmills Charcoal Cooperage mills Post and pole mills Other millsa Total Sawmills Charcoal Cooperage mills Post and pole mills Other millsa Total 9.7 0.0 -0.9 1.9 12.4 124.2 2.4 4.6 1.1 3.3 135.5 1994 117.2 0.6 5.3 1.1 2.0 126.2 5.0 --1.1 1.0 7.1 SOFTWOODS 9.5 6.5 0.0 ---1.1 0.8 1.2 1.6 11.9 8.9 2003 1997 2000 ALL SPECIES 128.5 118.4 1.2 0.9 6.1 4.0 1.5 0.9 3.2 3.0 140.5 127.2 HARDWOODS Sawmills 92.4 114.5 119.0 111.9 112.1 Charcoal 4.6 2.4 1.2 0.9 0.6 Cooperage mills 5.0 4.6 6.1 4.0 5.3 Post and pole mills 0.5 0.2 0.3 0.1 0.0 Other millsa 2.2 1.5 2.0 1.4 1.0 Total 104.7 123.1 128.6 118.2 119.1 All table cells without observations are indicated by -- . Table value of 0.0 indicates the volume rounds to less than 0.1 thousand cubic feet. Columns and rows may not add to their totals due to rounding. a Includes mills producing excelsior, pulpwood, veneer, cabin logs, etc. 1991 Product Survey Year and soft woods and hardwoods, and survey year, Missouri 108.6 0.7 8.5 0.1 3.2 121.1 5.7 --1.3 1.7 8.7 114.3 0.7 8.5 1.3 4.9 129.7 2006 Tablein3.--I ndust rialfeet, roundwood s, in m and illion cubic feet , by m illyear, t ype, Table 3.—Industrial roundwood receipts, million cubic by mill type,receipt and softwoods hardwoods, and survey Missouri 90.0 0.1 5.2 0.0 0.6 96.0 5.0 --0.8 1.0 6.9 95.0 0.1 5.2 0.9 1.7 102.9 2009 -17 -83 -39 -39 -79 -21 -11 ---34 -40 -20 -17 -83 -39 -34 -65 -21 % change 2006 - 2009 26 Species group Total Arkansas Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Missouri Nebraska Softwoods Eastern redcedar 3,394 149 31 --0 -3,214 -Cypress 10 ------10 -Shortleaf pine 3,502 99 1 ----3,402 -White pine 4 -3 ----2 -Total 6,910 248 35 --0 -6,628 -Hardwoods Ash 1,187 5 42 11 3 2 6 1,116 -Basswood 0 ------0 -River birch 46 ------46 -Black cherry 138 4 19 8 0 0 5 100 -Black walnut 5,011 456 56 5 42 462 3 3,853 4 Cottonwood 2,668 1 156 -20 12 -2,475 4 Elm 276 2 0 -1 0 -272 -Hickory 4,799 109 84 32 6 5 42 4,505 -Hard maple 423 4 44 11 0 -6 354 -Soft maple 1,576 1 272 -217 5 -1,080 1 Red oak group 49,594 1,014 679 107 40 21 66 47,568 1 White oak group 27,580 574 771 417 61 16 91 25,188 0 Sweet gum 98 2 0 ----96 -Sycamore 1,508 5 31 -2 2 -1,465 0 Tupelo/gum 112 2 -----111 -Yellow-poplar 604 12 150 35 --21 374 -Other hardwoods 346 1 0 -0 1 -344 -Total 95,966 2,192 2,304 625 392 527 241 88,947 11 State total 102,876 2,439 2,339 625 392 527 241 95,575 11 All table cells without observations are indicated by -- . Table value of 0 indicates the volume rounds to less than 1 thousand cubic feet. Columns and rows may not add to their totals due to rounding. a Includes Ohio, West Virginia, and Wisconsin. State of origin Tennessee -----4 --3 2 --13 4 -41 135 ---12 -214 214 Oklahoma ---------127 --2 --56 16 -2 ---204 204 Table 4.—Industrial roundwood receipts, in thousand cubic feet, by species group and state of origin, Missouri, 2009 Table 4.--I ndust rial roundwood receipt s, in t housand cubic feet , by species group and st at e of origin, Missouri, 2009 -----------310 -----310 310 ------ Other Statesa 27 1946 79.4 1.4 0.6 0.6 14.9 1.3 0.0 11.0 59.4 5.6 174.2 8.3 -0.1 ---0.0 3.2 0.2 0.0 11.8 Product Saw logs Veneer logs Pulpwood Charcoal Cooperage logs Handle bolts Poles Posts Industrial fuelwood Other productsa Total Saw logs Veneer logs Pulpwood Charcoal Cooperage logs Handle bolts Poles Posts Industrial fuelwood Other productsa Total 4.1 -0.1 ---0.2 0.8 0.2 0.0 5.4 47.8 1.0 0.8 3.2 4.5 1.2 0.2 9.6 61.9 6.2 136.4 1958 3.3 -----0.3 1.2 0.1 0.3 5.2 66.3 1.0 1.9 16.7 8.9 0.4 0.3 2.5 24.5 1.1 123.6 1969 5.5 ------0.5 -0.2 6.2 71.7 0.7 1.9 6.2 4.7 --1.7 -0.6 87.5 1980 9.5 0.0 0.1 0.0 ---1.1 -1.1 11.9 9.3 0.0 0.0 0.0 ---0.9 -1.8 12.1 SOFTWOODS 7.5 ------2.6 0.0 1.7 11.8 7.8 -----0.0 0.7 -0.6 9.1 125.0 0.9 4.3 1.2 5.1 0.3 -1.4 -1.3 139.6 1997 1991 1994 ALL SPECIES 89.7 93.7 120.0 1.0 1.7 1.1 2.2 1.2 1.5 2.7 4.6 2.4 2.0 4.8 4.2 0.1 0.2 0.2 0.1 --1.3 3.1 1.1 -0.0 -0.8 12.1 2.1 99.9 121.4 132.6 1987 Survey Year 6.5 -----0.1 0.7 -1.5 8.8 113.1 0.7 8.5 0.8 3.3 0.1 0.1 0.8 -1.7 129.0 2000 4.7 0.0 0.2 ----1.1 -0.9 6.9 111.2 1.3 7.2 0.6 4.9 0.2 -1.1 -1.0 127.6 2003 92.3 0.9 3.0 0.1 3.8 0.1 0.6 0.2 0.2 1.3 102.6 2009 -16% -10% 2% -83% -28% 7% 0% -68% --68% -18% % change 2006 - 2009 5.4 -6% --b 0.0 0.3 >500% ---------0.5 0.5 2% 0.7 0.2 -68% -0.0 -1.7 1.0 -39% 8.7 7.5 -14% (Table 5 continued on next page) 5.7 110.1 1.0 3.0 0.7 5.3 0.1 0.6 0.7 -4.1 125.5 2006 Table 5.--Iproduction, ndust rial roundwood product ion, in m illion cubicand feethardwoods, , by product , soft woods and hardwoods, Table 5.—Industrial roundwood in million cubic feet, by product, softwoods and survey year, Missouri and survey year, M issouri 28 HARDWOODS Saw logs 71.1 43.7 63.0 66.2 81.9 86.2 110.7 115.5 Veneer logs 1.4 1.0 1.0 0.7 1.0 1.7 1.1 0.9 Pulpwood 0.5 0.7 1.9 1.9 2.2 1.2 1.5 4.2 Charcoal 0.6 3.2 16.7 6.2 2.7 4.6 2.4 1.2 Cooperage logs 14.9 4.5 8.9 4.7 2.0 4.8 4.2 5.1 Handle bolts 1.3 1.2 0.4 -0.1 0.2 0.2 0.3 Poles --0.0 -0.1 ---Posts 7.8 8.8 1.3 1.2 0.6 0.5 0.2 0.3 Industrial fuelwood 59.2 61.7 24.4 -----Other productsa 5.6 6.2 0.8 0.4 0.2 10.4 0.3 0.2 Total 162.4 131.0 118.4 81.3 90.8 109.6 120.5 127.7 All table cells without observations are indicated by -- . Table value of 0.0 indicates the volume rounds to less than 0.1 thousand cubic feet. Columns and rows may not add to their totals due to rounding. a Includes excelsior, cabin logs, and other miscellaneous products. b Volumes are too small to calculate a meaningful percent change. Table 5.—Continued 106.6 0.7 8.5 0.8 3.3 0.1 -0.1 -0.2 120.2 106.5 1.3 7.0 0.6 4.9 0.2 -0.0 -0.1 120.7 104.3 1.0 3.0 0.7 5.3 0.1 0.0 0.0 -2.4 116.8 86.9 0.9 2.7 0.1 3.8 0.1 0.0 0.0 0.2 0.3 95.1 -17% -10% -8% -83% -28% 7% -30% -86% --88% -19% 29 Species group Total Arkansas Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Michigan Softwoods Eastern redcedar 3,214 -------Cypress 10 -------Shortleaf pine 4,272 567 ----302 -White pine 2 -------Other pine 2 -----2 -Total 7,499 567 ----304 -Hardwoods Ash 1,284 -118 -14 11 20 -Basswood 14 ---13 ---River birch 46 -----0 -Black cherry 134 -2 3 10 -17 -Black walnut 5,224 -70 8 950 1 --Cottonwood 2,529 -0 -43 2 9 -Elm 354 -2 -5 -71 -Hickory 4,749 0 14 -10 1 212 -Hard maple 388 -1 7 1 -25 -Soft maple 1,374 -2 -264 17 4 -Red oak group 48,950 1 112 4 257 6 940 -White oak group 27,210 1 20 13 266 18 937 431 Sweet gum 149 -----52 -Sycamore 1,485 -2 --1 14 -Tupelo/gum 130 -----19 -Yellow-poplar 397 -----23 -Other hardwoods 710 -0 0 -2 359 -Total 95,125 2 344 36 1,832 59 2,702 431 Grand Total 102,624 569 344 36 1,832 59 3,006 431 All table cells without observations are indicated by -- . Table value of 0 indicates the volume rounds to less than 1 thousand cubic feet. Columns and rows may not add to their totals due to rounding. State of mill ----------8 --1 ---2 -----11 11 3,214 10 3,402 2 -6,628 1,116 0 46 100 3,853 2,475 272 4,505 354 1,080 47,568 25,188 96 1,465 111 374 344 88,947 95,575 Missouri Nebraska 6 --1 8 -4 ---27 80 -3 --4 134 134 ------- Oklahoma Table 6.—Industrial roundwood production, in thousand cubic feet, by species group and state of mill, Missouri, 2009 Table 6. -- I ndust rial roundwood product ion, in t housand cubic feet , by species group and st at e of m ill, M issouri, 2009 ----326 --6 -7 35 254 -----628 628 ------- Other foreign 30 Forest Inventory All Unit and county species Eastern Ozark Unit Bollinger 2,652 Butler 1,005 Carter 3,827 Crawford 2,054 Dent 2,132 Iron 2,515 Madison 4,868 Oregon 4,259 Reynolds 4,674 Ripley 3,584 Shannon 6,807 St. Francois 847 Washington 3,532 Wayne 2,306 Total 45,062 Southwestern Ozark Unit Barry 1,374 Christian 870 Douglas 2,393 Howell 5,229 McDonald 1,348 Newton 792 Ozark 1,113 Stone 708 Taney 887 Texas 5,061 Webster 440 Wright 876 Total 21,090 Cypress -1 -----------1 1 -------------- Eastern redcedar 2 --6 20 47 33 22 31 81 45 73 40 9 409 44 46 62 21 1 1 177 12 408 7 34 7 820 91 19 117 408 41 4 141 9 30 458 -9 1,326 33 92 324 52 79 55 261 241 193 331 744 53 183 167 2,809 Shortleaf pine -------------- ---------------- White pine Softwoods -------------- ---------------- Other pine 134 66 179 430 42 5 318 21 438 465 34 16 2,146 35 93 324 58 98 103 293 263 224 412 789 126 223 177 3,219 Total softwoods 22 14 1 9 16 7 0 21 1 4 0 1 98 184 1 7 5 2 2 32 34 2 10 6 12 2 13 311 Ash -------------- ---------------- Basswood 20 -0 0 -0 8 1 -1 0 8 2 1 41 Black cherry 30 3 4 25 43 2 12 26 21 3 83 9 4 6 270 Black walnut -0 137 --34 --73 -7 61 -0 103 -1 225 -1 5 -0 148 -0 20 -0 164 --77 --89 -10 1,135 (Table 7 continued on next page) ---0 -----0 ----0 River birch Hardwoods Table 7.—Industrial roundwood production, in thousand cubic feet, by Forest Inventory Unit, county, and species group, Missouri, 2009 Table 7 . -- I ndust rial roundwood product ion, in t housand cubic feet , by Forest I nvent ory Unit , count y, and species group, M issouri, 2 0 0 9 31 Forest Inventory All Unit and county species Northwestern Ozark Unit Benton 192 Camden 870 Cedar 108 Dallas 737 Hickory 742 Laclede 334 Maries 830 Miller 1,394 Morgan 419 Phelps 1,948 Polk 510 Pulaski 388 St. Clair 231 Total 8,702 Prairie Unit Adair 421 Andrew 56 Atchison 20 Audrain 623 Barton 745 Bates 128 Buchanan 228 Caldwell 103 Carroll 354 Cass 283 Chariton 472 Clark 945 Clay 13 Clinton 27 Cooper 276 (Table 7 continued) Table 7.—Continued Cypress ------------------------------ Eastern redcedar 11 207 -149 25 84 142 290 37 70 24 70 0 1,109 ---0 -0 ---0 ----39 --------------1 -----2 ---24 -4 -31 Shortleaf pine ---------------- --------------- White pine Softwoods ---------------- --------------- Other pine ---0 -0 ---0 ----40 11 207 -149 25 86 142 290 37 94 24 74 0 1,139 Total softwoods 2 0 -23 75 8 -3 12 3 7 30 1 0 2 2 7 15 17 2 0 13 11 3 7 92 1 4 175 Ash 6 ----------1 ---- --------------- Basswood -0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ---0 1 Black cherry 61 42 38 47 86 38 24 58 44 59 102 64 92 754 Black walnut -1 166 --4 --14 -0 44 -0 11 0 1 35 --106 --9 --0 0 0 3 12 1 40 -2 86 -----13 1 0 62 (Table 7 continued on continued) next page) (Prairie Unit 0 -------1 ---0 1 River birch Hardwoods 32 Prairie Unit (cont.) Dade Daviess De Kalb Gentry Greene Grundy Harrison Henry Holt Jasper Johnson Knox Lafayette Lawrence Lewis Lincoln Linn Livingston Macon Marion Mercer Monroe Nodaway Pettis Pike Putnam Ralls Randolph Ray Saline Schuyler Scotland Shelby Sullivan Vernon Worth Total Table 7.—Continued 130 540 56 123 305 380 312 193 35 163 122 306 62 766 581 592 123 245 410 134 210 429 79 407 651 103 547 1,479 81 172 501 563 249 108 242 40 16,134 ----3 --2 --2 ---0 0 --1 ----38 0 -------0 -0 -87 -------------------------------------- --------------0 ---------------------1 ---------------1 --------------------1 -------------------------------------- ----3 --2 --2 ---1 1 --1 ----38 0 -------0 -0 -88 15 26 1 1 22 19 14 9 -11 5 5 2 33 16 19 2 8 6 2 12 4 0 5 36 0 22 21 4 4 0 5 6 0 6 0 508 -----------4 --2 ---0 -----------------14 --56 -0 45 --13 --14 -0 111 --45 --61 0 0 17 --7 -0 43 --6 -1 36 -0 0 -0 181 -1 87 -1 17 -0 26 -0 33 1 0 6 -0 18 -0 36 3 0 29 --8 1 0 140 -0 16 -0 29 -0 17 17 2 44 --0 -0 60 344 -3 -4 150 -0 4 -0 29 0 0 136 --7 35 18 2,462 (Table 7 continued on next page) 33 Forest Inventory Unit and county Riverborder Unit Boone Callaway Cape Girardeau Cole Dunklin Franklin Gasconade Howard Jefferson Mississippi Moniteau Montgomery New Madrid Osage Pemiscot Perry Scott St. Charles St. Louis Ste. Genevieve Stoddard Warren Total State total (Table 7 continued) Table 7.—Continued Eastern redcedar 0 31 10 95 -14 120 -66 -80 101 -163 -23 -1 1 70 -14 789 3,214 All species 560 374 814 511 73 735 984 267 511 2 421 554 460 1,144 1 2,502 76 138 31 686 428 364 11,636 102,624 ----0 -------1 ---0 ---8 -9 10 Cypress --11 1 2 6 1 -19 -3 ----20 -1 -39 3 0 105 4,272 Shortleaf pine -----------------0 ---1 1 2 White pine Softwoods --------2 -------------2 2 Other pine 0 31 21 96 2 20 122 -88 -83 101 1 163 -42 0 2 1 108 11 15 906 7,499 Total softwoods 7 0 21 10 5 10 10 5 11 -4 17 2 22 -53 0 1 0 13 0 3 193 1,284 Ash -----------------------14 Basswood Black cherry Black walnut 7 1 82 -0 53 -9 23 -0 18 --1 -0 33 -0 9 2 0 56 -8 4 ----0 66 -0 13 --1 -0 8 ----33 169 -0 1 -2 11 -0 4 -8 22 -1 11 -2 19 9 64 602 46 134 5,224 (Table 7 continued on next page) River birch Hardwoods 34 Forest Inventory CottonUnit and county wood Eastern Ozark Unit Bollinger 10 Butler 1 Carter 0 Crawford 6 Dent 5 Iron 3 Madison 7 Oregon 12 Reynolds -Ripley 5 Shannon 0 St. Francois 8 Washington 13 Wayne 0 Total 72 Southwestern Ozark Unit Barry -Christian 0 Douglas 0 Howell 1 McDonald -Newton 1 Ozark 0 Stone -Taney 2 Texas -Webster -Wright -Total 4 (Table 7 continued) Table 7.—Continued Hickory 272 68 207 76 122 91 351 274 249 188 359 39 93 183 2,571 79 34 52 309 47 20 16 24 11 197 16 23 828 Elm 4 5 10 7 1 0 7 39 2 14 3 -9 5 107 0 0 1 4 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 8 ---1 -----0 --1 85 --7 1 4 57 5 0 1 0 13 14 14 201 Hard maple 0 0 7 4 0 0 0 0 1 4 0 4 22 7 9 27 6 5 7 7 2 3 14 6 -5 7 106 Soft maple 670 491 1,555 2,923 654 366 572 331 279 3,074 203 546 11,665 1,172 571 2,307 1,122 1,158 1,554 2,387 2,451 3,027 2,066 4,146 383 2,219 1,193 25,755 Red oak group 304 220 518 1,447 373 150 179 151 125 1,144 110 195 4,917 772 229 912 713 676 735 1,603 1,122 1,110 815 1,399 224 907 673 11,892 White oak group Hardwoods -------------- 9 9 3 1 0 0 14 0 -19 -0 1 6 62 Sweetgum 24 10 6 13 67 15 21 12 8 8 0 1 184 14 10 14 25 18 10 41 27 32 25 11 3 31 18 278 Sycamore 2 --15 29 1 ---0 --46 3 7 13 1 -4 25 3 4 7 4 1 2 10 83 Tupelo/ gum 0 -0 2 1 0 0 --4 0 0 6 0 14 Other hardwoods 2,617 913 3,502 1,996 2,033 2,412 4,574 3,996 4,450 3,172 6,018 721 3,310 2,129 41,843 Total hardwoods -1 1,240 --804 --2,214 -7 4,799 -17 1,306 -1 787 --795 -0 687 -0 449 -0 4,596 --406 --860 -27 18,944 (Table 7 continued on next page) 37 -----24 ----21 --81 Yellowpoplar 35 Forest Inventory CottonUnit and county wood Northwestern Ozark Unit Benton 0 Camden 1 Cedar 2 Dallas -Hickory -Laclede -Maries 23 Miller 13 Morgan 18 Phelps 6 Polk 1 Pulaski -St. Clair 2 Total 65 Prairie Unit Adair 7 Andrew 37 Atchison 4 Audrain 42 Barton 1 Bates 1 Buchanan -Caldwell 25 Carroll 169 Cass 0 Chariton 41 Clark 160 Clay 5 Clinton 3 Cooper 48 (Table 7 continued) Table 7.—Continued Hickory 3 17 -42 4 7 16 21 11 78 8 13 14 235 8 --25 137 30 -3 10 24 8 32 1 0 1 Elm -0 0 7 -0 6 0 -9 -3 0 25 2 --1 0 1 -1 4 0 5 9 1 0 -- 1 --0 ------0 1 --0 -3 ----3 17 3 1 ---27 Hard maple 20 4 0 16 71 1 33 35 44 1 31 28 1 2 5 1 2 -0 -1 24 14 3 4 0 2 1 51 Soft maple 81 5 -277 228 33 54 12 58 100 199 344 1 4 40 59 273 38 227 403 110 159 441 114 811 153 107 79 2,973 Red oak group 126 3 1 158 153 15 36 9 25 93 85 244 2 3 53 51 307 10 235 220 90 386 500 171 811 117 116 35 3,050 White oak group Hardwoods ---------------- -1 -----8 1 0 ---11 Sweetgum 0 4 -20 69 1 -3 16 23 26 7 1 1 16 2 9 4 13 1 0 33 21 9 68 13 9 2 184 Sycamore ---------------- --------------- Tupelo/ gum 2 -1 ---1 1 4 1 --1 10 Other hardwoods 181 663 108 588 717 247 687 1,104 382 1,855 486 314 231 7,563 Total hardwoods -1 421 -0 56 --20 -16 622 -1 745 -1 128 --228 -3 103 -16 354 -35 283 -17 472 -1 945 -1 13 -0 27 -9 236 (Prairie Unit continued) (Table 7 continued on next page) --------------- Yellowpoplar 36 Prairie Unit (cont.) Dade Daviess De Kalb Gentry Greene Grundy Harrison Henry Holt Jasper Johnson Knox Lafayette Lawrence Lewis Lincoln Linn Livingston Macon Marion Mercer Monroe Nodaway Pettis Pike Putnam Ralls Randolph Ray Saline Schuyler Scotland Shelby Sullivan Vernon Worth Total Table 7.—Continued 1 193 25 85 -127 112 3 18 1 18 23 34 -48 85 6 104 8 2 54 16 59 19 94 5 22 47 41 36 5 28 3 4 2 26 1,898 0 21 0 0 1 14 12 0 -0 0 4 1 0 8 0 1 3 3 2 11 2 --0 -0 17 2 1 1 3 2 -0 -134 -26 0 1 6 19 14 22 -5 6 14 2 38 19 21 3 8 12 6 12 9 0 4 36 0 24 44 3 2 6 11 8 0 13 0 673 -0 ---------1 --2 3 0 0 0 2 0 0 -1 3 0 1 1 -0 0 0 0 0 --16 -60 3 4 0 44 17 2 2 3 4 40 2 0 39 32 29 25 13 3 13 12 3 4 39 14 24 32 4 7 41 154 8 14 12 1 996 35 46 5 4 105 38 28 63 3 66 30 85 11 325 147 216 33 26 212 48 23 220 3 77 300 19 226 682 11 22 39 135 165 11 48 2 4,943 20 64 4 6 52 36 26 61 3 30 31 88 4 170 204 164 23 23 142 49 24 109 2 79 78 35 189 488 7 28 63 68 50 50 20 3 3,499 -------------------------------------- 3 40 4 4 5 24 18 11 2 4 20 4 3 18 7 22 1 13 4 2 12 20 4 25 27 0 8 59 5 7 0 3 2 -2 0 571 -------------------------------------- -0 130 -19 540 -1 56 -2 123 -0 302 -14 380 -11 312 -3 191 --35 -2 163 -2 120 -1 306 -3 62 -0 766 -1 580 -10 591 -0 123 -3 245 -2 410 -1 134 -12 210 -6 429 -1 79 -14 369 -20 651 --103 -14 547 -24 1,479 -4 81 -5 172 --501 -0 563 -0 249 --108 -2 242 -0 40 -279 16,045 (Table 7 continued on next page) 37 Hardwoods White Forest Inventory CottonHard Soft Red oak oak Unit and county wood Elm Hickory maple maple group group Riverborder Unit Boone 26 3 18 1 11 182 187 Callaway 1 -8 2 4 79 182 Cape Girardeau 9 0 74 22 -325 274 Cole 17 1 9 5 18 155 162 Dunklin 0 1 5 -1 32 18 Franklin 19 2 28 2 17 230 355 Gasconade 119 2 17 5 28 194 440 Howard 7 1 9 0 7 84 60 Jefferson 1 6 30 7 2 170 176 Mississippi 2 -0 ----Moniteau 8 -10 3 2 116 120 Montgomery 78 -18 4 28 145 122 New Madrid 2 51 2 --9 10 Osage 60 4 17 7 42 323 452 Pemiscot -1 --1 --Perry 11 1 114 64 1 1,082 692 Scott 2 0 10 4 -5 18 St. Charles 43 0 1 3 13 23 29 St. Louis --1 0 1 3 21 -33 13 -253 201 Ste. Genevieve 7 Stoddard 7 6 37 0 2 159 166 Warren 72 0 2 4 21 45 165 Total 491 80 441 144 198 3,615 3,852 State total 2,529 354 4,749 388 1,374 48,950 27,210 All table cells without observations are indicated by -- . Table value of 0 indicates the volume rounds to less than 1 thousand cubic feet. Columns and rows may not add to their totals due to rounding. (Table 7 continued) Table 7.—Continued Sycamore 32 12 0 18 2 21 36 31 3 -6 19 1 39 -2 1 9 0 1 18 17 268 1,485 Sweetgum --0 1 5 1 1 -0 -1 -40 --2 12 --1 10 -75 149 --0 ------------1 ------1 130 Tupelo/ gum --34 ------------235 23 --24 --316 397 Yellowpoplar 3 1 1 1 -1 3 5 4 -1 10 341 7 -0 -0 0 1 1 0 380 710 Other hardwoods 560 342 793 415 71 715 862 267 423 2 339 454 460 981 1 2,459 76 136 30 578 418 349 10,730 95,125 Total hardwoods 38 Softwoods Eastern redcedar Cypress Shortleaf pine White pine Other pine Total Hardwoods Ash Basswood River birch Black cherry Black walnut cottonwood Elm Hickory Hard maple Soft maple Red oak group White oak group Sweetgum Sycamore Tupelo/gum Yellow-poplar Other hardwoods Total State total Species group 8,278 58 17,964 10 -26,310 6,880 82 214 687 22,879 17,584 1,711 26,954 2,181 8,120 267,883 121,820 700 8,514 664 2,410 2,083 491,366 517,676 1,284 14 46 134 5,224 2,529 354 4,749 388 1,374 48,950 27,210 149 1,485 130 397 710 95,125 102,624 MBF a 1,133 14 35 113 5,008 2,486 282 4,439 359 1,337 47,683 21,684 115 1,402 109 397 343 86,941 92,318 2,245 10 3,120 2 -5,377 MCF Saw logs b 3,214 10 4,272 2 2 7,499 MCF a Total ---------3 206 --6 8 1 10 660 ----0 894 894 ------- a MCF All Units ---14 949 --26 33 6 43 2,888 ----1 3,960 3,960 MBF b Veneer logs 338 -95 217 107 310 897 2,550 268 348 11,908 11,768 420 467 241 2 4,540 34,476 38,320 --3,820 -24 3,844 Cords c a 27 -8 17 8 24 71 201 21 28 941 930 33 37 19 0 359 2,724 3,027 --302 -2 304 MCF Pulpwood ---1 ---451 1 -1,051 189 ----1 1,694 1,694 ------- Cords c ------- a ------- MBFb a ------- MCF2 Cooperage ---------0 -----------32 --0 -----74 --13 23,054 3,799 ------------0 --119 23,054 3,799 119 23,054 3,799 (Table 8 continued on next page) MCF Charcoal Table 8.—Industrial roundwood production by Forest Inventory Unit, species group, and product, Missouri, 2009 Table 8. -- I ndust rial roundwood product ion by Forest I nvent ory Unit , species group, and product , Missouri, 2009 39 Softwoods Eastern redcedar Cypress Shortleaf pine Total Hardwoods Ash River birch Black cherry Black walnut Cottonwood Elm Hickory Hard maple Soft maple Red oak group White oak group Sweetgum Sycamore Tupelo/gum Yellow-poplar Other hardwoods Total Unit total Species group (Table 8 continued) Table 8.—Continued Total 1,268 6 11,912 13,186 1,171 -229 1,137 506 581 15,069 1,134 626 143,180 56,472 374 1,624 476 492 43 223,115 236,302 311 0 41 270 72 107 2,571 201 106 25,755 11,892 62 278 83 81 14 41,843 45,062 193 -38 249 72 96 2,482 187 103 25,486 10,052 62 267 78 81 7 39,452 41,866 344 1 2,069 2,414 MCFa Saw logs MBFb 409 1 2,809 3,219 MCFa Veneer logs ---98 --8 --8 1,279 -----1,393 1,393 -------21 --2 --2 292 -----317 317 ----32 6 37 --138 836 177 37 2,600 3,581 3 130 54 -88 7,718 10,153 --2,435 2,435 2 0 3 --11 66 14 3 205 283 0 10 4 -7 610 802 --192 192 MCFa Pulpwood MBFb MCFa Cordsc Eastern Ozark Unit ------104 --832 106 -----1,042 1,042 ----- ----- a ----- MCF2 Cooperage MBFb ------------------7 --------58 --7 7,622 1,256 ---------------73 7,622 1,256 73 7,622 1,256 (Table 8 continued on next page) ----- MCFa Charcoal Cordsc 40 Softwoods Eastern redcedar Shortleaf pine Total Hardwoods Ash Black cherry Black walnut Cottonwood Elm Hickory Hard maple Soft maple Red oak group White oak group Sycamore Tupelo/gum Other hardwoods Total Unit total Table 8.—Continued 2,957 5,473 8,430 559 17 5,066 25 32 3,902 3 134 60,187 23,088 884 184 118 94,199 102,629 820 1,326 2,146 98 10 1,135 4 8 828 1 22 11,665 4,917 184 46 27 18,944 21,090 92 3 1,109 4 5 643 1 22 10,713 4,110 146 30 19 16,896 18,649 802 951 1,753 --122 --1 --1 305 ---430 430 -----26 --0 --0 70 ---97 97 ---- Southwestern Ozark Unit 52 89 --36 1,458 0 4 8,830 6,918 30 187 92 17,697 18,959 -1,262 1,262 4 7 --3 115 0 0 698 546 2 15 7 1,398 1,498 -100 100 -----345 --220 83 ---647 647 ---- ---- ------------------24 --------15 --6 427 70 ---------45 427 70 45 427 70 (Table 8 continued on next page) ---- 41 Softwoods Eastern redcedar Shortleaf pine Total Hardwoods Ash River birch Black cherry Black walnut Cottonwood Elm Hickory Hard maple Soft maple Red oak group White oak group Sweetgum Sycamore Other hardwoods Total Unit total Species group (Table 8 continued) Table 8.—Continued 2,672 116 2,788 1,051 0 5 3,319 453 154 1,413 162 298 16,700 12,831 68 1,096 46 37,596 40,384 175 1 1 754 65 25 235 27 51 2,973 3,050 11 184 10 7,563 8,702 MBF a 173 0 1 726 64 25 233 27 49 2,973 2,284 11 180 8 6,754 7,499 725 20 745 MCF Saw logs b 1,109 31 1,139 MCF a Total ---124 --2 --2 189 ---316 316 ------27 --0 --0 43 ---71 71 ---- a 5 --4 ----1 ---20 -30 30 ---- c MCF Pulpwood MBF MCF Cords Northwestern Ozark Unit b Veneer logs 0 --0 ----0 ---2 -2 2 ---- a -----1 ---2 1 -----1 4 4 Cords c ---- a ---- MBFb a ---- MCF2 Cooperage ------0 -----------0 --0 ---------4,385 723 ------0 --0 4,385 723 0 4,385 723 (Table 8 continued on next page) MCF Charcoal 42 Softwoods Eastern redcedar Shortleaf pine White pine Total Hardwoods Ash Basswood River birch Black cherry Black walnut Cottonwood Elm Hickory Hard maple Soft maple Red oak group White oak group Sycamore Other hardwoods Total Unit total Table 8.—Continued 94 4 4 102 3,045 82 199 101 10,834 13,266 807 4,072 73 5,894 27,749 15,655 3,390 1,663 86,829 86,931 87 1 1 88 508 14 35 18 2,462 1,898 134 673 16 996 4,943 3,499 571 279 16,045 16,134 501 14 33 17 2,371 1,876 133 671 12 971 4,939 2,787 558 274 15,156 15,183 26 1 1 27 ---7 393 --1 17 6 9 42 -0 474 474 -------2 85 --0 4 1 2 9 -0 104 104 ----- Prairie Unit 40 ---60 59 ---229 --82 -471 471 ----3 ---5 5 ---18 --7 -37 37 -------0 ---0 0 ----0 0 0 ----- ----- -------------0 -----------0 --0 ---------4,220 695 ---0 --0 4,220 695 0 4,220 695 (Table 8 continued on next page) ----- 43 Softwoods Eastern redcedar Cypress Shortleaf pine White pine Other pine Total Hardwoods Ash River birch Black cherry Black walnut Cottonwood Elm Hickory Hard maple Soft maple Red oak group White oak group Sweetgum Sycamore Tupelo/gum Yellow-poplar Other hardwoods Total Unit total Species group (Table 8 continued) Table 8.—Continued 1,287 52 459 6 -1,804 1,055 14 336 2,524 3,334 136 2,498 809 1,168 20,067 13,774 257 1,521 4 1,918 213 49,627 51,431 193 9 64 602 491 80 441 144 198 3,615 3,852 75 268 1 316 380 10,730 11,636 MBF a 174 2 55 552 471 22 411 133 192 3,572 2,452 42 250 1 316 35 8,683 9,122 349 9 80 1 -439 MCF Saw logs b 789 9 105 1 2 906 MCF a Total --7 212 --14 17 -23 1,074 ----0 1,347 1,347 --------2 46 --3 4 -5 246 ----0 306 306 ------- a MBF MCF Riverborder Unit b Veneer logs 209 89 91 43 251 722 257 91 77 477 1,270 417 204 0 2 4,359 8,560 8,707 --123 -24 147 Cords c --10 -2 12 a 17 7 7 3 20 57 20 7 6 38 100 33 16 0 0 344 676 688 MCF Pulpwood --0 ---0 0 -------0 0 0 ------- Cords c ------- a ------- MBFb a ------- MCF2 Cooperage ------0 -----------0 --0 ---------6,400 1,055 ------------0 --0 6,400 1,055 0 6,400 1,055 (Table 8 continued on next page) MCF Charcoal 44 Softwoods Eastern redcedar Cypress Shortleaf pine White pine Other pine Total Hardwoods Ash Basswood River birch Black cherry Black walnut cottonwood Elm Hickory Hard maple Soft maple Red oak group White oak group Sweetgum Sycamore Tupelo/gum Yellow-poplar Other hardwoods Total State total Species group (Table 8 continued) Table 8.—Continued ------120 ------24 -------0 -144 144 743 ------149 -------1 -893 893 MCFa ------- MBFb Handles -----120 -600 -15 1,200 900 -15 ---2,850 3,150 --300 --300 Cordsc -----8 -42 -1 84 63 -1 ---200 221 309 ---273 1,636 309 1,085 36 273 993 1,996 36 309 ---7,254 189,218 1 ---1 6 1 4 0 1 4 8 0 1 ---28 574 39 -507 --546 MCFa Poles 13,044 -168,920 --181,964 Pieces All Units --21 --21 MCFa Industrial fuelwood ----------2 1 -----2 307 7 -297 --304 Mpiecesd ------- MCFa Excelsior/ shavings 924 -93 --1,017 MCFa Cabin logs --4 -----4 --------4 -----------6 1 -154 0 1 51 -----43 --1 ----0 7 1 1 274 236 1 1,291 (Table 8 continued on next page) 5 -229 --234 MCFa Posts 45 Softwoods Eastern redcedar Cypress Shortleaf pine Total Hardwoods Ash River birch Black cherry Black walnut Cottonwood Elm Hickory Hard maple Soft maple Red oak group White oak group Sweetgum Sycamore Tupelo/gum Yellow-poplar Other hardwoods Total Unit total Species group (Table 8 continued) Table 8.—Continued ----115 -----12 ---------127 127 ----715 -----75 ---------790 790 MCFa Handles MBFb ------------------- ----- Cordsc ------------------- ----36 ----36 540 36 -720 360 36 36 ---1,800 136,327 9,783 -124,744 134,527 0 ----0 2 0 -3 1 0 0 ---7 411 29 -374 404 MCFa Poles MCFa Pieces Eastern Ozark Unit Industrial fuelwood ---------1 ------1 169 0 -169 169 ------------------- ----- MCFa -----------------79 36 -43 79 MCFa Cabin logs (Table 8 continued on next page) ---------0 ------0 130 0 -130 130 MCFa Posts Mpiecesd Excelsior/ shavings 46 Softwoods Eastern redcedar Shortleaf pine Total Hardwoods Ash Black cherry Black walnut Cottonwood Elm Hickory Hard maple Soft maple Red oak group White oak group Sycamore Tupelo/gum Other hardwoods Total Unit total Table 8.—Continued ---1 ----4 -------5 5 ---8 ----24 -------32 32 -----600 --1,200 900 ---2,700 3,000 -300 300 -----42 --84 63 ---189 210 -21 21 --------------46,002 3,261 42,741 46,002 Southwestern Ozark Unit --------------138 10 128 138 --------1 0 ---1 123 6 115 122 ---- 4 37 41 ------------------------0 -154 0 -51 --36 --1 ---1 -243 94 -284 (Table 8 continued on next page) 5 89 94 47 Softwoods Eastern redcedar Shortleaf pine Total Hardwoods Ash River birch Black cherry Black walnut Cottonwood Elm Hickory Hard maple Soft maple Red oak group White oak group Sweetgum Sycamore Other hardwoods Total Unit total Species group (Table 8 continued) Table 8.—Continued MBF ---1 -----2 -------2 2 3 -----10 -------14 14 a ---- MCF Handles b Cords ----------------- ---- c a Poles ----------------- -------------------- ---- MCF Pieces MCF Northwestern Ozark Unit Industrial fuelwood ----------------- ---- a ---------0 ----0 12 -12 12 Mpiecesd ----------------- ---- MCFa 1 1 --1 ---2 ---2 2 10 395 384 1 385 MCFa Cabin logs (Table 8 continued on next page) ---------0 ----0 9 -9 9 MCFa Posts Excelsior/ shavings 48 Softwoods Eastern redcedar Shortleaf pine White pine Total Hardwoods Ash Basswood River birch Black cherry Black walnut Cottonwood Elm Hickory Hard maple Soft maple Red oak group White oak group Sycamore Other hardwoods Total Unit total Table 8.—Continued --------------------- --------------------- -----120 ---15 --15 -150 150 ---------8 ---1 --1 -11 11 ----- ----273 ---273 1,636 273 545 -273 273 1,636 273 -5,454 5,454 Prairie Unit 1 ---1 6 1 2 -1 1 6 1 -21 21 --------------1 0 --1 1 ----- ----- 61 0 -62 --2 -----2 --------2 -----------4 0 --0 1 ---4 -0 5 0 1 19 0 1 81 (Table 8 continued on next page) ----- 49 MBF MCF Handles b a Cords c a MCF Pieces Riverborder Unit Industrial fuelwood MCF Poles a Mpiecesd ------------------- ---------0 ------0 1 ------------1 ---1 451 439 -11 --450 MCFa MCFa ------- Cabin logs Excelsior/ shavings 1 -1 --1 MCFa Posts Softwoods Eastern redcedar ------1 Cypress -------Shortleaf pine ----1,435 4 1 White pine -------Other pine -------Total ----1,435 4 2 Hardwoods Ash 17 3 -----River birch -------Black cherry -------Black walnut -------Cottonwood -------Elm -------Hickory 39 6 -----Hard maple -------Soft maple -------Red oak group ------0 White oak group -------Sweetgum -------Sycamore -------Tupelo/gum -------Yellow-poplar 1 0 -----Other hardwoods -------Total 57 9 ----0 Unit total 57 9 --1,435 4 2 All table cells without observations are indicated by -- . Table value of 0 indicates the volume rounds to less than 1 unit of measure. Columns and rows may not add to their totals due to rounding. a Thousand cubic feet. b Thousand board feet, International ¼-inch rule. c Standard cords are 128 cubic feet consisting of 79 cubic feet of wood and 49 cubic feet of bark and air space. d Thousand pieces. Species group (Table 8 continued) Table 8.—Continued 50 Species group Softwoods Eastern redcedar Cypress Shortleaf pine White pine Total Hardwoods Ash Basswood River birch Black cherry Black walnut Cottonwood Elm Hickory Hard maple Soft maple Red oak group White oak group Sweetgum Sycamore Tupelo/gum Yellow-poplar Other hardwoods Total State total 2009 9,363 58 14,971 24 24,417 7,060 2 214 843 24,887 18,447 1,667 28,478 2,560 9,204 277,906 125,385 595 8,737 673 3,681 2,054 512,393 536,810 2006 9,203 122 18,358 0 27,683 9,136 75 297 1,503 18,449 22,150 3,017 38,236 3,168 13,233 327,928 163,529 2,003 12,965 570 2,526 2,297 621,081 648,764 Receipts -23% -97% -28% -44% 35% -17% -45% -26% -19% -30% -15% -23% -70% -33% 18% 46% -11% -17% -17% 2% -52% -18% >1,000%b -12% Percent change All Units 8,237 119 297 812 25,656 19,751 2,852 35,804 2,890 11,809 312,330 152,457 1,940 11,092 625 1,241 2,363 590,273 618,321 9,002 121 18,924 0 28,047 2006 -8% -52% -5% >1,000%b -6% Percent change 6,880 -16% 82 -31% 214 -28% 687 -15% 22,879 -11% 17,584 -11% 1,711 -40% 26,954 -25% 2,181 -25% 8,120 -31% 267,883 -14% 121,820 -20% 700 -64% 8,514 -23% 664 6% 2,410 94% 2,083 -12% 491,366 -17% 517,676 -16% (Table 9 continued on next page) 8,278 58 17,964 10 26,310 2009 Production Table 9.—Saw log receipts and production, in thousand board feeta, by Forest Inventory Unit and species group, Missouri, 2006 and 2009 and species group, Missouri, 2006 and 2009 Table 9. -- Saw log receipt s and product ion, in t housand board feet a, by Forest I nvent ory Unit 51 Species group Softwoods Eastern redcedar Cypress Shortleaf pine White pine Total Hardwoods Ash Basswood River birch Black cherry Black walnut Cottonwood Elm Hickory Hard maple Soft maple Red oak group White oak group Sweetgum Sycamore Tupelo/gum Yellow-poplar Other hardwoods Total Unit total (Table 9 continued) Table 9.—Continued 2009 1,354 10 12,516 -13,881 944 --90 249 408 601 16,097 971 637 140,536 58,653 422 1,668 480 -54 221,811 235,692 2006 1,097 80 14,666 -15,842 1,911 --109 475 1,045 1,143 23,130 1,114 1,468 176,747 70,738 1,286 2,020 330 331 3 281,849 297,691 Receipts -51% ---18% -48% -61% -47% -30% -13% -57% -20% -17% -67% -17% 45% ->1,000%b -21% -21% 24% -87% -15% --12% Percent change Eastern Ozark Unit 1,537 --122 677 776 811 20,676 850 895 172,329 63,201 1,127 1,514 150 163 3 264,829 281,085 661 80 15,515 -16,256 2006 -24% --88% 68% -35% -28% -27% 33% -30% -17% -11% -67% 7% 217% 203% >1,000%b -16% -16% 92% -93% -23% --19% Percent change (Table 9 continued on next page) 1,171 --229 1,137 506 581 15,069 1,134 626 143,180 56,472 374 1,624 476 492 43 223,115 236,302 1,268 6 11,912 -13,186 2009 Production 52 Softwoods Eastern redcedar Cypress Shortleaf pine White pine Total Hardwoods Ash Basswood River birch Black cherry Black walnut Cottonwood Elm Hickory Hard maple Soft maple Red oak group White oak group Sweetgum Sycamore Tupelo/gum Yellow-poplar Other hardwoods Total Unit total Table 9.—Continued 3,890 -1,931 -5,821 230 --13 14,764 17 13 3,713 -173 69,157 23,662 -786 193 -118 112,840 118,661 5,101 -2,530 -7,631 223 --1,000 6,516 -12 3,569 25 48 63,385 25,265 -2,042 240 -132 102,458 110,089 3% ---99% 127% -17% 4% -261% 9% -6% --62% -20% --11% 10% 8% -24% --24% --24% Southwestern Ozark Unit 895 --300 6,414 150 57 4,483 154 97 55,860 21,770 127 1,187 244 16 368 92,120 99,775 4,946 -2,709 -7,655 -40% -102% -10% 559 -38% ----17 -94% 5,066 -21% 25 -83% 32 -43% 3,902 -13% 3 -98% 134 39% 60,187 8% 23,088 6% --884 -26% 184 -25% --118 -68% 94,199 2% 102,629 3% (Table 9 continued on next page) 2,957 -5,473 -8,430 53 Species group Softwoods Eastern redcedar Cypress Shortleaf pine White pine Total Hardwoods Ash Basswood River birch Black cherry Black walnut Cottonwood Elm Hickory Hard maple Soft maple Red oak group White oak group Sweetgum Sycamore Tupelo/gum Yellow-poplar Other hardwoods Total Unit total (Table 9 continued) Table 9.—Continued 2009 2,817 --2,817 1,143 --3 1,294 135 141 1,167 166 83 14,088 11,609 83 928 ---30,839 33,656 2006 1,205 --1,205 419 --3 1,219 138 40 2,158 25 158 18,127 18,427 -1,160 --9 41,882 43,087 Receipts 173% ---17% 6% -2% 253% -46% 567% -48% -22% -37% --20% ----26% -22% 134% ---134% Percent change Northwestern Ozark Unit 324 --7 2,139 336 52 1,659 6 251 24,761 22,150 -1,120 --24 52,829 54,399 1,208 -362 -1,570 2006 224% ---31% 55% 35% 196% -15% 2733% 19% -33% -42% --2% --96% -29% -26% 121% --68% -78% Percent change (Table 9 continued on next page) 1,051 -0 5 3,319 453 154 1,413 162 298 16,700 12,831 68 1,096 --46 37,596 40,384 2,672 -116 -2,788 2009 Production 54 Softwoods Eastern redcedar Cypress Shortleaf pine White pine Total Hardwoods Ash Basswood River birch Black cherry Black walnut Cottonwood Elm Hickory Hard maple Soft maple Red oak group White oak group Sweetgum Sycamore Tupelo/gum Yellow-poplar Other hardwoods Total Unit total Table 9.—Continued 43 ---43 3,280 2 214 35 5,814 15,710 806 4,759 153 7,494 32,333 17,557 -4,393 --1,779 94,330 94,374 116 1 --116 4,339 75 297 134 6,403 18,808 1,821 5,937 1,035 10,414 39,355 31,232 55 6,171 --2,111 128,187 128,303 -24% -97% -28% -74% -9% -16% -56% -20% -85% -28% -18% -44% --29% ---16% -26% -26% -62% ----63% Prairie Unit 3,850 117 263 216 14,327 14,672 1,715 5,262 336 9,125 33,756 25,109 36 4,990 --1,807 115,582 115,687 106 ---106 -11% ----3% 3,045 -21% 82 -30% 199 -24% 101 -53% 10,834 -24% 13,266 -10% 807 -53% 4,072 -23% 73 -78% 5,894 -35% 27,749 -18% 15,655 -38% --3,390 -32% ----1,663 -8% 86,829 -25% 86,931 -25% (Table 9 continued on next page) 94 -4 4 102 55 Receipts Percent change Riverborder Unit Species group 2006 2009 2006 Softwoods Eastern redcedar 1,685 1,257 -25% 2,080 Cypress 41 48 17% 41 Shortleaf pine 1,162 524 -55% 339 >1,000%b 0 White pine 0 24 Total 2,889 1,854 -36% 2,461 Hardwoods Ash 2,244 1,463 -35% 1,630 Basswood ---1 River birch ---33 Black cherry 257 703 173% 167 Black walnut 3,835 2,767 -28% 2,099 Cottonwood 2,159 2,177 1% 3,816 >1,000%b 218 Elm 1 105 Hickory 3,442 2,742 -20% 3,723 Hard maple 970 1,270 31% 1,544 Soft maple 1,145 816 -29% 1,442 Red oak group 30,314 21,791 -28% 25,625 White oak group 17,866 13,905 -22% 20,227 Sweetgum 662 90 -86% 651 Sycamore 1,572 962 -39% 2,281 Tupelo/gum ---232 Yellow-poplar 2,196 3,681 68% 1,063 Other hardwoods 43 103 139% 163 Total 66,705 52,574 -21% 64,914 Unit total 69,594 54,428 -22% 67,375 All table cells without observations are indicated by -- . Table value of 0 indicates the volume rounds to less than 1 thousand board feet. Columns and rows may not add to their totals due to rounding. a Thousand board feet, International ¼-inch rule. b Volumes are too small to calculate a meaningful percent change. (Table 9 continued) Table 9.—Continued Percent change -38% 27% 35% >1,000%b -27% -35% --57% 101% 20% -13% -37% -33% -48% -19% -22% -32% -60% -33% -98% 80% 31% -24% -24% 2009 1,287 52 459 6 1,804 1,055 -14 336 2,524 3,334 136 2,498 809 1,168 20,067 13,774 257 1,521 4 1,918 213 49,627 51,431 Production 56 Species group Softwoods Eastern redcedar Cypress Shortleaf pine White pine Other pine Total Hardwoods Ash Basswood River birch Black cherry Black walnut Cottonwood Elm Hickory Hard maple Soft maple Red oak group White oak group Sweetgum Sycamore Tupelo/gum Yellow-poplar Other hardwoods Total State total 323.2 1.3 401.7 0.2 0.0 726.4 3,027.7 11.1 4,497.4 1.8 1.9 7,540.0 Total growing stock 51.2 444.9 1,454.7 0.2 4.2 14.7 5.5 11.4 48.2 2.6 36.3 138.6 6.5 323.2 2,499.4 24.2 403.2 2,696.7 8.8 91.2 357.8 107.3 1,415.4 5,048.1 7.1 113.7 414.2 39.8 419.3 1,487.1 1,158.3 10,016.9 51,065.3 551.7 5,551.0 28,631.3 3.4 37.3 148.8 44.8 443.3 1,603.9 2.7 35.0 133.7 6.8 124.2 432.4 20.6 121.7 632.1 2,041.5 19,592.4 96,807.1 4,020.5 20,318.8 104,347.2 1,273.2 0.1 704.2 0.0 1.4 1,978.9 1,431.3 9.8 3,391.5 1.6 0.5 4,834.7 958.6 10.2 31.3 99.7 2,169.6 2,269.3 257.9 3,525.4 293.3 1,028.0 39,890.0 22,528.7 108.1 1,115.8 96.0 301.4 489.9 75,173.2 80,007.9 Poletimber Sawtimber residue (not used) Growing stock Used for products Logging 15.9 0.1 1.3 4.1 1.0 189.9 15.1 84.5 7.4 17.5 840.2 482.6 6.9 19.8 4.4 4.1 65.3 1,760.1 1,935.7 116.7 0.2 58.6 0.0 -175.6 Limbwood 377.5 0.1 43.5 0.0 0.0 421.1 Cull trees 0.3 92.2 -0.9 0.3 2.6 0.0 10.4 0.4 2,228.9 1.1 43.8 -30.5 0.3 375.3 0.0 27.7 1.0 91.8 0.7 6,107.0 0.3 3,209.2 -13.1 1.0 97.7 -10.5 -26.8 0.0 81.3 5.5 12,449.8 75.3 12,870.9 9.7 -60.1 --69.8 Saplings 0.2 -0.1 0.1 0.1 0.4 0.4 1.5 0.1 0.4 944.0 432.5 0.2 0.4 0.1 0.0 2.3 1,382.9 1,400.4 5.3 -12.2 --17.5 Dead trees 165.8 2.0 5.2 16.6 817.0 0.5 41.2 654.2 52.6 195.8 10.0 4.8 16.9 205.2 16.0 58.1 50.3 2,312.2 2,313.5 --1.3 --1.3 Nonforest trees Non-growing stock Used for products All Units Source of material Total 982.2 11.6 30.9 98.5 1,148.6 1,338.9 246.9 3,828.2 310.1 1,149.7 24,943.4 11,634.6 101.2 1,208.4 95.2 340.5 320.2 47,789.1 51,236.6 1,575.7 5.7 1,865.0 0.9 0.2 3,447.5 Total 3,213.7 10.1 4,271.5 1.7 1.9 7,498.9 wood material used Total Total 1,898.9 7.0 2,266.7 1.2 0.2 4,173.9 5,112.6 17.1 6,538.2 2.8 2.1 11,672.8 wood wood material material not used harvested 1,256.7 1,284.3 1,427.1 2,711.4 14.6 13.5 15.8 29.3 40.4 46.3 42.3 88.6 129.7 133.5 134.7 268.3 4,196.0 5,223.6 1,471.8 6,695.4 1,574.6 2,529.2 1,742.1 4,271.3 334.1 353.9 338.1 692.0 4,944.1 4,748.6 5,243.6 9,992.2 812.0 397.8 388.1 423.9 1,456.1 1,374.2 1,569.0 2,943.2 32,845.4 48,950.3 34,960.4 83,910.7 15,764.1 27,209.8 17,185.5 44,395.3 138.3 148.6 138.6 287.2 1,532.6 1,484.8 1,651.7 3,136.5 126.2 129.7 130.2 259.9 429.5 397.2 464.8 861.9 519.4 709.6 441.9 1,151.5 65,699.6 95,125.2 67,381.5 162,506.7 69,832.4 102,624.1 71,555.4 174,179.5 (Table 10 continued on next page) 2,084.9 6.0 2,040.7 1.0 0.2 4,132.8 slash non(not growing used) stock Logging source ofinmthousand at erial, and species issouri, 2Unit, 0 0 9 source of material, and species group, Missouri, 2009a Table 10.—Wood material harvested for industrial roundwood, cubic feet, bygroup, ForestMInventory a Table 1 0 . -- Wood m at erial harvest ed for indust rial roundwood, in t housand cubic feet , by Forest I nvent ory Unit , 57 Species group Softwoods Eastern redcedar Cypress Shortleaf pine Total Hardwoods Ash River birch Black cherry Black walnut Cottonwood Elm Hickory Hard maple Soft maple Red oak group White oak group Sweetgum Sycamore Tupelo/gum Yellow-poplar Other hardwoods Total Unit total (Table 10 continued) Poletimber 200.6 0.0 472.0 672.6 27.1 0.0 0.8 --2.2 50.8 3.9 1.9 595.4 239.9 1.2 5.1 1.5 1.4 0.4 931.5 1,604.1 Sawtimber 130.5 1.0 2,237.1 2,368.6 227.3 0.3 30.4 112.6 65.1 79.4 1,935.7 150.4 80.1 21,054.9 9,855.7 47.0 209.4 62.2 61.5 9.7 33,981.6 36,350.2 146.2 0.0 11.9 16.8 11.5 30.4 788.4 59.0 32.4 5,335.1 2,440.7 19.3 84.1 24.7 25.3 2.5 9,028.3 9,333.0 39.9 0.1 264.6 304.6 residue (not used) Growing stock Used for products Logging Table 10.—Continued 400.7 0.3 43.0 129.4 76.6 112.0 2,774.9 213.2 114.3 26,985.4 12,536.4 67.5 298.5 88.4 88.2 12.6 43,941.5 47,287.4 371.0 1.1 2,973.8 3,345.9 Total growing stock 2.4 0.1 0.9 -5.4 2.9 37.4 4.3 1.6 396.5 194.9 0.7 4.5 1.5 0.8 1.3 655.1 711.1 17.9 0.0 38.1 56.0 Limbwood ------0.0 --0.3 0.0 -----0.3 35.7 1.3 -34.1 35.3 Saplings 25.6 0.1 3.0 115.3 1.1 8.2 183.3 14.8 7.4 3,201.4 1,401.8 4.2 19.7 6.0 5.5 1.6 4,999.0 5,077.7 57.8 0.0 20.8 78.7 Cull trees 0.0 0.0 0.0 --0.1 0.4 0.1 0.0 502.6 199.5 0.0 0.1 0.0 -0.0 702.9 710.5 0.8 -6.9 7.7 Dead trees Total 236.7 0.6 1,236.2 1,473.5 314.5 0.6 1,336.1 1,651.2 slash non(not growing used) stock Logging 310.6 0.5 40.5 270.1 71.6 106.8 2,571.3 200.8 106.1 25,754.7 11,892.3 62.1 277.9 82.7 81.0 14.1 41,843.1 45,062.1 408.9 1.0 2,809.1 3,219.0 wood material used Total Total 319.5 0.0 44.4 74.2 50.0 113.3 2,923.9 220.2 121.0 18,640.8 7,792.0 72.3 314.3 92.3 94.9 9.1 30,882.1 32,660.3 276.6 0.7 1,500.8 1,778.2 630.1 0.5 84.9 344.3 121.6 220.1 5,495.2 421.0 227.1 44,395.5 19,684.3 134.4 592.2 175.0 175.9 23.2 72,725.2 77,722.4 685.5 1.7 4,309.9 4,997.1 wood wood material material not used harvested Total (Table 10 continued on next page) 28.2 173.2 229.5 -0.0 0.2 5.5 32.5 41.9 42.2 57.4 214.9 -38.5 45.0 14.0 82.9 108.1 363.6 2,135.5 2,720.3 27.3 161.2 207.8 15.1 88.7 112.8 3.7 13,305.7 17,410.1 0.5 5,351.3 7,147.9 9.0 52.9 66.8 39.1 230.2 293.6 11.5 67.6 86.6 11.9 69.5 87.7 1.0 6.6 10.6 572.7 21,853.8 28,783.8 572.7 23,327.3 30,435.0 ----- Nonforest trees Eastern Ozark Unit Source of material Non-growing stock Used for products 58 Softwoods Eastern redcedar Shortleaf pine Total Hardwoods Ash Black cherry Black walnut Cottonwood Elm Hickory Hard maple Soft maple Red oak group White oak group Sycamore Tupelo/gum Other hardwoods Total Unit total 423.7 215.5 639.3 2.0 0.3 --0.2 29.6 0.0 0.4 302.2 132.4 5.9 1.2 0.6 474.8 1,114.0 213.9 1,040.4 1,254.3 73.4 6.4 471.7 3.2 5.8 569.9 0.4 17.0 9,378.1 3,900.5 144.8 33.3 19.3 14,623.8 15,878.1 Table 10.—Continued 29.9 1.1 70.2 0.6 1.8 208.2 0.2 6.9 2,279.5 906.9 48.9 10.1 6.4 3,570.7 3,779.8 85.8 123.3 209.1 105.3 7.9 541.9 3.8 7.8 807.7 0.6 24.3 11,959.8 4,939.8 199.5 44.6 26.3 18,669.3 20,771.9 723.4 1,379.2 2,102.6 1.7 1.2 -0.3 0.5 30.0 0.0 0.3 276.0 155.8 1.9 2.9 1.5 472.0 532.4 41.7 18.7 60.3 -----0.3 --0.4 0.3 ---1.0 28.6 4.2 23.4 27.6 7.0 1.3 485.6 0.1 0.8 99.2 0.0 1.5 1,486.5 639.0 10.2 4.4 2.5 2,738.3 2,894.7 134.8 21.6 156.4 Southwestern Ozark Unit 0.0 0.0 --0.0 0.9 0.0 0.0 215.4 84.5 0.0 0.1 0.0 301.0 307.8 2.0 4.8 6.8 541.3 569.0 1,110.3 724.1 638.7 1,362.8 13.5 79.4 101.6 0.4 2.8 5.8 178.1 253.6 917.4 -1.9 2.2 0.8 4.8 7.0 98.2 562.4 791.0 0.1 0.5 0.6 3.2 19.0 24.1 6.3 5,647.4 7,631.9 4.4 2,194.9 3,078.8 21.3 127.4 160.8 4.4 27.0 38.9 2.8 17.2 24.0 333.5 8,938.3 12,784.1 334.8 10,048.6 14,146.9 -1.3 1.3 627.1 692.3 1,319.4 1,447.5 2,017.9 3,465.4 97.5 109.3 206.9 9.8 3.9 13.7 1,135.5 323.8 1,459.3 3.5 2.5 6.0 8.2 6.6 14.8 828.1 770.6 1,598.7 0.6 0.6 1.2 22.5 26.0 48.4 11,664.9 7,926.8 19,591.8 4,916.7 3,101.8 8,018.6 184.1 176.3 360.3 46.3 37.2 83.5 26.7 23.6 50.3 18,944.4 12,509.0 31,453.4 21,090.5 13,828.4 34,918.8 (Table 10 continued on next page) 820.4 1,325.6 2,146.0 59 Species group Softwoods Eastern redcedar Shortleaf pine Total Hardwoods Ash River birch Black cherry Black walnut Cottonwood Elm Hickory Hard maple Soft maple Red oak group White oak group Sweetgum Sycamore Other hardwoods Total Unit total (Table 10 continued) Poletimber 409.5 4.8 414.3 3.4 0.1 0.0 0.2 0.1 0.4 4.3 0.5 1.1 66.8 51.3 0.2 4.3 0.4 133.1 547.4 Sawtimber 535.3 22.5 557.7 132.9 1.2 0.6 313.3 59.4 19.3 178.2 20.3 39.1 2,440.3 2,571.5 8.5 139.1 8.0 5,931.6 6,489.3 54.6 0.1 0.3 46.6 10.4 7.9 74.1 8.3 15.5 621.3 656.6 3.5 56.6 2.6 1,558.5 1,673.3 112.1 2.6 114.7 residue (not used) Growing stock Used for products Logging Table 10.—Continued 191.0 1.4 0.9 360.1 69.9 27.6 256.6 29.1 55.7 3,128.3 3,279.4 12.2 200.0 11.0 7,623.3 8,710.0 1,056.9 29.8 1,086.7 Total growing stock 1.8 0.0 0.0 0.0 4.8 0.3 2.4 0.3 0.5 41.8 34.7 0.1 2.1 0.1 88.9 126.9 37.7 0.4 38.0 Limbwood 0.0 -0.0 0.0 --0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 --0.1 0.0 0.1 5.2 2.7 2.5 5.1 Saplings 11.7 0.0 0.1 322.1 1.0 1.7 15.9 1.8 3.3 365.7 347.2 0.8 12.2 0.5 1,084.1 1,206.1 121.8 0.2 122.0 Cull trees 0.0 -0.0 0.0 --0.0 0.0 0.0 58.5 44.9 -0.0 0.0 103.4 105.5 1.6 0.5 2.1 Dead trees 25.3 0.0 0.1 118.1 -3.7 34.1 3.9 7.2 0.0 -1.6 26.4 1.1 221.6 221.6 ---- Nonforest trees Northwestern Ozark Unit Source of material Non-growing stock Used for products Total 148.6 0.1 0.7 166.4 34.5 21.8 199.8 22.9 42.2 1,549.8 1,234.1 9.6 155.1 6.7 3,592.4 4,117.5 512.8 12.3 525.1 Total 175.2 1.3 0.9 753.6 65.3 25.4 234.9 26.7 51.2 2,973.0 3,049.6 11.2 184.1 10.1 7,562.8 8,702.1 1,108.5 30.8 1,139.3 wood material used Total Total 203.2 0.3 1.0 213.1 44.9 29.7 273.9 31.2 57.8 2,171.1 1,890.6 13.2 211.7 9.3 5,150.9 5,790.7 624.9 14.9 639.8 378.5 1.6 1.8 966.7 110.2 55.1 508.8 58.0 109.0 5,144.1 4,940.2 24.4 395.8 19.4 12,713.7 14,492.8 1,733.4 45.7 1,779.1 wood wood material material not used harvested (Table 10 continued on next page) 187.5 0.2 0.9 606.6 40.3 27.5 252.2 28.9 53.2 2,015.7 1,660.9 12.2 195.8 8.4 5,090.4 5,782.8 676.6 15.9 692.4 slash non(not growing used) stock Logging 60 Softwoods Eastern redcedar Shortleaf pine White pine Total Hardwoods Ash Basswood River birch Black cherry Black walnut Cottonwood Elm Hickory Hard maple Soft maple Red oak group White oak group Sycamore Other hardwoods Total Unit total 18.8 0.0 0.0 18.8 11.9 0.2 0.8 0.3 4.1 11.3 3.3 13.5 0.2 29.8 112.1 69.0 15.3 5.1 277.0 295.8 62.4 0.9 0.6 63.9 383.2 10.2 27.0 14.3 1,022.0 1,709.8 100.9 509.1 12.9 744.4 4,056.4 2,926.5 428.5 212.5 12,157.8 12,221.7 Table 10.—Continued 157.3 4.2 10.5 5.3 152.4 304.6 41.9 210.4 4.1 304.3 1,032.8 754.4 175.3 86.2 3,243.7 3,252.2 8.3 0.1 0.1 8.5 552.3 14.7 38.2 19.9 1,178.6 2,025.8 146.1 733.0 17.2 1,078.5 5,201.3 3,750.0 619.1 303.8 15,678.5 15,769.7 89.5 1.0 0.7 91.2 5.6 0.1 0.3 0.2 0.6 141.7 1.4 6.9 0.1 12.3 69.4 41.7 6.6 2.8 289.7 291.1 1.3 0.0 0.0 1.4 0.1 --0.0 0.2 0.2 -0.0 0.0 0.8 0.0 0.0 0.3 0.0 1.7 1.8 0.1 --0.1 4.3 0.0 0.0 4.3 33.9 0.9 2.2 1.1 1,050.3 34.0 9.0 45.2 0.8 66.3 607.8 406.7 38.3 18.5 2,315.0 2,319.3 Prairie Unit 0.0 --0.0 0.1 0.1 -0.0 0.0 0.3 97.1 54.8 0.1 0.0 152.5 152.5 0.1 --0.1 73.4 2.0 4.8 2.4 385.1 0.5 19.4 98.1 1.8 142.1 0.0 0.0 81.8 40.1 851.6 851.6 ----- 27.0 0.5 0.4 27.8 430.6 543.6 11.6 14.6 28.3 35.6 14.4 18.1 543.6 1,979.9 1,009.4 1,185.9 114.1 143.9 575.5 725.8 10.5 13.2 834.4 1,056.2 2,575.4 3,349.7 1,493.1 1,996.3 479.7 606.8 235.7 297.1 8,356.4 11,966.8 8,378.3 11,994.5 21.2 0.4 0.4 22.0 29.5 0.5 0.4 30.5 116.4 1.5 1.1 119.0 508.0 588.0 1,096.0 13.5 15.8 29.3 35.1 38.7 73.8 18.3 19.8 38.1 2,462.5 696.0 3,158.4 1,897.6 1,314.0 3,211.6 134.0 156.0 290.0 672.9 785.9 1,458.8 30.4 15.8 14.6 996.0 1,138.7 2,134.7 4,942.8 3,608.2 8,551.0 3,498.7 2,247.5 5,746.2 571.0 655.0 1,226.0 279.1 321.9 600.9 16,045.2 11,600.0 27,645.2 16,133.7 11,630.5 27,764.2 (Table 10 continued on next page) 86.9 1.0 0.6 88.5 61 residue (not used) Growing stock Used for products Logging Total growing stock Nonforest trees Riverborder Unit Source of material Non-growing stock Used for products SawPoleLimbSapCull Dead Species group timber timber wood lings trees trees Softwoods Eastern redcedar 489.2 220.6 77.1 787.0 18.1 1.5 58.7 0.8 -Cypress 8.8 0.1 1.1 10.0 0.2 -0.1 --Shortleaf pine 90.7 11.9 11.0 113.6 1.5 0.2 0.8 0.0 -White pine 1.0 0.0 0.1 1.2 0.0 -0.0 --Other pine 0.5 1.4 0.0 1.9 --0.0 --Total 590.2 234.0 89.4 913.6 19.8 1.7 59.6 0.8 -Hardwoods Ash 141.9 6.8 56.8 205.5 4.4 0.2 14.0 0.1 25.4 River birch 2.9 4.6 0.7 8.2 0.9 0.3 0.3 0.1 0.3 Black cherry 48.0 1.2 17.7 66.9 1.8 0.0 4.9 0.0 8.1 Black walnut 250.0 2.2 37.2 289.4 0.4 0.1 255.5 0.0 93.5 Cottonwood 431.8 12.8 76.0 520.6 37.8 0.9 7.7 0.3 -Elm 52.5 2.6 9.2 64.3 10.1 -10.8 0.4 3.3 Hickory 332.5 9.1 134.4 475.9 7.7 0.0 31.7 0.1 60.2 Hard maple 109.3 2.5 42.2 154.1 2.6 0.0 10.1 0.0 19.5 Soft maple 147.3 6.6 60.2 214.1 2.8 0.2 13.2 0.1 28.1 Red oak group 2,960.4 81.7 748.3 3,790.5 56.7 0.0 445.6 70.5 0.0 White oak group 3,274.5 59.0 792.3 4,125.8 55.5 -414.6 48.8 -Sweetgum 52.6 2.0 14.5 69.1 6.1 -8.2 0.2 6.2 Sycamore 194.0 14.2 78.5 286.7 4.6 0.7 17.3 0.2 36.6 Tupelo/gum 0.5 0.0 0.2 0.7 0.0 -0.0 0.0 0.1 Yellow-poplar 239.9 5.4 98.9 344.2 3.3 -21.3 0.0 46.2 Other hardwoods 240.3 14.1 24.0 278.5 59.7 0.0 58.2 2.2 5.1 Total 8,478.4 225.1 2,191.1 10,894.6 254.4 2.4 1,313.4 123.1 332.8 Unit total 9,068.6 459.1 2,280.5 11,808.2 274.2 4.0 1,373.1 124.0 332.8 All table cells without observations are indicated by -- . Table value of 0.0 indicates the volume rounds to less than 0.1 thousand cubic feet. Columns and rows may not add to their totals due to rounding. a Based on factors obtained from the Missouri Logging Utilization Study, 1987, and other regional utilization studies. (Table 10 continued) Table 10.—Continued Total 342.8 5.4 49.6 0.6 0.2 398.5 194.6 4.4 62.9 477.2 301.3 47.7 454.8 147.3 209.8 2,437.9 1,880.2 59.3 275.5 0.7 341.8 179.2 7,074.6 7,473.1 263.7 5.1 47.0 0.6 0.2 316.6 150.3 2.5 48.0 127.6 254.7 23.3 355.0 115.0 165.4 1,865.2 1,361.2 38.6 216.0 0.5 271.0 54.0 5,048.4 5,365.0 slash non(not growing used) stock Logging Total 192.9 9.4 64.1 601.9 491.2 79.5 441.3 144.2 198.4 3,614.8 3,852.5 75.3 267.7 0.7 316.1 379.5 10,729.7 11,635.8 788.9 9.1 105.1 1.0 1.9 906.1 wood material used Total Total 207.1 3.2 65.7 164.8 330.7 32.5 489.4 157.2 225.6 2,613.5 2,153.5 53.1 294.4 0.7 369.9 78.1 7,239.5 7,645.6 340.8 6.3 58.0 0.7 0.2 406.1 400.0 12.7 129.8 766.7 821.9 112.0 930.7 301.4 424.0 6,228.4 6,006.0 128.4 562.2 1.4 686.0 457.6 17,969.2 19,281.3 1,129.7 15.4 163.1 1.8 2.1 1,312.2 wood wood material material not used harvested 62 Forest Inventory All Unit and county species Eastern Ozark Unit Bollinger 2,865 Butler 1,058 Carter 4,035 Crawford 2,146 Dent 2,230 Iron 2,659 Madison 5,147 Oregon 4,477 Reynolds 4,929 Ripley 3,752 Shannon 7,084 St. Francois 891 Washington 3,583 Wayne 2,433 Total 47,287 Southwestern Ozark Unit Barry 1,369 Christian 891 Douglas 2,473 Howell 4,830 McDonald 1,375 Newton 706 Ozark 1,146 Stone 660 Taney 853 Texas 5,183 Webster 415 Wright 870 Total 20,772 Cypress -1 -----------1 1 -------------- Eastern redcedar 2 --5 17 42 29 20 27 71 43 70 36 8 371 39 41 54 20 1 1 156 10 358 7 30 7 723 99 21 128 424 44 4 154 10 33 452 -9 1,379 36 94 346 54 76 59 286 255 206 349 784 58 195 175 2,974 Shortleaf pine -------------- ---------------- White pine Softwoods -------------- ---------------- Other pine 138 62 182 443 45 5 310 20 391 459 30 16 2,103 38 94 346 60 93 101 315 275 233 420 827 128 232 184 3,346 Total softwoods 24 16 1 9 17 7 0 23 1 5 0 1 105 262 2 7 5 2 2 35 37 2 11 7 13 2 14 401 Ash -------------- ---------------- Basswood 22 -0 0 -0 9 1 -1 0 8 1 1 43 Black cherry 14 1 2 12 21 1 6 13 10 2 40 4 2 3 129 Black walnut -0 65 --16 --35 -5 29 -0 49 -1 107 -1 2 -0 71 -0 10 -0 78 --37 --43 -8 542 (Table 11 continued on next page) ---0 -----0 ----0 River birch Hardwoods 1 1 .from -- Growing-st rem ovalsroundwood, from t im berland for indust rialby roundwood, in t housand cubic , Table 11.—Growing-stock Table removals timberlandock for industrial in thousand cubic feet, Forest Inventory Unit, county, andfeet species group, Missouri, 2009 by Forest I nvent ory Unit , count y, and species group, M issouri, 2 0 0 9 63 Forest Inventory All Unit and county species Northwestern Ozark Unit Benton 168 Camden 863 Cedar 92 Dallas 726 Hickory 727 Laclede 316 Maries 883 Miller 1,428 Morgan 422 Phelps 2,042 Polk 478 Pulaski 374 St. Clair 190 Total 8,710 Prairie Unit Adair 352 Andrew 57 Atchison 13 Audrain 641 Barton 790 Bates 116 Buchanan 181 Caldwell 106 Carroll 380 Cass 299 Chariton 476 Clark 955 Clay 14 Clinton 21 Cooper 254 (Table 11 continued) Table 11.—Continued Cypress ------------------------------ Eastern redcedar 12 182 -131 22 74 147 290 38 70 21 70 0 1,057 ---0 -0 ---0 ----40 --------------1 -----2 ---24 -4 -30 Shortleaf pine ---------------- --------------- White pine Softwoods ---------------- --------------- Other pine ---0 -0 ---0 ----41 12 182 -131 22 76 147 290 38 94 21 74 0 1,087 Total softwoods 2 0 -25 82 8 -3 14 4 8 33 1 0 2 3 8 16 18 3 0 14 12 3 8 100 1 4 191 Ash 7 ----------1 ---- --------------- Basswood -0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ---0 1 Black cherry 29 20 18 22 41 18 11 27 21 28 48 30 44 360 Black walnut -1 79 --2 --7 -0 21 -0 5 0 1 17 --51 --5 --0 0 0 2 13 1 19 -2 41 -----6 1 0 30 (Table 11 continued next page) (Prairie on Unit contued) 0 -------1 ---0 1 River birch Hardwoods 64 Prairie Unit (cont.) Dade Daviess De Kalb Gentry Greene Grundy Harrison Henry Holt Jasper Johnson Knox Lafayette Lawrence Lewis Lincoln Linn Livingston Macon Marion Mercer Monroe Nodaway Pettis Pike Putnam Ralls Randolph Ray Saline Schuyler Scotland Shelby Sullivan Vernon Worth Total Table 11.—Continued 105 552 51 121 258 381 298 195 34 148 127 307 67 705 570 628 117 243 437 133 204 440 79 352 686 94 582 1,545 87 146 333 516 262 100 178 39 15,770 ----3 --2 --2 ---0 0 --1 ----41 0 -------0 -0 -89 -------------------------------------- --------------0 ---------------------1 ---------------1 --------------------1 -------------------------------------- ----3 --2 --2 ---1 1 --1 ----41 0 -------0 -0 -91 16 28 1 1 24 21 16 10 -12 6 6 3 36 18 21 2 9 6 2 13 5 0 5 39 0 24 23 4 4 0 6 6 0 6 0 552 -----------4 --2 ---0 -----------------15 --26 -0 22 --6 --7 -0 53 --22 --29 0 0 8 --3 -0 21 --3 -1 18 -0 0 -0 86 -1 42 -1 8 -0 13 -0 16 1 0 3 -0 8 -0 17 3 0 14 --4 2 0 67 -0 7 -0 14 -0 8 18 2 21 --0 -0 29 164 -4 -4 72 -0 2 -0 14 0 0 65 --3 38 20 1,179 (Table 11 continued on next page) 65 Forest Inventory Unit and county Riverborder Unit Boone Callaway Cape Girardeau Cole Dunklin Franklin Gasconade Howard Jefferson Mississippi Moniteau Montgomery New Madrid Osage Pemiscot Perry Scott St. Charles St. Louis Ste. Genevieve Stoddard Warren Total State total (Table 11 continued) Table 11.—Continued Eastern redcedar 0 30 9 101 -13 125 -59 -74 109 -168 -20 -1 1 63 -15 787 3,028 All species 541 372 854 531 78 775 1,060 248 460 2 396 592 333 1,205 1 2,562 82 141 32 711 448 386 11,808 104,347 ----0 -------1 ---0 ---9 -10 11 Cypress --12 1 2 6 1 -20 -3 ----22 -1 -42 3 0 114 4,497 Shortleaf pine -----------------0 ---1 1 2 White pine Softwoods --------2 -------------2 2 Other pine 0 30 21 102 2 19 127 -81 -78 109 1 168 -42 0 2 1 105 12 16 914 7,540 Total softwoods 7 0 23 11 5 11 11 5 8 -4 18 1 24 -58 1 2 0 14 0 3 205 1,455 Ash -----------------------15 Basswood Black cherry Black walnut 6 1 40 -0 25 -10 11 -0 9 --0 -0 16 -0 4 2 0 27 -6 2 ----0 32 -0 6 --0 -0 4 ----36 81 -0 0 -2 5 -0 2 -9 10 -1 5 -2 9 8 67 289 48 139 2,499 (Table 11 continued on next page) River birch Hardwoods 66 Forest Inventory CottonUnit and county wood Eastern Ozark Unit Bollinger 10 Butler 1 Carter 0 Crawford 7 Dent 6 Iron 4 Madison 8 Oregon 12 Reynolds -Ripley 5 Shannon 0 St. Francois 9 Washington 14 Wayne 0 Total 77 Southwestern Ozark Unit Barry -Christian 0 Douglas 0 Howell 1 McDonald -Newton 1 Ozark 0 Stone -Taney 2 Texas -Webster -Wright -Total 4 (Table 11 continued) Table 11.—Continued Hickory 297 75 225 81 133 100 383 298 271 202 386 43 83 200 2,775 86 37 57 259 51 21 18 26 12 196 18 26 808 Elm 5 5 10 6 1 0 8 43 2 15 3 -7 6 112 0 0 2 4 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 8 ---1 -----0 --1 92 --8 1 4 62 5 0 1 0 14 11 15 213 Hard maple 0 0 7 5 0 1 0 0 1 5 0 4 24 7 10 30 7 6 7 7 3 4 15 7 -6 8 114 Soft maple 706 517 1,636 2,764 694 386 602 348 294 3,226 213 574 11,960 1,234 601 2,423 1,175 1,214 1,633 2,511 2,576 3,180 2,169 4,329 403 2,282 1,256 26,985 Red oak group 320 231 545 1,284 394 158 188 159 132 1,206 116 206 4,940 817 241 959 755 734 792 1,691 1,181 1,188 853 1,470 242 905 710 12,536 White oak group Hardwoods -------------- 9 10 3 2 0 0 15 0 -21 -0 1 6 68 Sweetgum 26 11 7 13 73 17 23 13 8 8 0 1 200 15 11 15 27 19 11 44 30 35 26 11 3 31 19 299 Sycamore 2 --10 32 1 ---0 --45 3 7 14 1 -4 27 4 4 7 4 1 1 11 88 Tupelo/ gum 0 -0 2 1 0 0 --4 0 0 4 0 13 Other hardwoods 2,827 963 3,689 2,086 2,137 2,559 4,832 4,202 4,696 3,331 6,257 763 3,351 2,248 43,941 Total hardwoods -1 1,231 --829 --2,291 -5 4,387 -19 1,330 -1 701 --836 -0 640 -0 462 -0 4,724 --385 --855 -26 18,669 (Table 11 continued on next page) 40 -----26 ----22 --88 Yellowpoplar 67 Forest Inventory CottonUnit and county wood Northwestern Ozark Unit Benton 0 Camden 1 Cedar 2 Dallas -Hickory -Laclede -Maries 24 Miller 14 Morgan 19 Phelps 6 Polk 1 Pulaski -St. Clair 2 Total 70 Prairie Unit Adair 8 Andrew 38 Atchison 4 Audrain 45 Barton 1 Bates 1 Buchanan -Caldwell 27 Carroll 181 Cass 0 Chariton 44 Clark 172 Clay 6 Clinton 3 Cooper 51 (Table 11 continued) Table 11.—Continued Hickory 3 19 -46 5 7 18 23 12 85 9 15 15 257 8 --27 149 33 -3 11 26 8 35 1 0 1 Elm -0 0 7 -0 6 0 -9 -4 0 28 2 --1 0 1 -1 5 0 5 9 1 0 -- 1 --0 ------0 1 --0 -3 ----3 19 3 1 ---29 Hard maple 22 4 0 18 77 2 36 38 47 1 31 31 1 2 5 1 2 -0 -2 26 15 3 4 0 2 1 56 Soft maple 85 5 -291 240 34 56 12 61 105 210 362 1 4 42 62 288 40 239 424 116 168 464 120 853 160 112 83 3,128 Red oak group 136 3 1 173 161 16 38 10 26 97 91 258 2 3 56 54 329 11 248 232 95 428 532 186 878 124 127 36 3,279 White oak group Hardwoods ---------------- -1 -----9 1 0 ---12 Sweetgum 0 4 -22 75 1 -4 17 25 28 7 1 1 16 2 10 4 14 1 0 36 23 9 74 14 10 3 200 Sycamore ---------------- --------------- Tupelo/ gum 2 -1 ---1 1 4 1 --1 11 Other hardwoods 156 681 92 595 705 239 736 1,139 384 1,948 457 300 190 7,623 Total hardwoods -1 352 -0 57 --13 -17 641 -1 790 -2 116 --181 -3 106 -18 380 -38 299 -19 476 -1 955 -1 14 -0 21 -10 213 (Table 11 continued on next page) (Prairie Unit continued) --------------- Yellowpoplar 68 Prairie Unit (cont.) Dade Daviess De Kalb Gentry Greene Grundy Harrison Henry Holt Jasper Johnson Knox Lafayette Lawrence Lewis Lincoln Linn Livingston Macon Marion Mercer Monroe Nodaway Pettis Pike Putnam Ralls Randolph Ray Saline Schuyler Scotland Shelby Sullivan Vernon Worth Total Table 11.—Continued 1 206 26 90 -136 119 3 19 1 19 25 36 -52 91 6 111 8 3 58 17 62 21 101 6 23 51 44 38 6 31 3 4 3 28 2,026 0 22 1 0 1 15 13 0 -0 0 4 1 0 8 0 1 3 4 2 12 2 --0 -1 18 2 1 1 3 2 -0 -146 -28 1 1 7 21 15 24 -5 6 16 2 41 21 23 4 8 14 6 13 10 0 4 39 1 26 48 4 2 6 12 9 1 14 0 733 -0 ---------1 --2 3 0 0 0 2 0 0 -1 3 0 1 1 -0 0 0 0 0 --17 -65 3 5 0 48 18 2 3 3 4 44 2 0 42 35 31 27 14 3 15 13 3 5 43 15 26 35 4 7 44 168 9 15 13 2 1,079 37 48 5 5 110 39 30 66 3 69 31 89 11 342 155 228 35 28 223 50 24 231 3 81 316 20 238 718 12 23 41 142 174 12 51 2 5,201 21 68 4 7 55 38 28 64 3 32 32 95 4 179 218 182 24 24 157 53 26 117 2 83 85 38 212 520 8 30 67 74 54 55 21 3 3,750 -------------------------------------- 3 43 4 4 6 26 19 12 2 4 21 4 4 19 8 24 1 14 4 2 13 22 4 28 30 0 8 64 6 7 0 3 3 -3 0 619 -------------------------------------- -1 105 -21 552 -1 51 -2 121 -1 255 -15 381 -12 298 -3 193 --34 -2 148 -2 125 -1 307 -4 67 -0 705 -1 569 -11 627 -0 117 -4 243 -2 436 -1 133 -14 204 -6 440 -1 79 -15 311 -22 686 --94 -15 582 -26 1,545 -4 87 -5 146 --333 -0 516 -1 262 --100 -2 178 -0 39 -304 15,678 (Table 11 continued on next page) 69 Hardwoods White Forest Inventory CottonHard Soft Red oak oak Unit and county wood Elm Hickory maple maple group group Riverborder Unit Boone 25 4 19 1 11 192 200 Callaway 1 -8 2 4 83 202 Cape Girardeau 10 0 81 24 -342 292 Cole 18 1 10 5 19 163 172 Dunklin 0 1 6 -1 34 19 Franklin 20 2 31 2 18 242 391 Gasconade 127 2 19 5 30 204 489 Howard 7 1 9 0 7 89 65 Jefferson 1 4 26 5 2 166 152 Mississippi 2 -1 ----Moniteau 7 -11 3 2 122 127 Montgomery 83 -19 4 31 152 137 New Madrid 2 36 3 --9 11 Osage 65 4 19 8 46 340 479 Pemiscot -0 --1 --Perry 11 1 124 70 1 1,139 738 Scott 2 0 11 4 -5 19 St. Charles 46 0 1 3 14 24 31 St. Louis --1 0 1 3 23 -36 15 -267 218 Ste. Genevieve 8 Stoddard 7 7 40 0 2 168 175 Warren 77 0 2 4 23 47 184 Total 521 64 476 154 214 3,790 4,126 State total 2,697 358 5,048 414 1,487 51,065 28,631 All table cells without observations are indicated by -- . Table value of 0 indicates the volume rounds to less than 1 thousand cubic feet. Columns and rows may not add to their totals due to rounding. (Table 11 continued) Table 11.—Continued Sycamore 34 13 0 19 2 23 39 31 3 -7 21 1 42 -3 1 10 0 1 19 18 287 1,604 Sweetgum --1 1 6 1 1 -0 -1 -31 --2 14 --1 11 -69 149 --0 ------------1 ------1 134 Tupelo/ gum --37 ------------256 25 --26 --344 432 Yellowpoplar 4 1 1 1 -1 3 5 3 -1 11 238 7 -0 -0 0 1 1 0 278 632 Other hardwoods 541 342 833 430 75 756 934 248 379 2 319 483 333 1,037 1 2,520 82 139 31 606 436 370 10,895 96,807 Total hardwoods 70 Forest Inventory All Unit and county species Eastern Ozark Unit Bollinger 10,732 Butler 3,955 Carter 15,097 Crawford 8,304 Dent 8,586 Iron 10,043 Madison 19,387 Oregon 16,598 Reynolds 18,602 Ripley 13,914 Shannon 26,186 St. Francois 3,427 Washington 13,742 Wayne 9,115 Total 177,689 Southwestern Ozark Unit Barry 5,175 Christian 3,214 Douglas 9,133 Howell 18,426 McDonald 5,570 Newton 2,720 Ozark 4,025 Stone 2,476 Taney 2,270 Texas 19,054 Webster 1,475 Wright 3,224 Total 76,761 Cypress -3 -----------3 6 -------------- Eastern redcedar 2 --6 19 58 43 25 30 79 60 186 73 9 590 52 45 60 25 6 6 172 11 394 10 33 7 820 507 109 648 1,857 234 23 784 51 170 1,550 -48 5,980 175 400 1,526 261 302 242 1,456 1,069 981 1,535 3,001 303 828 794 12,874 Shortleaf pine -------------- ---------------- White pine Softwoods -------------- ---------------- Other pine 560 154 708 1,882 239 28 955 62 563 1,560 33 55 6,800 177 403 1,526 267 321 299 1,499 1,094 1,010 1,613 3,061 490 901 806 13,469 Total softwoods 93 61 5 34 67 28 2 88 4 19 1 3 407 1,009 6 29 19 9 7 134 142 8 41 25 50 9 54 1,544 Ash -------------- ---------------- Basswood 83 -0 0 -0 35 2 -3 1 32 6 3 166 Black cherry 64 6 8 53 93 4 26 57 45 7 179 19 10 13 582 Black walnut -1 294 --72 --158 -21 131 -1 220 -3 484 -5 10 -0 317 -1 44 -0 353 --164 --192 -32 2,439 (Table 12 continued on next page) ---1 -----0 ----1 River birch Hardwoods a Tablefrom 1 2 .timberland -- Sawt im for berindustrial rem ovals from t im berland for indust riala,roundwood, in t housand boardand feetspecies , Table 12.—Sawtimber removals roundwood, in thousand board feet by Forest Inventory Unit, county, group, Missouri, 2009 by Forest I nvent ory Unit , count y, and species group, M issouri, 2 0 0 9 71 Forest Inventory All Unit and county species Northwestern Ozark Unit Benton 664 Camden 2,830 Cedar 361 Dallas 2,357 Hickory 2,640 Laclede 990 Maries 3,800 Miller 5,407 Morgan 1,745 Phelps 7,991 Polk 1,763 Pulaski 1,494 St. Clair 743 Total 32,786 Prairie Unit Adair 1,427 Andrew 289 Atchison 61 Audrain 2,596 Barton 2,971 Bates 449 Buchanan 711 Caldwell 456 Carroll 1,795 Cass 1,115 Chariton 1,864 Clark 3,892 Clay 63 Clinton 87 Cooper 1,089 (Table 12 continued) Table 12.—Continued Cypress ------------------------------ Eastern redcedar 54 201 -145 24 82 645 1,066 161 268 23 268 0 2,938 ---0 -0 ---0 ----163 --------------4 -----12 ---100 -13 -125 Shortleaf pine ---------------- --------------- White pine Softwoods ---------------- --------------- Other pine ---0 -0 ---0 ----167 54 201 -145 24 94 645 1,066 161 368 23 281 0 3,062 Total softwoods 9 0 -95 315 33 -12 52 14 28 125 3 1 6 11 31 62 71 10 0 56 47 12 29 385 6 16 737 Ash 26 ----------6 ---- --------------- Basswood -0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 ---1 3 Black cherry 131 91 81 100 185 82 51 124 94 127 218 137 198 1,620 Black walnut -3 357 --8 --30 -0 94 -0 23 1 3 75 --228 --20 --0 0 1 7 50 4 84 -7 184 -----28 5 0 132 (Table 12 continued next page) (Prairie on Unit contued) 2 -------5 ---0 8 River birch Hardwoods 72 Prairie Unit (cont.) Dade Daviess De Kalb Gentry Greene Grundy Harrison Henry Holt Jasper Johnson Knox Lafayette Lawrence Lewis Lincoln Linn Livingston Macon Marion Mercer Monroe Nodaway Pettis Pike Putnam Ralls Randolph Ray Saline Schuyler Scotland Shelby Sullivan Vernon Worth Total Table 12.—Continued 415 2,518 245 641 989 1,730 1,382 732 168 565 508 1,212 324 2,670 2,265 2,675 467 1,156 1,747 525 904 1,711 423 1,471 2,803 387 2,429 5,934 414 616 1,394 2,048 995 432 718 203 64,681 ----3 --2 --2 ---0 0 --1 ----209 0 -------0 -0 -382 -------------------------------------- --------------2 ---------------------5 ---------------4 --------------------4 -------------------------------------- ----3 --2 --2 ---2 4 --1 ----209 0 -------0 -0 -391 62 109 2 4 91 80 60 38 -46 22 22 10 139 67 81 7 33 25 9 49 18 0 22 149 1 92 88 16 12 2 21 23 1 24 1 2,119 -----------17 --7 ---1 -----------------57 --119 -0 97 --29 --31 -0 239 --97 --131 0 1 37 --15 -0 92 --12 -3 78 -0 0 -0 388 -4 187 -3 37 -0 57 -0 72 3 2 13 -1 38 -0 76 13 1 62 --18 8 1 298 -0 33 -0 62 -2 38 70 7 95 --0 -0 124 737 -14 -17 322 -0 9 -0 62 0 1 292 --15 151 77 5,284 (Table 12 continued on next page) 73 Forest Inventory Unit and county Riverborder Unit Boone Callaway Cape Girardeau Cole Dunklin Franklin Gasconade Howard Jefferson Mississippi Moniteau Montgomery New Madrid Osage Pemiscot Perry Scott St. Charles St. Louis Ste. Genevieve Stoddard Warren Total State total (Table 12 continued) Table 12.—Continued Eastern redcedar 0 88 10 491 -14 557 -87 -177 557 -717 -22 -1 1 102 -71 2,895 7,625 All species 2,045 1,554 3,249 2,142 293 3,195 4,721 943 1,654 13 1,392 2,676 1,398 4,739 4 9,722 318 638 142 2,676 1,693 1,793 47,000 398,917 ----2 -------3 ---1 ---45 -51 57 Cypress --61 4 10 30 8 -62 -17 ----112 -3 -210 15 2 532 19,516 Shortleaf pine -----------------2 ---4 6 9 White pine Softwoods --------3 -------------3 3 Other pine 0 88 71 495 12 44 564 -151 -194 557 3 717 -134 1 7 1 312 60 77 3,488 27,210 Total softwoods 23 1 90 39 21 41 41 14 34 -16 71 5 91 -222 3 6 1 55 1 11 785 5,592 Ash -----------------------57 Basswood Black cherry Black walnut 6 2 173 -1 113 -39 50 -0 39 --1 -0 70 -0 19 9 1 119 -24 8 ----0 141 -1 29 --1 -0 18 ----138 366 -0 2 -8 24 -0 9 -35 47 -3 23 -6 41 15 260 1,293 175 539 11,218 (Table 12 continued on next page) River birch Hardwoods 74 Forest Inventory CottonUnit and county wood Eastern Ozark Unit Bollinger 60 Butler 3 Carter 1 Crawford 38 Dent 33 Iron 22 Madison 45 Oregon 71 Reynolds -Ripley 31 Shannon 2 St. Francois 52 Washington 83 Wayne 2 Total 443 Southwestern Ozark Unit Barry -Christian 2 Douglas 2 Howell 3 McDonald -Newton 4 Ozark 2 Stone -Taney 11 Texas -Webster -Wright -Total 22 (Table 12 continued) Table 12.—Continued Hickory 1,134 288 866 314 511 384 1,475 1,148 1,043 780 1,485 164 333 770 10,696 330 144 220 995 196 82 69 102 48 738 70 98 3,093 Elm 18 21 40 25 5 1 29 165 8 58 12 -29 23 434 1 0 6 15 1 1 0 1 5 0 0 0 31 ---2 -----0 --2 354 --30 3 16 239 20 1 5 1 54 44 57 825 Hard maple 1 1 29 18 1 2 1 1 3 18 2 17 94 27 37 114 26 21 29 28 10 15 56 26 -22 31 441 Soft maple 2,597 1,891 5,985 10,328 2,791 1,426 2,204 1,275 1,074 11,795 781 2,102 44,249 4,501 2,198 8,864 4,304 4,436 5,978 9,188 9,423 11,630 7,941 15,821 1,476 8,409 4,594 98,763 Red oak group 1,177 847 1,995 4,882 1,534 584 688 580 483 4,538 423 752 18,484 3,046 884 3,523 3,105 3,075 3,243 6,255 4,337 4,690 3,152 5,513 988 3,748 2,621 48,180 White oak group Hardwoods -------------- 35 40 11 6 0 0 57 1 -80 -1 4 24 260 Sweetgum 110 42 26 50 324 70 89 48 32 32 0 4 828 58 41 58 105 75 41 171 115 136 102 43 12 121 73 1,153 Sycamore 8 --43 122 5 ---0 --178 11 28 56 2 -16 104 14 16 28 16 3 5 43 342 Tupelo/ gum 0 0 0 7 4 2 1 0 0 16 1 1 18 0 51 Other hardwoods 10,555 3,552 13,571 8,037 8,266 9,743 17,888 15,504 17,592 12,301 23,125 2,938 12,841 8,309 164,220 Total hardwoods -3 4,615 -0 3,060 -0 8,425 -21 16,544 -73 5,331 -3 2,691 -0 3,070 -0 2,413 -2 1,707 -0 17,494 -0 1,442 -0 3,169 -103 69,961 (Table 12 continued on next page) 154 -----100 ----86 --340 Yellowpoplar 75 Forest Inventory CottonUnit and county wood Northwestern Ozark Unit Benton 2 Camden 7 Cedar 11 Dallas -Hickory -Laclede -Maries 142 Miller 78 Morgan 109 Phelps 34 Polk 8 Pulaski -St. Clair 12 Total 403 Prairie Unit Adair 44 Andrew 220 Atchison 25 Audrain 262 Barton 4 Bates 6 Buchanan -Caldwell 153 Carroll 1,046 Cass 3 Chariton 253 Clark 979 Clay 32 Clinton 16 Cooper 296 (Table 12 continued) Table 12.—Continued Hickory 13 72 -177 18 29 69 88 48 327 33 56 58 989 32 --105 574 126 -11 41 102 33 132 3 1 4 Elm -0 1 28 -0 23 2 -36 -14 2 106 7 --3 1 4 -6 19 2 20 35 3 1 -- 4 --0 ------0 4 --0 -11 ----12 72 11 5 ---112 Hard maple 84 16 0 68 298 6 139 147 183 3 92 117 3 9 13 5 7 -1 -6 100 57 15 15 1 6 4 218 Soft maple 311 18 -1,066 879 126 206 45 223 385 767 1,323 3 14 155 226 1,053 146 874 1,550 423 613 1,698 439 3,122 587 410 304 11,446 Red oak group 545 11 5 749 588 59 138 35 95 356 352 951 8 12 213 204 1,313 40 906 848 353 1,946 2,049 791 3,634 452 547 133 13,217 White oak group Hardwoods ---------------- -6 -----34 6 1 ---47 Sweetgum 2 16 -86 287 5 -14 67 97 109 27 6 3 56 8 37 16 55 4 2 138 88 34 286 55 37 10 770 Sycamore ---------------- --------------- Tupelo/ gum 7 0 3 0 0 0 5 3 20 4 0 0 4 46 Other hardwoods 610 2,629 361 2,213 2,616 897 3,155 4,341 1,584 7,622 1,740 1,213 743 29,724 Total hardwoods -5 1,427 -1 289 -0 61 -67 2,595 -2 2,971 -6 449 -0 711 -11 456 -68 1,795 -146 1,115 -73 1,864 -4 3,892 -3 63 -1 87 -41 922 (Table 12 continued on next page) (Prairie Unit continued) --------------- Yellowpoplar 76 Prairie Unit (cont.) Dade Daviess De Kalb Gentry Greene Grundy Harrison Henry Holt Jasper Johnson Knox Lafayette Lawrence Lewis Lincoln Linn Livingston Macon Marion Mercer Monroe Nodaway Pettis Pike Putnam Ralls Randolph Ray Saline Schuyler Scotland Shelby Sullivan Vernon Worth Total Table 12.—Continued 8 1,188 146 517 -787 686 18 112 4 109 132 209 -285 524 36 641 48 15 334 96 355 119 583 33 135 293 252 199 33 166 19 23 15 161 11,625 1 86 2 2 2 58 49 2 -2 1 15 4 2 30 2 2 13 15 7 48 9 --2 -2 71 7 4 3 12 7 -2 -558 -109 2 3 25 80 59 91 -20 24 58 8 158 79 88 14 32 52 23 49 39 1 17 151 2 99 187 14 7 24 44 33 2 55 1 2,814 -0 ---------4 --7 13 0 0 0 7 0 0 -3 13 0 4 4 -0 0 2 2 0 --67 -252 13 18 1 185 70 7 10 10 15 167 9 1 161 134 120 104 53 11 56 50 13 22 165 58 100 135 15 17 171 645 35 59 51 6 4,114 136 176 18 17 403 144 109 243 13 253 114 325 41 1,252 565 833 127 101 814 185 88 846 12 298 1,157 74 871 2,627 43 83 149 520 635 43 185 6 19,026 76 251 15 25 201 139 101 235 10 115 118 372 16 654 837 821 97 94 695 216 100 471 7 303 349 157 997 2,009 28 129 260 286 220 243 75 12 14,849 -------------------------------------- 11 167 15 16 21 101 73 47 9 15 83 14 14 74 30 94 5 53 16 10 51 83 14 109 114 0 32 248 23 20 2 12 10 -10 1 2,371 -------------------------------------- -2 415 -82 2,518 -3 245 -8 641 -2 986 -57 1,730 -46 1,382 -11 729 -0 168 -7 565 -9 506 -5 1,212 -14 324 -1 2,670 -4 2,263 -43 2,672 -1 467 -14 1,156 -9 1,746 -4 525 -52 904 -23 1,711 -2 423 -62 1,262 -86 2,803 -0 387 -57 2,429 -100 5,934 -16 414 -19 616 -0 1,394 -2 2,048 -2 995 -0 432 -7 718 -0 203 -1,178 64,290 (Table 12 continued on next page) 77 Hardwoods White Forest Inventory CottonHard Soft Red oak oak Unit and county wood Elm Hickory maple maple group group Riverborder Unit Boone 98 14 74 4 30 701 786 Callaway 8 -32 6 16 306 926 Cape Girardeau 58 1 313 93 -1,250 1,134 Cole 104 6 37 20 74 596 650 Dunklin 2 3 22 -5 125 71 Franklin 116 8 118 7 70 885 1,745 Gasconade 735 9 72 19 116 746 2,235 Howard 35 5 36 0 28 324 258 Jefferson 7 17 104 22 9 623 630 Mississippi 11 -2 ----Moniteau 12 -42 11 9 448 480 Montgomery 481 -74 16 118 557 649 New Madrid 13 152 10 --35 40 Osage 374 15 72 29 177 1,244 1,811 Pemiscot -2 --2 --Perry 66 3 479 270 3 4,167 2,866 Scott 12 1 41 15 -17 74 St. Charles 266 1 5 12 54 89 128 St. Louis --4 0 4 12 110 -140 56 -975 899 Ste. Genevieve 45 Stoddard 42 27 153 0 9 614 643 Warren 445 0 9 16 90 172 856 Total 2,930 263 1,840 597 813 13,886 16,992 State total 15,423 1,392 19,432 1,603 5,680 187,371 111,722 All table cells without observations are indicated by -- . Table value of 0 indicates the volume rounds to less than 1 thousand board feet. Columns and rows may not add to their totals due to rounding. a International ¼-inch rule. (Table 12 continued) Table 12.—Continued Sycamore 120 52 2 72 9 87 149 95 12 -28 79 5 162 -10 3 39 0 4 74 70 1,071 6,193 Sweetgum --2 6 22 3 3 -1 -6 -129 --7 52 --4 41 -275 582 --0 ------------3 ------3 522 Tupelo/ gum --143 ------------987 97 --100 --1,326 1,667 Yellowpoplar 14 4 4 5 0 3 11 20 12 0 5 43 1,005 27 0 2 0 0 0 4 4 0 1,164 2,542 Other hardwoods 2,045 1,466 3,178 1,647 280 3,152 4,157 943 1,503 13 1,198 2,119 1,395 4,022 4 9,588 316 632 141 2,364 1,634 1,716 43,512 371,707 Total hardwoods 78 Forest Inventory All Unit and county species Eastern Ozark Unit Bollinger 2,135 Butler 760 Carter 2,841 Crawford 1,406 Dent 1,462 Iron 1,766 Madison 3,757 Oregon 3,194 Reynolds 3,400 Ripley 2,634 Shannon 4,769 St. Francois 603 Washington 2,191 Wayne 1,743 Total 32,660 Southwestern Ozark Unit Barry 979 Christian 648 Douglas 1,741 Howell 2,771 McDonald 859 Newton 486 Ozark 828 Stone 477 Taney 664 Texas 3,468 Webster 296 Wright 613 Total 13,828 Cypress -0 -----------0 1 -------------- Eastern redcedar 2 --5 15 35 24 13 24 63 19 42 27 7 277 33 36 48 13 0 0 138 9 315 3 26 6 627 58 13 79 218 14 1 95 6 21 181 -6 692 21 49 182 31 37 27 176 124 118 184 339 24 93 96 1,501 Shortleaf pine -------------- ---------------- White pine Softwoods -------------- ---------------- Other pine 91 49 127 231 14 1 233 15 336 184 26 12 1,319 23 49 182 36 52 63 200 137 142 247 358 66 119 103 1,778 Total softwoods 26 17 1 6 19 8 0 25 1 5 0 1 109 175 2 8 5 3 2 37 39 2 10 7 14 2 15 319 Ash -------------- ---------------- Basswood 23 -0 0 -0 10 1 -0 0 9 0 1 44 Black cherry 8 1 1 7 12 0 3 7 6 1 23 2 1 1 74 Black walnut -0 39 --10 --21 -1 17 -0 29 -1 65 -1 1 -0 43 -0 6 -0 46 --22 --25 -4 324 (Table 13 continued on next page) ---0 -----0 ----0 River birch Hardwoods Table 1 3 .by -- industrial H arvest residue generat ed by indust rial roundwood harvest in t housand cubicand feet , Table 13.—Harvest residue generated roundwood harvesting, in thousand cubic feet, by Foresting, Inventory Unit, county, species group, Missouri, 2009 by Forest I nvent ory Unit , count y, and species group, M issouri, 2 0 0 9 79 Forest Inventory All Unit and county species Northwestern Ozark Unit Benton 108 Camden 607 Cedar 71 Dallas 560 Hickory 508 Laclede 233 Maries 479 Miller 919 Morgan 240 Phelps 1,331 Polk 378 Pulaski 220 St. Clair 137 Total 5,791 Prairie Unit Adair 239 Andrew 40 Atchison 8 Audrain 448 Barton 694 Bates 97 Buchanan 132 Caldwell 91 Carroll 299 Cass 244 Chariton 355 Clark 689 Clay 11 Clinton 14 Cooper 156 (Table 13 continued) Table 13.—Continued Cypress ------------------------------ Eastern redcedar 3 161 -116 19 66 46 125 13 28 19 28 0 625 ---0 -0 ---0 ----14 --------------0 -----1 ---12 -2 -15 Shortleaf pine ---------------- --------------- White pine Softwoods ---------------- --------------- Other pine ---0 -0 ---0 ----15 3 161 -116 19 67 46 125 13 40 19 30 0 640 Total softwoods 2 0 -27 88 9 -3 15 4 8 35 1 0 0 2 9 17 20 3 0 15 13 2 8 107 1 5 203 Ash 7 ----------2 ---- --------------- Basswood -0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ---0 1 Black cherry 17 12 11 13 25 11 7 16 12 17 29 18 26 213 Black walnut -1 48 --1 --4 -0 13 -0 3 0 1 10 --28 --2 --0 0 0 1 14 1 11 -2 25 -----3 0 0 18 (Table 13 continued next page) (Prairie on Unit contued) 0 -------0 ---0 0 River birch Hardwoods 80 Prairie Unit (cont.) Dade Daviess De Kalb Gentry Greene Grundy Harrison Henry Holt Jasper Johnson Knox Lafayette Lawrence Lewis Lincoln Linn Livingston Macon Marion Mercer Monroe Nodaway Pettis Pike Putnam Ralls Randolph Ray Saline Schuyler Scotland Shelby Sullivan Vernon Worth Total Table 13.—Continued 78 450 36 85 188 312 233 154 24 111 102 229 50 519 409 428 92 185 284 90 167 314 54 224 526 64 371 1,124 67 92 233 416 186 62 131 26 11,630 ----3 --2 --2 ---0 0 --1 ----7 0 -------0 -0 -29 -------------------------------------- --------------0 ---------------------1 ---------------0 --------------------0 -------------------------------------- ----3 --2 --2 ---1 0 --1 ----7 0 -------0 -0 -30 17 31 1 1 25 22 17 11 -13 6 6 3 39 19 23 2 9 7 3 14 5 0 4 42 0 26 25 4 3 0 6 7 0 7 0 588 -----------5 --2 ---0 -----------------16 --16 -0 12 --3 --4 -0 31 --12 --17 0 0 5 --2 -0 12 --2 -1 10 -0 0 -0 52 -1 25 -1 5 -0 8 -0 9 1 1 2 -0 5 -0 10 4 0 8 --2 0 0 40 -0 4 -0 8 -0 5 20 2 13 --0 -0 17 100 -4 -5 43 -0 1 -0 8 0 0 38 --1 39 20 696 (Table 13 continued on next page) 81 Forest Inventory Unit and county Riverborder Unit Boone Callaway Cape Girardeau Cole Dunklin Franklin Gasconade Howard Jefferson Mississippi Moniteau Montgomery New Madrid Osage Pemiscot Perry Scott St. Charles St. Louis Ste. Genevieve Stoddard Warren Total State total (Table 13 continued) Table 13.—Continued Eastern redcedar 0 17 8 23 -11 37 -48 -49 19 -55 -18 -1 1 50 -4 341 1,899 All species 365 195 607 338 62 459 587 176 240 2 271 343 76 799 0 1,897 73 101 14 495 336 209 7,646 71,555 ----0 -------0 ---0 ---5 -6 7 Cypress --7 0 1 4 1 -7 -2 ----14 -0 -20 2 0 58 2,267 Shortleaf pine -----------------0 ---0 1 1 White pine Softwoods --------0 -------------0 0 Other pine 0 17 15 23 1 15 38 -55 -51 19 0 55 -31 0 1 1 70 7 4 406 4,174 Total softwoods 6 0 24 11 6 11 11 4 2 -4 20 0 25 -62 0 2 0 15 0 3 207 1,427 Ash -----------------------16 Basswood Black cherry Black walnut 1 0 23 -0 15 -11 5 -0 5 --0 -0 9 -0 2 2 0 16 -2 1 ----0 19 -0 4 --0 -0 2 ----39 45 -0 0 -2 3 -0 1 -10 6 -1 3 -1 5 3 66 165 42 135 1,472 (Table 13 continued on next page) River birch Hardwoods 82 Forest Inventory CottonUnit and county wood Eastern Ozark Unit Bollinger 7 Butler 0 Carter 0 Crawford 4 Dent 4 Iron 2 Madison 5 Oregon 8 Reynolds -Ripley 4 Shannon 0 St. Francois 6 Washington 9 Wayne 0 Total 50 Southwestern Ozark Unit Barry -Christian 0 Douglas 0 Howell 0 McDonald -Newton 0 Ozark 0 Stone -Taney 1 Texas -Webster -Wright -Total 2 (Table 13 continued) Table 13.—Continued Hickory 316 80 240 83 142 105 411 319 290 211 409 46 59 213 2,924 92 40 61 191 55 23 19 28 13 203 19 27 771 Elm 5 6 11 6 1 0 8 46 2 16 3 -2 6 113 0 0 2 2 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 7 ---1 -----0 --1 99 --8 1 4 67 6 0 1 0 15 4 16 220 Hard maple 0 0 8 5 0 1 0 0 1 5 0 5 26 8 10 32 7 6 8 8 3 4 15 7 -5 9 121 Soft maple 485 359 1,135 1,640 398 263 418 242 204 2,236 148 399 7,927 855 417 1,680 809 841 1,132 1,743 1,787 2,206 1,501 2,991 280 1,527 871 18,641 Red oak group 221 161 378 662 236 108 131 110 92 780 80 143 3,102 544 166 652 409 377 433 1,145 804 706 569 954 136 430 467 7,792 White oak group Hardwoods -------------- 10 11 3 2 0 0 16 0 -22 -0 1 7 72 Sweetgum 21 12 7 12 53 14 25 13 9 9 0 1 176 16 11 16 29 21 12 48 32 38 27 12 3 29 20 314 Sycamore 1 --2 34 1 ---0 --37 3 8 16 0 -4 29 4 4 7 4 1 0 12 92 Tupelo/ gum 0 -0 2 1 0 0 --3 0 0 2 0 9 2,112 712 2,659 1,370 1,410 1,703 3,557 3,056 3,258 2,387 4,411 537 2,072 1,640 30,882 Total hardwoods -1 888 --599 --1,614 -1 2,540 -20 844 -1 485 --595 -0 461 -0 328 -0 3,284 --270 --601 -24 12,509 (Table 13 continued on next page) 43 -----28 ----24 --95 Yellowpoplar Other hardwoods 83 Forest Inventory CottonUnit and county wood Northwestern Ozark Unit Benton 0 Camden 1 Cedar 1 Dallas -Hickory -Laclede -Maries 16 Miller 9 Morgan 12 Phelps 4 Polk 1 Pulaski -St. Clair 1 Total 45 Prairie Unit Adair 5 Andrew 25 Atchison 3 Audrain 30 Barton 0 Bates 1 Buchanan -Caldwell 17 Carroll 118 Cass 0 Chariton 29 Clark 111 Clay 4 Clinton 2 Cooper 33 (Table 13 continued) Table 13.—Continued Hickory 4 20 -49 5 8 19 24 13 91 9 15 16 274 9 --29 160 35 -3 12 28 9 37 1 0 1 Elm -0 0 8 -0 7 1 -10 -4 0 30 2 --1 0 1 -2 5 0 5 10 1 0 -- 1 --0 ------0 1 --0 -3 ----3 20 3 1 ---31 Hard maple 23 4 0 19 83 2 39 41 51 1 24 33 1 2 1 1 2 -0 -2 28 16 2 4 0 2 1 58 Soft maple 59 3 -202 167 24 39 9 42 73 145 251 1 3 29 43 200 28 166 294 80 116 322 83 592 111 78 58 2,171 Red oak group 80 2 1 85 111 11 26 7 18 68 57 174 2 2 36 35 188 8 172 161 65 182 339 88 481 86 62 25 1,891 White oak group Hardwoods ---------------- -2 -----10 2 0 ---13 Sweetgum 0 4 -24 80 1 -4 19 27 30 8 2 1 13 1 10 5 15 1 0 38 24 7 80 15 10 3 212 Sycamore ---------------- --------------- Tupelo/ gum 1 -1 ---2 1 3 1 --1 9 Other hardwoods 105 446 71 444 489 166 433 794 228 1,290 360 190 137 5,151 Total hardwoods -1 239 -0 40 --8 -19 448 -1 694 -2 97 --132 -3 91 -19 299 -41 244 -20 355 -1 689 -1 11 -0 14 -9 141 (Table 13 continued on next page) (Prairie Unit continued) --------------- Yellowpoplar 84 Prairie Unit (cont.) Dade Daviess De Kalb Gentry Greene Grundy Harrison Henry Holt Jasper Johnson Knox Lafayette Lawrence Lewis Lincoln Linn Livingston Macon Marion Mercer Monroe Nodaway Pettis Pike Putnam Ralls Randolph Ray Saline Schuyler Scotland Shelby Sullivan Vernon Worth Total Table 13.—Continued 1 134 16 58 -89 77 2 13 0 12 15 24 -33 59 4 72 5 2 38 11 40 13 66 4 15 33 29 22 4 19 2 3 2 18 1,314 0 24 1 1 1 16 14 0 -0 0 4 1 0 9 1 1 4 4 2 13 3 --1 -1 20 2 1 1 3 2 -0 -156 -30 1 1 7 22 16 25 -6 7 16 2 44 22 24 4 9 15 6 14 11 0 5 42 1 28 52 4 2 7 13 9 1 15 0 786 -0 ---------1 --1 4 0 0 0 1 0 0 -0 4 0 0 0 -0 0 1 1 0 --15 -70 4 5 0 52 19 2 3 3 4 47 2 0 45 37 33 29 15 3 16 14 4 3 46 16 28 38 4 4 48 180 10 16 14 2 1,139 26 33 3 3 76 27 21 46 2 48 22 62 8 237 107 158 24 19 155 35 17 160 2 56 219 14 165 498 8 16 28 99 120 8 35 1 3,608 14 46 3 5 38 26 19 44 2 22 22 56 3 124 135 79 14 16 72 30 17 68 1 57 47 21 79 328 5 16 42 44 31 26 14 2 2,248 -------------------------------------- 3 47 4 4 6 28 20 13 2 4 23 4 4 21 8 26 1 15 4 3 14 23 4 27 32 0 9 69 6 5 0 3 3 -3 0 655 -------------------------------------- -1 78 -23 450 -1 36 -2 85 -1 185 -16 312 -13 233 -3 152 --24 -2 111 -2 101 -1 229 -4 50 -0 519 -1 408 -12 428 -0 92 -4 185 -3 283 -1 90 -15 167 -6 314 -1 54 -13 217 -24 526 --64 -16 371 -28 1,124 -4 67 -5 92 --233 -1 416 -1 186 --62 -2 131 -0 26 -322 11,600 (Table 13 continued on next page) 85 Hardwoods White Forest Inventory CottonHard Soft Red oak oak Unit and county wood Elm Hickory maple maple group group Riverborder Unit Boone 11 4 21 0 8 133 121 Callaway 1 -9 1 5 58 74 Cape Girardeau 7 0 85 26 -237 155 Cole 12 2 10 6 21 113 113 Dunklin 0 1 6 -1 24 13 Franklin 13 2 32 2 19 168 162 Gasconade 83 3 20 5 32 141 205 Howard 4 1 10 0 8 61 39 Jefferson 1 1 14 1 2 101 57 Mississippi 1 -1 ----Moniteau 1 -12 3 2 85 84 Montgomery 54 -21 4 33 105 50 New Madrid 1 6 3 --7 8 Osage 42 4 20 8 49 236 304 Pemiscot -0 --0 --Perry 7 1 130 75 1 789 436 Scott 1 0 11 4 -3 10 St. Charles 30 0 1 2 15 17 17 St. Louis --0 0 1 2 8 -38 16 -185 119 Ste. Genevieve 5 Stoddard 5 8 43 0 3 116 118 Warren 50 0 2 4 25 32 62 Total 331 32 489 157 226 2,614 2,154 State total 1,742 338 5,244 424 1,569 34,960 17,186 All table cells without observations are indicated by -- . Table value of 0 indicates the volume rounds to less than 1 thousand cubic feet. Columns and rows may not add to their totals due to rounding. (Table 13 continued) Table 13.—Continued Sycamore 33 14 0 20 3 24 42 25 3 -6 22 2 45 -3 1 11 0 1 21 19 294 1,652 Sweetgum --1 2 6 1 1 -0 -2 -12 --2 15 --1 11 -53 139 --0 ------------1 ------1 130 Tupelo/ gum --40 ------------275 27 --28 --370 465 Yellowpoplar 4 1 1 2 -1 3 5 1 -1 12 37 8 -0 -0 0 1 1 0 78 442 Other hardwoods 365 178 591 315 60 444 549 176 185 2 220 324 75 744 0 1,865 73 100 13 425 329 205 7,240 67,382 Total hardwoods 86 Softwood 4.0 11.7 7.7 1.1 31.8 5.1 61.3 3.3 8.4 4.2 0.6 17.1 3.1 36.6 0.7 3.1 2.6 0.1 8.0 -14.4 166.2 503.2 150.8 80.9 467.5 67.5 1,436.1 69.7 312.5 50.7 8.1 167.5 31.6 640.1 26.3 129.5 37.2 18.6 83.7 1.9 297.2 26.3 104.8 32.5 16.8 52.1 0.4 232.9 69.5 260.2 43.8 7.3 104.4 19.6 504.8 160.4 415.5 134.6 64.9 307.2 44.8 1,127.3 Hardwood Total wood residue Hardwood Total all residues disposition Softwood All Units Fiber products 4.0 Charcoal 13.3 Industrial fuel 8.6 Residential fuel 1.2 Miscellaneousc 45.3 Not used 7.0 Total 79.4 Eastern Ozark Unit Fiber products 3.3 Charcoal 9.5 Industrial fuel 5.0 Residential fuel 0.6 Miscellaneousc 26.1 Not used 4.3 Total 48.8 Southwestern Ozark Unit Fiber products 0.7 Charcoal 3.5 Industrial fuel 2.7 Residential fuel 0.1 Miscellaneousc 11.4 Not used 0.3 Total 18.6 Forest Inventory Unit and -1.9 1.1 0.0 5.7 -8.8 2.2 5.0 1.6 0.3 10.9 1.6 21.5 2.2 6.9 3.1 0.7 21.1 2.7 36.6 Softwood 23.4 75.0 17.9 6.5 28.3 0.1 151.2 62.1 160.7 5.8 6.0 68.8 8.8 312.3 148.5 268.8 53.8 49.6 168.6 27.0 716.4 0.7 1.2 1.5 0.0 2.2 -5.6 1.1 3.4 2.6 0.3 6.2 1.5 15.1 1.8 4.9 4.6 0.3 10.7 2.4 24.7 0.0 1.1 0.8 0.1 9.0 1.2 12.2 0.0 1.6 0.9 0.2 13.6 1.9 18.1 Softwood 0.2 52.3 6.9 0.8 63.1 12.1 135.4 5.8 87.7 16.2 16.0 160.3 22.8 308.7 Hardwood Bark 2.9 --29.8 0.5 24.7 14.7 0.1 4.7 10.3 0.0 1.8 23.8 3.4 31.6 0.3 0.3 1.5 81.7 4.2 64.3 (Table 14 continued on next page) 7.4 99.5 38.0 1.3 35.6 10.8 192.5 11.8 146.7 80.8 15.3 138.6 17.7 410.9 Hardwood Fineb Softwood Residue type Hardwood Wood residue Coarsea Table 14.—Disposition of residues produced at primary wood-using mills, in thousand green tons, by Forest Inventory Unit, disposition, residue type, and Table 14. -- Disposit ion 2009 of residues produced at prim ary wood-using m ills, in t housand green t ons, by Forest I nvent ory Unit , softwoods and hardwoods, Missouri, disposit ion, residue t ype, and soft woods and hardwoods, Missouri, 2009 87 Residue type Forest Inventory Wood residue Fineb Coarsea Unit and Total all residues Total wood residue disposition Softwood Hardwood Softwood Hardwood Softwood Hardwood Softwood Hardwood Northwestern Ozark Unit Fiber products -3.7 -2.6 -2.6 --Charcoal -19.2 -15.0 -10.1 -4.9 Industrial fuel 0.6 2.8 0.5 2.2 0.4 1.4 0.1 0.8 Residential fuel 0.1 8.4 0.1 6.1 0.1 5.5 -0.6 Miscellaneousc 4.1 40.3 3.5 31.4 2.3 21.0 1.3 10.4 Not used 2.1 2.0 1.8 1.7 1.0 0.8 0.8 0.9 Total 6.9 76.3 5.9 59.0 3.8 41.3 2.2 17.6 Prairie Unit Fiber products -25.6 -21.6 -20.1 -1.5 Charcoal -14.4 -13.3 -10.2 -3.1 Industrial fuel 0.4 43.3 0.4 39.3 -24.0 0.4 15.3 Residential fuel 0.1 38.6 0.1 29.1 0.1 26.1 -3.0 Miscellaneousc 0.1 111.0 0.1 81.4 0.0 35.8 0.1 45.6 Not used 0.0 26.8 0.0 19.3 0.0 15.1 0.0 4.3 Total 0.5 259.8 0.5 204.0 0.1 131.2 0.5 72.8 Riverborder Unit Fiber products -41.0 -40.5 -40.4 -0.1 Charcoal 0.2 27.5 0.2 22.2 -12.8 0.2 9.4 Industrial fuel 0.1 16.8 0.1 16.8 -4.7 0.1 12.0 Residential fuel 0.3 7.2 0.3 5.5 0.3 5.5 0.0 0.0 Miscellaneousc 3.7 65.0 3.1 37.9 2.1 14.7 0.9 23.2 Not used 0.3 5.2 0.2 3.8 0.1 2.3 0.1 1.5 Total 4.6 162.6 3.8 126.7 2.5 80.4 1.3 46.3 All table cells without observations are indicated by -- . Table value of 0.0 indicates the volume rounds to less than 0.1 thousand green tons. Columns and rows may not add to their totals due to rounding. a Suitable for chipping such as slabs, edgings, veneer cores, etc. b Not suitable for chipping such as sawdust, veneer clippings etc. c Livestock bedding, mulch, small dimension, specialty items, etc. (Table 14 continued) Table 14.—Continued 1.1 4.2 0.6 2.3 8.9 0.3 17.4 4.0 1.2 4.0 9.5 29.6 7.5 55.8 0.5 5.3 -1.7 27.1 1.4 35.9 --0.1 0.0 0.6 0.3 1.0 ---0.0 0.0 -0.0 ---0.1 0.6 0.1 0.8 Bark Softwood Hardwood Piva, Ronald J.; Treiman, Thomas B. 2012. Missouri timber industry: an assessment of timber product output and use, 2009. Resour. Bull. NRS-74. Newtown Square, PA: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Northern Research Station. 88 p. Presents recent Missouri forest industry trends; production and receipts of industrial roundwood; and production of saw logs, veneer logs, pulpwood, and other products in 2009. Logging residue generated from timber harvest operations is reported, as well as wood and bark residue generated at primary wood-using mills and disposition of mill residues. KEY WORDS: Industrial roundwood, harvest residue, mill residue, production, pulpwood, receipts, saw logs, veneer logs The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) prohibits discrimination in all its programs and activities on the basis of race, color, national origin, age, disability, and where applicable, sex, marital status, familial status, parental status, religion, sexual orientation, genetic information, political beliefs, reprisal, or because all or part of an individual’s income is derived from any public assistance program. (Not all prohibited bases apply to all programs.) Persons with disabilities who require alternate means for communication of program information (Braille, large print, audiotape, etc.) should contact USDA’s TARGET Center at (202)720-2600 (voice and TDD). To file a complaint of discrimination, write to USDA, Director, Office of Civil Rights, 1400 Independence Avenue, S.W., Washington, DC 20250-9410, or call (800)795-3272 (voice) or (202)720-6382 (TDD). USDA is an equal opportunity provider and employer. Printed on Recycled Paper Northern Research Station www.nrs.fs.fed.us