Skip to content. | Skip to navigation

You are here: Home Our Resources Literature The effects of popula...

The effects of population growth on timber management and inventories in Virginia

Author: Wear, D.N.; Lui, R.; Foreman, J.M. [and others]
Date: 1999
Periodical: Forest Ecology and Management
Link: http://www.srs.fs.usda.gov/pubs/rpc/1999-06/rpc_99jun_46.pdf
Abstract: Expanding human populations may have important effects on the availability of timber from private lands in the South. To examine the effects of development on timber supply, the authors compared the density of populations and various site variables with expert opinions on the future location of commercial timberland for a study site in Virginia. Population density is a significant predictor of commercial timberland and resulting probability equations provide a method for adjusting timber inventories. Findings indicate that the transition between rural and urban land use occurs where population density is between 20 and 70 people per square mile. Population effects reduce commercial inventories between 30 and 49 percent in the study area.


Personal tools

powered by Southern Regional Extension Forestry