Many forestlands are currently not producing up to their potential. This low productivity is especially severe on several million acres of privately owned timberland where very poor trees are growing on space that is needed by better trees. On the average, undesirable or cull trees occupy one-third of the total growing space in pine-hardwood and hardwood stands of the South. Timber stand improvement practices are needed to remove trees of undesirable form, quality, condition, growth rate, or species. Removal of poor trees will stimulate the growth of better trees and will increase profits to timberland owners. It is very likely that your timberland could benefit from some of these timber stand improvement practices.

What Is TSI?

Timber stand improvement, or TSI, is a term used to identify forest management practices which improve the vigor, stocking, composition, productivity, and quality of forest stands. The improvement is accomplished by removing poor trees and allowing crop trees to fully use the growing space. The chief aim of TSI is continued production of more and better timber products. TSI practices can be used to convert assorted hardwood and pine stands into productive forests of desirable species. TSI can speed up the growth and improve the quality of the trees in your forest. Different TSI practices may be needed at different times during the life of an established stand -- from the start of a new crop of trees until the final harvest. Here are some basic TSI practices:

Trees To Remove In TSI

In pine, mixed pine-hardwood, and hardwood stands, remove trees that are financially mature or that interfere with the growth and development of more valuable trees. You will want to remove trees such as these:

You will want to leave these trees in your timber stand:

Most people think TSI practices always involve out-of-pocket costs for the landowner. However, some TSI practices can produce immediate income. Thinning is a TSI practice that can produce income if the trees can be sold. Research has shown that volume growth and financial returns will increase with each additional TSI treatment, if costs are reasonable and adequate markets are available. For example, a prescribed burn before the harvest of an old pine stand can increase volume growth in the new stand. Prescribed burning plus removal of large hardwoods in a young pine stand can also yield a good investment return. Find a forester, if needed, to assist you in choosing the right TSI practices that will produce the desired forest management results at the least cost. Some TSI practices are quite cheap, and some, such as thinning, will produce immediate income. All TSI practices will increase future incomes. TSI doesn't cost -- it pays!

Prescribed Burning

Fire, if properly used, can be a very effective TSI practice for forest improvement, maintenance, and protection of pine stands. It is the cheapest management tool available to a timberand owner. Prescribed fire can be used for these purposes:

Prescribed fire is usually not recommended for hardwood stands. Hardwoods have thin bark that is easily damaged by fire. Pines have a thick bark that insulates the cambium (layer of growth cells under the bark) from heat damage. If you are interested in learning more about the use of prescribed fire, contact your county agent or county forester. Never attempt to use fire in your timber stands without the help of a forester. Fire is a management tool that must be applied regularly, at certain times of the year, during the right weather, and with proper equipment. A professional forester can assist you in developing a prescribed burning program for your timber stands.

Cull Tree Removal

Cull tree removal involves cutting or killing undesirable weed trees or culls. A cull is any tree, pine or hardwood, whose quality is so poor that you cannot sell it. Cull trees grow larger, but no better in quality. They take up needed growing space, shade desirable trees, and harbor insects and disease. You will make more money if you remove them to make room for better trees. Occasionally, a poor tree may be left because of its wildlife value. Some poor quality trees may be used for firewood and low value products, but most culls must be killed by chemical or mechanical means. Methods of cull tree removal include these:

Tree kill will vary with the herbicide used, size of the tree, time of the year, species, and other factors.

Species that are easy to kill:

  • basswood
  • elm
  • sumac
  • birch
  • ironwood
  • sweetgum
  • blackgum
  • oak
  • willow
  • box-elder
  • plum
  • cherry
  • sassafras

Species that are hard to kill:

  • ash
  • hackberry
  • poison ivy
  • beech
  • sugarberry
  • honeysuckle
  • cedar
  • hickory
  • kudzu
  • privet
  • holly
  • dogwood
  • maple

Thinning

Thinning overcrowded stands increases diameter growth of remaining trees and decreases loss from natural mortality. Larger diameter trees are more valuable as sawtimber, plywood, and veneer than are smaller trees that are used for pulpwood or fence posts. Thinning does not increase the total volume or fiber yield of a stand, but it substantially increases the yield of lumber, plywood, and poles and decreases the loss of trees from natural mortality.

Pre-commercial thinning is cutting in young, dense stands where the trees are too small to sell as wood products. This type thinning produces no immediate income for the timberland owner, but the cost can be justified by the value of increased future growth. The purpose of pre-commercial thinning is to reduce the competition and improve the growth rate of the remaining trees. Unwanted trees can be removed with herbicides, mechanical equipment, or by cutting. Thinning can sometimes be delayed until trees are large enough to make fenceposts if a market is available. The growth loss from delayed thinning will probably be greater than the income received for low-value products. Pre-commercial thinning plus cull tree removal of large hardwoods can result in an investment return of 10 to 20 percent in young pine stands. Commercial thinning of merchantable size trees produces some income for the landowner, depending upon the number, size, and quality of trees being removed. A commercial thinning is often referred to as an improvement cut if the very poor quality trees being removed are marketable. From a marketing standpoint, there should be sufficient volume to justify a harvesting operation by the buyer. The money a timberland owner receives for standing trees, called stumpage, decreases as the cost of harvesting increases. Harvesting cost decreases as tree size, quality, and volume per acre increase. You may want to delay thinning until trees are large enough to make an economical harvest, even though increased growth of crop trees will also be delayed.

Pine Beetle Prevention

You can reduce the likelihood of southern pine beetle attack in your pine timber by thinning. Overstocked stands are more susceptible to beetle attack. Overcrowding weakens the ability of trees to repel insect penetration. Healthy trees can often "pitch out" a beetle with increased resin flow. Also, cutting slow-growing, over mature trees during thinning operations reduces the chance of beetle attack. Some remaining crop trees damaged during thinning may be killed by black turpentine beetles, but the potential danger of southern pine beetle infestation in an overcrowded stand far exceeds the loss of some isolated trees to black turpentine beetles.

Sanitation Cutting

Sanitation cutting is normally done during thinning so that trees damaged by insects, disease, fire, wind, or ice can be sold along with good trees. Sanitation cutting is included in the practice of "thinning from below" where trees with damaged or deformed stems are cut first regardless of their crown position. You must decide whether or not to remove each deformed tree by its condition and whether you think the tree will live until the next scheduled thinning. Some good healthy trees may also be cut to achieve the desired spacing of their crowns (thinning from above) from the crop trees left. Sanitation cutting may not be economical unless it is done during a commercial thinning operation. If you cut only deformed trees, you may have difficulty selling them. If the trees cannot be sold, use the cheapest means of cull tree removal rather than sanitation cutting. Sanitation cutting alone is profitable only after a natural disaster, such as a hurricane, wind, or ice storm, where valuable trees are damaged.

Release Cutting

Release is a TSI practice you can use to regulate species composition and improve the quality and growth of your very young stands of trees. A new crop of trees can become established by natural seeding or sprouting under a canopy of overtopping trees. Unless these new trees are released from shading, they will not survive. The overtopping trees may be of desirable species, or they may be low-quality or culls. Undesirable, competing species may also be growing among the young trees. Cut overtopping and competing trees if they can be sold, or kill them with a herbicide if they are culls. You can inject or aerially spray hardwoods growing over young pine trees. Some herbicides can be used to kill hardwoods in established pine stands if the pines are five years or older. Use care when releasing desirable hardwood trees in hardwood stands because herbicide sprays will kill both desirable and undesirable hardwoods. Some injected herbicides can be translocated through root grafts to adjoining crop trees. Get professional help from a forester before using herbicides for overstory or understory release of young trees.