Forestry

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Prepare
a field notebook, make a collection, and identify 15
species of trees or wild shrubs in a local forested area.
Include a written description of:
- Identifying characteristics of leaf, twig, and fruit samples
- The habitat in which these trees or shrubs are found
- Chief ways each tree or shrub is used by human or wildlife
- The
forest's successional stage, what its history
has been, and what its future is.
-
Do ONE of the following:
- Collect and identify wood samples of 10 species of trees.
List several ways each species of wood can be used.
- Find and examine several stumps or logs that show variations
in growth rate in their ring patterns. Prepare a field notebook
describing their location and discuss possible reasons for
the variations.
-
Be able to do the following:
- Describe contributions forests make to Our economy in the
form of products
- Our social well-being
- Soil protection and increased fertility
- Clean water
- Clean air
- Wildlife
- Recreation
- Tell which watershed or other source your community
relies on for its water supply.
-
Be able to describe what forest management means, including:
- Multiple-use management
- Even-aged and uneven-aged management and silvicultural
systems associated with each type
- Intermediate cuttings
- How prescribed burning and related forest management
practices are used
-
Do ONE of the following:
- Visit a managed public or private forest area with its
manager or someone familiar with it. Write a brief report
describing:
- The
type of forest
- The management objectives
- The forestry techniques used to achieve the objectives
- Take a trip to a logging operation or wood-using industrial
plant and write a brief report describing:
- The
species and size of trees being harvested or
used
- Where the trees are going to or coming from
- What products are made from the trees or at the plant
- How the products are made
- How the products are used
- How waste materials from the logging operation or plant are disposed of or
utilized
-
Be able to do the following:
- Describe the damages to forests that result from:
- Wildfire
- Insects
- Tree disease
- Overgrazing
- Improper harvest
- Tell what can be done to reduce these damages.
- Tell
what you should do if you discover a forest fire
and how to control it.
-
Do ONE of the following:
- Assist in carrying out a project that meets one or more
of these objectives: timber stand improvement, watershed
improvement, wildlife habitat improvement, recreation
area improvement, or range improvement.
- Take part in a forest fire prevention campaign in cooperation
with your local fire warden, forester, or counselor.
- Visit with one of more local foresters and write a brief
report including education, qualifications, career opportunities,
and objectives relating to forestry.
Forestry Merit Badge Workbook
Requires Acrobat Reader
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to "F" Merit Badges
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