June 26, 2006 2:35 PM

Welcome

 

Welcome to the Southern Research Station's Biological/Engineering Systems and Technologies for Ecological Management Work Unit. The Unit conducts basic and applied research and transfers these results to the public.
 
In addition, the Unit is involved in demonstrations, technical consultations, and public presentations. Our stakeholders include forest industry, the National Forest System, other government agencies, private landowners, contractors, equipment manufacturers, and university researchers. Many of the Unit's studies are conducted in cooperation with universities, forest industry, and independent producers.
 
Scientists in the Unit are nationally and internationally recognized, serving on committees and numerous professional societies.

Background (Forest Engineering and Operations White Paper)

 

Forest operations are the critical connection between the forest management plan and the realization of desired future conditions. Forest operations are the physical actions which change the forest, altering structure, composition, condition, or value in order to meet society’s needs for clean air and water, forest products, wildlife, recreation, and other benefits. On every type of forest ownership, the forest operation is the tool selected by the land manager to shape the future and provide value and benefits in the present. Forest operations are the source of both the benefits of management and the negative impacts. Forest operations generate value for society through improved forest conditions and product outputs. They also impact ecological processes and leave an imprint on the landscape.

The basic challenge facing resource managers is matching the requirements of the management plan to the capabilities of the forest operation. Modern resource management involves the consideration of a wide variety of factors and often seeks to optimize the attainment of multiple objectives. Protecting water quality while enhancing carbon sequestration and producing economically-competitive forest products might serve as an example. There is not adequate information available for resource managers to make rational selections of forest operations in new prescriptions. In some cases, technology has not yet been developed to meet the functional requirements of management prescriptions within economic and social constraints. In other cases, even basic scientific knowledge about the interactions among modern forest operations systems and ecological processes is inadequate to define technology and development needs.

Map to Facility

 

Our facility is located at 520 DeVall Drive in Auburn, Alabama. From I-85 take Exit 51 and travel north on Hwy 29 to S. Donahue Drive. Turn left onto S. Donahue and then left onto Devall Drive.

 

Information on Local Area and Lodging

 

 

 

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