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Inventory

(123)
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2004/06
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Topic

(119)
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Number of stems of all living and dead trees and shrubs (standing and lying) with a diameter at breast height (dbh) ≥12 cm. The total number of stems is the sum of the number of stems and the number of deadwood stems.
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Classification

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Altitude above sea level in classes of 200 m. Reference: Digital height model DHM 25 from Swisstopo
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Altitudinal vegetation belts in the system used in the guidelines for monitoring the sustainability and performance of protection forests (NaiS; Frehner et al. 2005) – in ten classes, whereby the classes «hyperinsubric», «colline» and «colline with beech» and «lower and upper montane» only occur in the Southern Alps (S), the classes «submontane», «lower montane», «upper montane» only in the Northern Alps (N) and the classes «high montane», «subalpine» and «upper subalpine» on both sides of the Alps. The information is based on the altitudinal vegetation belts determined by experts (accessible forest sample plots of NFI4 on the 1.4-km network; Arge Frehner et al. 2020), as well as on the altitudinal vegetation belts modelled for the period 1981-2010 (other sample plots; Zischg et al. 2021).
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Altitudinal vegetation belts in the system used in the guidelines for monitoring the sustainability and performance of protection forests (NaiS; Frehner et al. 2005), reduced to three classes. The variable represents a simplification of the NaiS altititudinal vegetation belts in six classes (NAISHSTKOMB6KL) in which the class «hyperinsubric and colline» is mearged with «submontane» to form the class «hyperinsubric, colline, submontane», the class «lower and upper montane» with «high montane» to form the class «montane» and the class «subalpine» with «upper subalpine» to form the class «subalpine». The information is based on the altitudinal vegetation belts determined by experts (accessible forest sample plots of NFI4 on the 1.4-km network; Arge Frehner et al. 2020), as well as on the altitudinal vegetation belts modelled for the period 1981-2010 (other sample plots; Zischg et al. 2021).
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Altitudinal vegetation belts in the system used in the guidelines for monitoring the sustainability and performance of protection forests (NaiS; Frehner et al. 2005), reduced to six classes. The variable represents a simplification of the NaiS altitudinal vegetation belts with ten classes (NAISHSTKOMB) in which the classes «hyperinsubric» and «colline» are merged with «colline with beech» to form the class «hyperinsubric and colline» and the class «lower montane» with «upper montane» and «lower/upper montane» to form the class «lower and upper montane». The information is based on the altitudinal vegetation belts determined by experts (accessible forest sample plots of NFI4 on the 1.4-km network; Arge Frehner et al. 2020), as well as on the altitudinal vegetation belts modelled for the period 1981-2010 (other sample plots; Zischg et al. 2021).
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Cause of damage to trees and shrubs ≥12 cm in diameter at breast height (dbh) – in ten classes. Eight of these classes focus exclusively on standing living trees and shrubs with dbh ≥12 cm, while one class applies to lying living trees and shrubs with dbh ≥12 cm, and one to dead trees and shrubs with dbh ≥12 cm. Reference: Field Survey (MID 1029: Baumschadenursache, MID 1018: Baumzustand)
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region

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Demarcation of Switzerland into five regions (Jura, Plateau, Pre-Alps, Alps and Southern Alps) with relatively uniform growth and timber production conditions. The production regions were established by the Federal Office of Forestry long before the first National Forest Inventory (NFI1, 1983-1985). With a small exception along Lake Geneva, the boundaries of the production regions still follow the municipal boundaries of the time. Unlike the NFI, the Forestry Statistics of the Federal Statistical Office don't use the production regions as demarcation but rather the forestry zones, whose boundaries are somewhat different.
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evaluation area

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Forest of which less than two-thirds is covered with shrubs that can be accessed on foot.

grid

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NFI's sampling grid with a mesh size of 1.4 km. The 1.4-km grid is the grid size covering all the previous terrestrial Inventories, which is why it is also called the base grid.
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search result: 123 entries on 7 pages
LFI3 2004/06
production region
total number of stems
altitudinal vegetation belts (NaiS; 10 classes)
accessible forest without shrub forest
1.4-km grid
column total, %
LFI3 2004/06
production region
total number of stems
altitudinal vegetation belts (NaiS; 6 classes)
accessible forest without shrub forest
1.4-km grid
column total, %
LFI3 2004/06
production region
total number of stems
conifers and broadleaves
accessible forest without shrub forest
1.4-km grid
column total, %
LFI3 2004/06
production region
total number of stems
degree of damage
accessible forest without shrub forest
1.4-km grid
column total, %
LFI3 2004/06
production region
total number of stems
giant (yes/no)
accessible forest without shrub forest
1.4-km grid
column total, %
LFI3 2004/06
production region
total number of stems
higher/lower altitude zone
accessible forest without shrub forest
1.4-km grid
column total, %
search result: 123 entries on 7 pages

Citation

Abegg, M.; Ahles, P.; Allgaier Leuch, B.; Cioldi, F.; Didion, M.; Düggelin, C.; Fischer, C.; Herold, A.; Meile, R.; Rohner, B.; Rösler, E.; Speich, S.; Temperli, C.; Traub, B.,
2023: Swiss national forest inventory NFI. Result tables and maps of the NFI surveys 1983–2022 (NFI1, NFI2, NFI3, NFI4, NFI5.1–5) on the internet. [Published online 30.05.2023] Available from the World Wide Web <http://www.lfi.ch/resultate/> . Birmensdorf, Swiss Federal Research Institute WSL
https://doi.org/10.21258/1769925