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- Q17166009 subject Q6498192.
- Q17166009 subject Q6641172.
- Q17166009 subject Q8465786.
- Q17166009 abstract "Trees have a wide variety of sizes and shapes and growth habits. Specimens may grow as individual trunks, multitrunk masses, coppices, clonal colonies, or even more exotic tree complexes. Most champion tree programs focus finding and measuring the largest single-trunk example of each species. There are three basic parameters commonly measured to characterize the size of a single trunk tree: height, girth, and crown spread. Additional details on the methodology of Tree height measurement, Tree girth measurement, Tree crown measurement, and Tree volume measurement are presented in the links herein. A detailed guideline to these basic measurements is provided in The Tree Measuring Guidelines of the Eastern Native Tree Society by Will Blozan.Summaries of how to measure trees are also presented by various groups involved in documenting big trees around the world. These include among others: a) American Forests Tree Measuring Guidelines; b) National Register of Big Trees - Australia's Champion Trees: Tree Measurement, Champions and Verification; c)Tree Register: A unique record of Notable and Ancient Trees in Britain and Ireland - How to measure trees for inclusion in the Tree Register; and d) NZ Notable Trees Trust. Other parameters also measured include trunk and branch volume, canopy structure, canopy volume, and overall tree shape. Overviews of some of these more advanced measurements are discussed in Blozan above and in “Tsuga Search Measurement Protocols” by Will Blozan and Jess Riddle, September 2006, and tree trunk modeling by Robert Leverett and Leverett and others. The appropriate measurement protocols for multitrunk trees and other more exotic forms are less well-defined, but some general guidelines are presented below.".
- Q17166009 thumbnail Stick_measurement.png?width=300.
- Q17166009 wikiPageExternalLink Tree_Measuring_Guidelines-revised1.pdf.
- Q17166009 wikiPageExternalLink tree_measurement_data_spreadshee.htm.
- Q17166009 wikiPageWikiLink Q10884.
- Q17166009 wikiPageWikiLink Q1116374.
- Q17166009 wikiPageWikiLink Q11272.
- Q17166009 wikiPageWikiLink Q1360410.
- Q17166009 wikiPageWikiLink Q1423188.
- Q17166009 wikiPageWikiLink Q167.
- Q17166009 wikiPageWikiLink Q17081810.
- Q17166009 wikiPageWikiLink Q17164799.
- Q17166009 wikiPageWikiLink Q17164895.
- Q17166009 wikiPageWikiLink Q17165814.
- Q17166009 wikiPageWikiLink Q17165847.
- Q17166009 wikiPageWikiLink Q35865.
- Q17166009 wikiPageWikiLink Q611804.
- Q17166009 wikiPageWikiLink Q6498192.
- Q17166009 wikiPageWikiLink Q6641172.
- Q17166009 wikiPageWikiLink Q827664.
- Q17166009 wikiPageWikiLink Q8465786.
- Q17166009 wikiPageWikiLink Q95.
- Q17166009 comment "Trees have a wide variety of sizes and shapes and growth habits. Specimens may grow as individual trunks, multitrunk masses, coppices, clonal colonies, or even more exotic tree complexes. Most champion tree programs focus finding and measuring the largest single-trunk example of each species. There are three basic parameters commonly measured to characterize the size of a single trunk tree: height, girth, and crown spread.".
- Q17166009 label "Tree measurement".
- Q17166009 depiction Stick_measurement.png.