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United StatesDepartment of Agriculture
Forest Service
Northern Research Station
Resource BulletinNRS-69
Nebraska Timber Industry: An Assessment of Timber Product Output and Use2009Brian F. WaltersDennis M. AdamsRonald J. Piva
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Abstract
In 2009 there were 62 active primary wood-processing mills in Nebraska. These mills processed 4.1 million cubic feet of industrial roundwood. There was 4.09 million cubic feet of industrial roundwood harvested from Nebraska forests. The majority of roundwood harvested was for saw logs, accounting for 72 percent of the total. The harvesting of industrial roundwood products generated 1.5 million cubic feet of harvest residues. Primary wood-processing mills generated 68,000 green tons of mill residues.
Walters, Brian F.; Adams, Dennis M.; Piva, Ronald J. 2012. Nebraska timber industry: an assessment of timber product output and use, 2009. Resour. Bull. NRS-69. Newtown Square, PA: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Northern Research Station. 54 p.
Presents recent Nebraska forest industry trends; production and receipts of industrial roundwood; and production of saw logs, veneer logs, pulpwood, and other products in 2009. Logging residue generated from timber harvest operations is reported, as well as wood and bark residue generated at primary wood-using mills and disposition of mill residues.
KEY WORDS: Industrial roundwood, harvest residue, mill residue, production, pulpwood, receipts, saw logs, veneer logs
Cover Photo
Mill yard log deck. Photo by U.S. Forest Service, bugwood.org.
Manuscript received for publication July 2012
December 2012
ContentsIntroduction ....................................................................................................................... 1
The Authors .................................................................................................................... 1
Study Methods .................................................................................................................. 2
Primary Timber Industry in Nebraska............................................................................. 4
Industrial Roundwood .................................................................................................... 4
Saw Logs ....................................................................................................................... 6
Other Products ............................................................................................................... 7
Timber Removals ........................................................................................................... 7
Harvest Intensity ............................................................................................................ 8
Primary Mill Residues .................................................................................................... 9
Acknowledgments .......................................................................................................... 10
Literature Cited ............................................................................................................... 11
Appendix ......................................................................................................................... 12
DefinitionofTerms ....................................................................................................... 12
CommonandScientificNamesofTreeSpeciesinNebraska byTPOSpeciesGroup ................................................................................................ 16
Tables .......................................................................................................................... 19
1
INTRODUCTIONNebraska’s wood products manufacturing industry1 employs more than 2,300 workers and has an output of more than $362 million (U.S. Census Bureau 2007). Given the importance of this industry to the economy of Nebraska, this bulletin analyzes recent forest industry trends and reports the results of a detailed study of forest industry, industrial roundwood production, and associated primary mill wood and bark residue in 2009. Such detailed information is necessary for intelligent planning and decisionmaking in wood procurement, economic research, forest resources management, and forest industry development.
The last published report of timber product output and use in Nebraska (Piva and Adams 2008) covered a 2006 study and is used here for comparison. When new surveys are completed, errors and omissions from previous surveys are corrected. As a result of our ongoing efforts to improve the survey’s efficiency and reliability, changes may have been made to the previous survey’s data. All comparisons and analysis in this report are based on the reprocessed data from earlier surveys, which may not match earlier published data. Rows and columns of supporting tables may not sum due to rounding, but data in each table cell are accurately displayed.
Information about the forest resources of Nebraska is available at the FIA Web site: http://nrs.fs.fed.us/fia/data-tools/state-reports/NE.
The Authors
Brian F. Walters is a forester with the Forest inventory and analysis (Fia) program at the northern research station in st. Paul, Mn. He received a B.s. in forestry in 2005 and an M.s. in geographic information science in 2008 from Michigan state University.
Dennis M. aDaMs is the rural Forestry Program leader, nebraska Forest service (nFs), University of nebraska-lincoln (Unl). He received a B.s. in forest management from iowa state University in 1968 and an M.s. in horticulture and forestry from Unl in 1977. He has served as a forester with the nFs, Unl since 1973.
ronalD J. Piva is a forester with the Fia program at the northern research station in st. Paul, Mn. He received a B.s. in forest management from the University of Missouri-Columbia in 1984 and joined the Forest service in 1987.
1North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) 321–wood product manufacturing.
2
STUDY METHODSThis study was a cooperative effort between the Nebraska Forest Service (NFS) and the Forest Inventory and Analysis (FIA) unit at the Northern Research Station (NRS) of the U.S. Forest Service. The FIA program is responsible for providing forest resource statistics, including timber product outputs, for all ownerships across the United States.
NFS personnel surveyed all known primary wood-using mills, using questionnaires supplied by NRS. The questionnaires were designed to determine the size and composition of the State’s primary wood-using industry, its use of roundwood, and its generation and disposition of wood residues. Completed questionnaires were sent to NRS for processing and analyses. As part of data processing, all industrial roundwood volumes reported on the questionnaires were converted to standard units of measure using regional conversion factors (Table 1). Timber removals by source of material and harvest residues generated during logging were estimated from standard product volumes using factors developed from logging utilization studies previously conducted by NRS. To provide a complete assessment of Nebraska’s timber product output, data on roundwood volume processed by mills in Nebraska (receipts) were loaded into a regional timber removals database where they were supplemented with data on roundwood exported outside the State.
Certain terms used in this report -- retained, exports, imports, production, and receipts -- have specialized meanings and relationships unique to the FIA program that surveys timber product output (TPO) (Fig. 1; Appendix).
Figure1.—Themovementofindustrialroundwood.
3
Tabl
e 1.
—C
onve
rsio
n fa
ctor
s fr
om re
port
ed u
nit o
f mea
sure
to s
tand
ard
unit
of m
easu
rea
Prod
uct (
Stan
dard
uni
t of m
easu
re)
Rep
orte
d un
it of
mea
sure
Inte
rnat
iona
l ¼
-inch
rule
M
BF
Doy
le
scal
e M
BF
Gre
en to
nsSt
anda
rd c
ords
Thou
sand
pi
eces
Thou
sand
cu
bic
feet
Saw
logs
and
han
dles
(MB
F In
tern
atio
nal ¼
-inch
rule
)1
1.38
0.21
740.
5--
0.15
8
Vene
er lo
gs a
nd c
oope
rage
(MB
F In
tern
atio
nal ¼
-inch
rule
)1
1.14
0.21
740.
5--
0.15
8
Pulp
and
com
posi
te p
rodu
cts,
and
indu
stria
l fu
elw
ood
(Sta
ndar
d co
rds)
----
0.41
671
--0.
079
Pole
s(P
iece
s)20
--4.
348
101,
000
1
Post
s(Thousand pieces)
0.2
--0.
0416
70.
11
0.00
79
Cab
in lo
gs, e
xcel
sior
/sha
ving
s, a
nd
mis
cella
neou
s pr
oduc
ts(Thousand cubicfeet)
0.15
80.
2180
40.
0329
193
0.07
97.
90.
79
Cab
in lo
gs, e
xcel
sior
/sha
ving
s, a
nd
mis
cella
neou
s pr
oduc
ts(Thousandcubicfeet)
0.15
80.
2180
40.
1760
40.
0329
193
7.9
1a Reportedvolumetim
esconversionfactor=standardvolume.Forexample,asaw
millreportsreceiving100MBFDoyleruleofroundwood;toconvertthattoMBF
International¼
-inchrule:100*1.38=138MBF.
4
PRIMARY TIMBER INDUSTRY IN NEBRASKAIndustrial Roundwood
• Nebraska’s primary wood-using industry included 57 sawmills, 1 veneer mill, 3 post, pole, and piling mills, and 1 mill that produced other products (Table 2, Fig. 2).
• Receipts of industrial roundwood at Nebraska primary wood-using mills totaled 4.1 million cubic feet in 2009, a decrease of 19 percent from the 5.1 million cubic feet received in 2006 (Table 3).
• Ninety percent of the industrial roundwood processed by Nebraska’s primary wood-using mills was harvested from forests within the State. Iowa was the largest supplier of out-of-State wood, supplying nearly 10 percent of the total industrial roundwood processed (Table 4).
Western Unit
Eastern Unit
Mill TypeSawmill
Other Mill Type
County
Forest Inventory Unit
Figure2.—NebraskaForestInventoryUnitsandapproximatelocationsofprimarywood-usingmills,2009.
• Eighty-nine percent of the industrial roundwood processed by Nebraska primary wood-using mills was composed of hardwood species. Cottonwood alone accounted for 83 percent of the total volume processed. Softwoods accounted for 11 percent of the volume processed, and most of that was cedar/juniper.
• Industrial roundwood production decreased by 33 percent between 2006 and 2009, from 6.1 million cubic feet to 4.1 million cubic feet (Table 5, Fig. 3).
• Ninety-one percent of industrial roundwood harvested in Nebraska was retained for processing by primary wood-using mills in the State. Mills in Wyoming, Iowa, South Dakota, Missouri, and other countries received Nebraska’s industrial roundwood exports (Table 6).
5
• Seventy-five percent of the industrial roundwood production volume was from the cottonwood species group. Ponderosa pine (10 percent), cedar/juniper (10 percent), white oaks (2 percent), and black walnut (2 percent) were other major species groups harvested (Table 7, Fig. 4).
• The production of ponderosa pine for industrial roundwood was down dramatically from 2006, from 1.42 million cubic feet to 404,000 cubic feet in 2009.
• The Eastern Forest Inventory Unit produced 3.5 million cubic feet of industrial roundwood, 87 percent of total State production; the remaining 13 percent was produced in the Western unit.
Figure3.—Industrialroundwoodproductionbymajorspeciesgroupandsurveyyear,Nebraska(Blythetal.1984,HackettandAdams1996,ReadingandAdams2002,PivaandAdams2008).
Figure4.—Industrialroundwoodproductionbyspeciesgroup,Nebraska,2009.
6
Figure5.—Industrialroundwoodproductionbysurveyyearand(a)sawlogs,(b)excelsior/shavings, (c)veneerlogs,(d)postsandotherproducts,Nebraska(Blythetal.1984,HackettandAdams1996, Reading and Adams 2002, Piva and Adams 2008).
• Harvesting saw logs accounted for 72 percent of the total industrial roundwood production. Excelsior/shaving mills were the second largest consumer of Nebraska’s industrial roundwood production, consuming 20 percent of the total volume (Table 8, Fig. 5a–Fig. 5d).
Saw Logs
• Receipts at Nebraska sawmills totaled 19.3 million board feet in 2009, a decrease of 16 percent from the 22.9 million board feet received in 2006 (Table 9).
• Saw log production decreased by 37 percent between 2006 and 2009, from 29.5 to 18.5 million board feet.
• Cottonwood accounted for 80 percent of the total volume of saw log production in Nebraska. Other important species groups in saw log production were ponderosa pine (11 percent of total), white oaks, and black walnut (3 percent of total each) (Fig. 6).
• Ponderosa pine saw log production dropped by 76 percent, from 8.2 million board feet in 2006 to 1.9 million board feet in 2009.
7
Figure6.—Sawlogproductionbyspeciesgroup,Nebraska,2006and2009(PivaandAdams2008).
Other Products
• Excelsior/shavings, at 823,000 cubic feet, was the second most harvested product in Nebraska for 2006. Cottonwood (56 percent of total), cedar/juniper (36 percent), and ponderosa pine (8 percent) were the only species groups that were harvested for excelsior/shavings.
• Veneer log harvests amounted to 319,000 cubic feet (1.4 million board feet). Cottonwood and black walnut were the only species harvested for veneer.
• Posts and other miscellaneous products made up the rest of Nebraska harvests in 2006. These products accounted for less than 1 percent of the total volume of industrial roundwood production.
Timber Removals
• The harvest of industrial roundwood from Nebraska’s forests in 2009 resulted in 5.6 million cubic feet of total wood material cut with 4.1 million cubic feet (73 percent) used for primary wood products and 1.5 million cubic feet (27 percent) left on the ground as harvest residues (Table 10, Fig. 7).
• Growing-stock sources, at 4.55 million cubic feet, was the largest component of removals for industrial roundwood production. Eighty-nine percent of the growing-stock removed was used for products, and the remaining 11 percent was left as logging residue. Sawtimber-size trees accounted for 98 percent of the growing-stock volume used for products.
8
• Non-growing-stock sources of industrial roundwood production accounted for 1.06 million cubic feet of wood material removed. Five percent of this material was used for products; the remainder was left on the ground as logging slash. Seventy-two percent of the non-growing-stock material used for industrial roundwood came from cull trees; the rest of the volume used came from the limbs of growing-stock trees, saplings, dead trees, and nonforest trees.
• Eighty-seven percent of the total growing-stock material removed from Nebraska’s timberland came from the Eastern Forest Inventory Unit, and the remaining 13 percent came from the Western unit (Table 11).
• More than 25 million board feet of sawtimber was removed from Nebraska’s timberland. Cottonwood, ponderosa pine, and cedar/juniper accounted for 96 percent of the total sawtimber volume removed (Table 12).
• Ninety percent of the harvest residue in Nebraska was produced in the Eastern Forest Inventory Unit; the remainder was produced in the Western unit (Table 13).
Harvest Intensity
• In 2009, there were nearly 1.5 million acres of forest land in Nebraska (Meneguzzo 2011). The net volume in live trees on forest land was 2 billion cubic feet. The 5.6 million cubic feet of total wood material removed due to harvesting (Table 10) was less than 1 percent of the total volume (trees at least 5 inches d.b.h.).
• Harvest intensity across the State was light; only five counties had more than 25 cubic feet of industrial roundwood production per acre of forest land (Fig. 8). Some counties in which primary wood-using mills reported receiving roundwood had 0 acres of forest land as estimated by the FIA inventory. Therefore, we were unable to calculate harvest intensity for those counties.
Figure7.—Distributionoftimberremovalsforindustrialroundwoodbysourceofmaterial,Nebraska,2009.
9
• The Eastern unit had the greater harvest intensity of the two Forest Inventory units at 7.14 cubic feet of wood material removed per acre of forest land. The Western unit had less than 1 cubic foot of wood material removed per acre.
Primary Mill Residues
• In converting industrial roundwood into products, Nebraska’s primary wood-using industries generated 68,000 green tons of coarse wood residue (slabs, edgings, and veneer cores), fine wood residues (sawdust and veneer clippings), and bark residue (Table 14, Fig. 9a and Fig. 9b).
• Thirty-nine percent of mill residues generated were used for mulch. Miscellaneous uses, such as livestock bedding or specialty products, consumed 19 percent of mill residues, while industrial and residential fuel, combined, accounted for 18 percent. Twenty-four percent of residues generated went unused (Fig. 10).
• The top disposal method of coarse wood residue and bark was mulch, at 37 percent and 55 percent of the totals, respectively. Industrial fuel was the top disposal method of fine wood residue at 32 percent of the total.
Western Unit
Eastern Unit
Harvest Intensity(cubic feet of total woodmaterial removed peracre of forest land)
0.001 - 5.0005.001 - 15.00015.001 - 25.000> 25.000Timber harvests with 0 acresof estimated forest land
Forest Inventory Unit
No timber harvests
Figure8.—Harvestintensityofindustrialroundwoodbycounty,Nebraska,2009.
10
Figure9.—Residuesgeneratedbyprimarywood-usingmillsbytypeofresidue(a)andmajorspeciesgroup(b),Nebraska,2009.
Figure10.—Disposalofmillresiduebyproduct,Nebraska,2009.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTSSpecial thanks are given to the primary wood-using firms for supplying information for this study and to the Nebraska Forest Service for its cooperation in canvassing survey respondents.
11
LITERATURE CITEDBlyth, J.E.; Wardle, T.D.; Smith, W.B. 1984. Primary forest products industry and
timber use, Nebraska, 1980. Resour. Bull. NC-80. St. Paul, MN: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, North Central Forest Experiment Station. 11 p.
Hackett, R.L.; Adams, D.M. 1996. Nebraska timber industry – an assessment of timber product output and use, 1993. Resour. Bull. NC-177. St. Paul, MN: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, North Central Forest Experiment Station. 35 p.
Meneguzzo, D.M. 2011. Nebraska’s forest resources, 2009. Res. Note NRS-93. Newtown Square, PA: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Northern Research Station. 4 p.
Piva, R.J.; Adams, D.M. 2008. Nebraska timber industry – an assessment of timber product output and use, 2006. Resour. Bull. NRS-28. Newtown Square, PA: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Northern Research Station. 54 p.
Reading, W.H. IV; Adams, D.M. 2002. Nebraska timber industry – an assessment of timber product output and use, 2000. Resour. Bull. NC-208. St. Paul, MN: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, North Central Research Station. 32 p.
U.S. Census Bureau. 2007. 2007 Economic Census, Nebraska – Manufacturing: Geographic Area Series: Industry Statistics for the States, Metropolitan and Micropolitan Statistical Areas, Counties, and Places: 2007. Generated by Brian Walters using American FactFinder; <http://factfinder.census.gov>. [Accessed April 16, 2012].
12
APPENDIXDefinition of Terms
Board foot. Unit of measure for lumber cut from roundwood. One board foot is equivalent to a board that is 1 foot long, 1 foot wide, and 1 inch thick.
Bolt. A short log no more than 8 feet long, to be sawn for lumber, peeled or sliced for veneer, shaved for excelsior, or converted into shingles, cooperage stock, dimension stock, blocks, blanks, or other products.
Central stem. The portion of a tree between a 1-foot stump and the minimum 4.0-inch top diameter outside bark, or point where the central stem breaks into limbs.
Coarse mill residue. Wood residue suitable for chipping such as slabs, edgings, and veneer cores.
Commercial species. Tree species presently or prospectively suitable for industrial wood products. (Note: Excludes species of typically small size, poor form, or inferior quality such as hophornbeam, Osage-orange, and redbud.)
Cull removals. Net volume of rough and rotten trees plus the net volume in sections of the central stem of growing-stock trees that do not meet regional merchantability standards but are harvested for industrial roundwood products.
Diameter at breast height (d.b.h.). The outside bark diameter at 4.5 feet above the forest floor on the uphill side of the tree. For determining breast height, the forest floor includes the duff layer that may be present, but does not include unincorporated woody debris that may rise above the ground line.
Doyle rule. A simple log rule or formula for estimating the board-foot volume of logs based on a 4-inch slabbing allowance to square the log. This rule is used in the Eastern and Southern United States.
Exports. The volume of roundwood utilized by mills outside the state where the timber was harvested.
Fine mill residue. Wood residue not suitable for chipping, such as sawdust and veneer clippings.
13
Forest land. Land at least 10-percent stocked with trees of any size, or formerly having had such tree cover, and not currently developed for nonforest use. (Note: Stocking is measured by comparing specified standards with basal area and/or number of trees, age or size, and spacing.) The minimum area for classification of forest land is 1 acre. Roadside, streamside, and shelterbelt strips of timber must have a crown width of at least 120 feet to qualify as forest land. Unimproved roads and trails, streams or other bodies of water, or clearings in forest areas shall be classified as forest if less than 120 feet wide.
Growing-stock removals. The growing-stock volume removed from timberland by harvesting industrial roundwood products. (Note: Includes sawtimber removals, poletimber removals, and logging residues.)
Growing-stock tree. A live timberland tree of commercial species that meets specified standards of size, quality, and merchantability. (Note: Excludes rough, rotten, and dead trees.)
Growing-stock volume. Net volume of growing-stock trees 5.0 inches d.b.h. and larger, from 1 foot above the ground to a minimum 4.0-inch top diameter outside bark of the central stem or to the point where the central stem breaks into limbs.
Hardwoods. Dicotyledonous trees, usually broad-leaved and deciduous.
Harvest residues. The total net volume of unused portions of trees cut or killed by logging. (Note: Includes both logging residues and logging slash.)
Industrial fuelwood. A roundwood product, with or without bark, used to generate energy at manufacturing facilities and schools, correctional institutions, or electric generating plants.
Imports. The volume of roundwood delivered to a mill or group of mills in a specific state but harvested outside that state.
Industrial roundwood exports. The quantity of industrial roundwood harvested in a geographical area and transported to other geographical areas.
Industrial roundwood imports. The quantity of industrial roundwood received from other geographical areas.
Industrial roundwood products. Saw logs, pulpwood, veneer logs, poles, commercial posts, pilings, cooperage logs, particleboard bolts, shaving bolts, lath bolts, charcoal bolts, and chips from roundwood used for pulp or board products.
Industrial roundwood production. The quantity of industrial roundwood harvested in a geographic area plus all industrial roundwood exported to other geographical areas.
Industrial roundwood receipts. The quantity of industrial roundwood received by commercial mills in a geographic area plus all industrial roundwood imported from other geographical areas.
14
Industrial roundwood retained. The quantity of industrial roundwood harvested from and processed by commercial mills within the same geographical area.
International ¼-inch rule. A log rule or formula for estimating the board-foot volume of logs, allowing ½ inch of taper for each 4-foot length and assuming ¼ inch of kerf. This rule is used as the U.S. Forest Service standard log rule in the Eastern United States.
Limbwood removals. Net volume of all portions of a tree other than the central stem (including forks, large limbs, tops, and stumps) harvested for industrial roundwood products.
Logging residue. The net volume of unused portions of the merchantable central stem of growing-stock trees cut or killed by logging.
Logging slash. The net volume of unused portions of the unmerchantable (non-growing-stock) sections of trees cut or killed by logging.
Merchantable sections. Refers to sections of the central stem of growing-stock trees that meet either pulpwood or saw log specifications.
Net volume. Gross volume less deductions for rot, sweep, or other defects affecting use for roundwood products.
Noncommercial species. Trees species of typically small size, poor form, or inferior quality that normally do not develop into trees suitable for industrial roundwood products. Noncommercial species are listed in the volume tables as rough trees.
Nonforest land. Land that has never supported forests, and land formerly forested where use for timber management is precluded by development for other uses. (Note: Includes areas used for crops, active Christmas tree plantations, orchards, nurseries, improved pasture, residential areas, city parks, improved roads of any width and adjoining clearings, powerline clearings of any width, and 1- to 39.9-acre areas of water classified by the Bureau of the Census as land.) If intermingled in forest areas, unimproved roads and nonforest strips must be more than 120 feet wide and more than 1 acre to qualify as nonforest land.
Nonforest land removals. Net volume of trees on nonforest lands harvested for industrial roundwood products.
Poletimber. A growing-stock tree at least 5.0 inches d.b.h. but smaller than sawtimber size (9.0 inches d.b.h. for softwoods, 11.0 inches d.b.h. for hardwoods).
Poletimber removals. Net volume in the merchantable central stem of poletimber trees harvested for industrial roundwood products.
Primary wood-using mills. Mills receiving roundwood or chips from roundwood for processing into products such as lumber, veneer, and pulp.
15
Primary wood-using mill residue. Wood materials (coarse and fine) and bark generated at manufacturing plants that process industrial roundwood into principal products. These residues include wood products obtained incidental to production of principal products and wood materials not utilized for some product.
Production. The quantity of roundwood material harvested in a geographic area plus all roundwood material exported to other geographical areas.
Receipts. The quantity of roundwood material received by commercial mills in a geographic area plus all roundwood material imported from other geographical areas.
Retained. Roundwood volume harvested from and processed by mills within the same state.
Rotten tree. A tree that does not meet regional merchantability standards because of excessive unsound cull.
Rough tree. A tree that does not meet regional merchantability standards because of excessive sound cull (includes forks, sweep and crook, and large branches or knots), including noncommercial tree species.
Roundwood. Logs, bolts, or other round sections cut from trees (including chips from roundwood).
Sapling. A live tree between 1.0 and 5.0 inches d.b.h.
Saw log portion. That portion of the central stem of sawtimber trees between the stump and the saw log top.
Saw log top. The point on the central stem of sawtimber trees above which a saw log cannot be produced. The minimum saw log top is 7.0 inches diameter outside bark for softwoods and 9.0 inches diameter outside bark for hardwoods.
Sawtimber removals. As used in Table 10, sawtimber removals refers to the net volume in the merchantable central stem of sawtimber-size trees harvested for industrial roundwood products. (Note: includes the saw log and upper stem portions of sawtimber-size trees.) When referring to the sawtimber volume removed from timberland as in Table 12, sawtimber removals refers to the net volume in the saw log portion of sawtimber-size trees harvested for roundwood products or left on the ground as harvest residue, and is usually expressed in thousands of board feet (International ¼-inch rule).
Sawtimber tree. A growing-stock tree containing at least a 12-foot saw log or two noncontiguous saw logs 8 feet or longer, and meeting regional specifications for freedom from defect. Softwoods must be at least 9.0 inches d.b.h. and hardwoods must be at least 11.0 inches d.b.h.
Sawtimber volume. Net volume in the saw log portion of sawtimber trees.
16
Softwoods. Coniferous trees, usually evergreen, having needles or scale-like leaves.
Timber product output. The volume of roundwood products produced from an area’s forests.
Timberland. Forest land that is producing, or is capable of producing, in excess of 20 cubic feet per acre per year of industrial roundwood products under natural conditions, is not withdrawn from timber utilization by statute or administrative regulation, and is not associated with urban or rural development.
Tree. A woody perennial plant, typically large, with a single well-defined stem carrying a more or less definite crown; sometimes defined as attaining a minimum diameter of 3 in. (7.6 cm) and a minimum height of 15 ft (4.6 m) at maturity. For FIA, any plant on the tree list in the current field manual is measured as a tree.
Upper stem portion. That portion of the central stem of sawtimber trees between the saw log top and the minimum top diameter of 4.0 inches outside bark, or to the point where the central stem breaks into limbs.
Common and Scientific Names of Tree Species in Nebraska by TPO Species Group
Softwoods
Cedar/juniper
Rocky Mountain juniper Juniperus scopulorum
Eastern redcedar Juniperus virginiana
Ponderosa pine Pinus ponderosa
White pine
Eastern white pine Pinus strobus
Hardwoods
Soft maple
Boxelder acer negundo
Silver maple acer saccharinum
17
Hickory
Bitternut hickory Carya cordiformis
Shagbark hickory Carya ovata
Hackberry Celtis occidentalis
Ash
Green ash Fraxinus pennsylvanica
Black walnut Juglans nigra
American sycamore Platanus occidentalis
Cottonwood
Eastern cottonwood Populus deltoides
Plains cottonwood Populus deltoides ssp. Monilifera
Black cherry Prunus serotina
Red oak group
Northern red oak Quercus rubra
Black oak Quercus velutina
White oak group
Bur oak Quercus macrocarpa
Chinkapin oak Quercus muehlenbergii
Basswood
American basswood (Linden) tilia americana
18
Elm
American elm Ulmus americana
Siberian elm Ulmus pumila
Slippery elm Ulmus rubra
Other hardwoods
Honeylocust Gleditsia triacanthos
Black locust robinia pseudoacacia
Black willow salix nigra
Kentucky coffeetree Gymnocladus dioicus
19
Tables
Table 1.–Conversion factors from reported unit of measure to standard unit of measure (This table is in the Study Methods section.)
Table 2.–Number of active primary wood-using mills by mill type and survey year, Nebraska
Table 3.–Industrial roundwood receipts, in thousand cubic feet, by mill type, survey year, and softwoods and hardwoods, Nebraska
Table 4.–Industrial roundwood receipts, in thousand cubic feet, by species group and state of origin, Nebraska, 2009
Table 5.–Industrial roundwood production, in thousand cubic feet, by product, softwoods and hardwoods, and survey year, Nebraska
Table 6.–Industrial roundwood production, in thousand cubic feet, by species group and state of destination, Nebraska, 2009
Table 7.–Industrial roundwood production, in thousand cubic feet, by Forest Inventory Unit, county, and species group, Nebraska, 2009
Table 8.–Industrial roundwood production by Forest Inventory Unit, species group, and product, Nebraska, 2009
Table 9.–Saw log receipts and production, in thousand board feet, International ¼-inch rule, by species group, Nebraska, 2006 and 2009
Table 10.–Wood material harvested for industrial roundwood, in thousand cubic feet, by species group and source of material, Nebraska, 2009
Table 11.–Growing-stock removals from timberland for industrial roundwood, in thousand cubic feet, by Forest Inventory Unit, county, and species group, Nebraska, 2009
Table 12.–Sawtimber removals from timberland for industrial roundwood, in thousand board feet, International ¼-inch rule, by Forest Inventory Unit, county, and species group, Nebraska, 2009
Table 13.–Harvest residue generated by industrial roundwood harvesting, in thousand cubic feet, by Forest Inventory Unit, county, and species group, Nebraska, 2009
Table 14.–Disposition of residues produced at primary wood-using mills, in green tons, by Forest Inventory Unit, disposition, residue type, and softwoods and hardwoods, Nebraska, 2009
20
Milltypeandmillsize
Sur
vey
year
1980
c19
9320
0020
0620
09S
awm
illsa
5,000mbforgreater
--
22
22
Between1,000and4,999mbf
710
53
2Between100and999mbf
358
610
8Lessthan100mbf
1219
3445
Tota
l42
3232
4957
Ven
eer m
ills
--
1 --
1
1Post,pole,pilingmills
2 --
--
2
3O
ther
mill
sb2
22
21
All
mill
s46
3534
5462
a Annuallum
berproductioninthousandboardfeet(m
bf),International¼
-inchrule.
b Includesmillsproducingexcelsior/shavings,cabinlogs,etc.
c Num
berstocategorizesawmillsproducinglessthan1,000mbfoflum
berareunavailablefor1980.
Table2.–N
umberofactiveprimarywood-usingmillsbymilltypeandsurveyyear,N
ebraska
21
Sur
vey
year
2006
- 20
09
1993
2000
2006
2009
% c
hang
eA
ll Sp
ecie
sS
aw m
ills
6,50
44,
414
3,56
02,
986
-16
Post, pole,pilingmills
--
--
59
92O
ther
mill
sa29
029
61,
542
1,13
8-2
6To
tal
6,79
44,
711
5,10
64,
133
-19
Softw
oods
Saw
mill
s95
012
985
104
22Post,pole,pilingmills
--
--
18
567
Oth
er m
illsa
119
279
681
362
-47
Tota
l1,
068
408
767
473
-38
Har
dwoo
dsS
aw m
ills
5,55
44,
286
3,47
52,
882
-17
Post,pole,pilingmills
--
--
31
-67
Oth
er m
illsa
172
1786
177
6-1
0To
tal
5,72
54,
303
4,33
93,
659
-16
Col
umns
and
row
s m
ay n
ot a
dd to
thei
r tot
als
due
to ro
undi
ng.
a Includesmillsproducingexcelsior/shavings,cabinlogs,etc.
Table3.–Industrialroundw
oodreceipts,inthousandcubicfeet,bymilltype,surveyyear,andsoftwoodsandhardw
oods,N
ebraska
22
Stateoforigin
Speciesgroup
Tota
lIo
wa
Kan
sas
Mis
sour
iNebraska
SouthDakota
Softw
oods
Cedar/juniper
383
--
--
--
383
--
Ponderosapine
90 --
--
--
90
--
Whitepine
0 --
--
--
0
--
Tota
l47
3 --
--
--
47
3 --
H
ardw
oods
Ash
262
--
--
24 --
Blackwalnut
388
--
823
--
Cot
tonw
ood
3,44
337
6 --
--
3,
059
8E
lm18
2 --
--
17
--
Hackberry
61
--
--
5 --
Hickory
1 --
--
1
--
--
Softm
aple
132
--
--
11 --
Redoakgroup
3 --
2
--
1 --
Whiteoakgroup
106
125
286
0O
ther
har
dwoo
ds6
1 --
--
5
--
Tota
l3,
659
404
711
3,23
08
Sta
te to
tal
4,13
340
47
113,
704
8
All
tabl
e ce
lls w
ithou
t obs
erva
tions
are
indi
cate
d by
-- .
Tabl
e va
lue
of 0
indi
cate
s th
e vo
lum
e ro
unds
to le
ss th
an 1
thou
sand
cub
ic fe
et. C
olum
ns a
nd ro
ws
may
not
add
to
thei
r tot
als
due
to ro
undi
ng.
Table4.–Industrialroundw
oodreceipts,inthousandcubicfeet,byspeciesgroupandstateoforigin,N
ebraska,2009
23
Sur
vey
year
%changefrom
Pro
duct
1980
1993
2000
2006
2009
2006
- 20
09A
ll sp
ecie
sS
aw lo
gs2,
967
8,62
55,
995
4,74
22,
930
-38%
Ven
eer l
ogs
112
136
650
531
9-3
7%Excelsior/shavings
126
194
279
875
823
-6%
Industrial fuelwood
--
--
148
--
--
Pos
ts20
9 --
0
59
92%
Otherproductsa
--
--
--
--
7 --
To
tal
3,41
48,
955
6,29
46,
135
4,08
7-3
3%So
ftwoo
dsS
aw lo
gs31
33,
876
2,26
61,
491
420
-72%
Ven
eer l
ogs
--
--
--
--
--
--
Excelsior/shavings
106
119
279
703
362
-48%
Industrialfuelwood
--
--
--
--
--
--
Pos
ts88
--
01
856
7%Otherproductsa
--
--
--
--
7 --
To
tal
507
3,99
52,
545
2,19
579
7-6
4%H
ardw
oods
Saw
logs
2,65
44,
749
3,72
93,
252
2,51
0-2
3%V
enee
r log
s11
213
66
505
319
-37%
Excelsior/shavings
2075
--
172
461
168%
Industrialfuelwood
--
--
148
--
--
Pos
ts12
1 --
--
3
1-6
7%Otherproductsa
--
--
--
--
--
--
Tota
l2,
907
4,96
03,
750
3,94
03,
291
-16%
All
tabl
e ce
lls w
ithou
t obs
erva
tions
are
indi
cate
d by
-- .
Tabl
e va
lue
of 0
indi
cate
s th
e vo
lum
e ro
unds
to le
ss th
an 1
thou
sand
cub
ic fe
et. C
olum
ns a
nd ro
ws
may
not
add
to
thei
r tot
als
due
to ro
undi
ng.
a Includescabinlogsandothermiscellaneousproducts.
Table5.–Industrialroundw
oodproduction,inthousandcubicfeet,byproduct,softw
oodsandhardw
oods,andsurveyyear,N
ebraska
24
Stateofdestination
Speciesgroup
Tota
lIo
wa
Mis
sour
iNebraska
SouthDakota
Wyo
min
gO
ther
Cou
ntrie
sSoftwoods
Cedar/juniper
393
--
--
383
90
--
Ponderosapine
404
--
--
902
312
--
Whitepine
0 --
--
0
--
--
--
Tota
l79
7 --
--
47
312
312
--
Har
dwoo
dsA
sh24
--
--
24 --
--
--
Blackwalnut
7644
423
--
14
Cot
tonw
ood
3,06
3 --
4
3,05
9 --
--
--
E
lm17
--
--
17 --
--
--
Hackberry
5 --
--
5
--
--
--
Softm
aple
12 --
1
11 --
--
--
Redoakgroup
3 --
1
1 --
--
--
Whiteoakgroup
86 --
0
86 --
--
--
S
ycam
ore
0 --
0
--
--
--
--
Oth
er h
ardw
oods
5 --
--
5
--
--
--
Tota
l3,
291
4411
3,23
0 --
1
4S
tate
tota
l4,
087
4411
3,70
412
313
4
All
tabl
e ce
lls w
ithou
t obs
erva
tions
are
indi
cate
d by
-- .
Tabl
e va
lue
of 0
indi
cate
s th
e vo
lum
e ro
unds
to le
ss th
an 1
thou
sand
cub
ic fe
et. C
olum
ns a
nd ro
ws
may
not
add
to
thei
r tot
als
due
to ro
undi
ng.
Table6.–Industrialroundw
oodproduction,inthousandcubicfeet,byspeciesgroupandstateofdestination,Nebraska,2009
25
Softwoods
Har
dwoo
dsFo
rest
Inve
ntor
yA
llCedar/
Pon
dero
saW
hite
Tota
lBlack
Cot
ton-
Unitandcounty
species
juniper
pine
pine
softw
oods
Ash
wal
nut
woo
dEa
ster
n U
nit
Ada
ms
61 --
--
--
--
2
--
53
Boo
ne23
1 --
--
1
--
--
22Buffalo
640
--
--
02
055
Bur
t6
--
--
--
--
--
--
6B
utle
r7
0 --
--
0
--
06
Cas
s0
--
--
--
--
--
0 --
C
edar
128
0 --
--
0
--
--
128
Cla
y0
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
Colfax
171
33 --
--
33
--
--
138
Cum
ing
171
0 --
1
0 --
15
Cus
ter
00
--
--
0 --
0
--
Dakota
322
--
--
--
--
--
032
1D
awso
n1
1 --
--
1
--
--
--
Dixon
162
0 --
--
0
--
016
1D
odge
187
33 --
0
331
014
5D
ougl
as17
5 --
--
--
--
2
--
158
Franklin
61 --
--
--
--
2
--
53Gage
130
--
--
00
34
Greeley
6633
--
--
33 --
--
33
Hal
l62
1 --
--
1
2 --
53
Ham
ilton
1 --
--
--
--
--
1
--
Table7.–Industrialroundw
oodproduction,inthousandcubicfeet,byForestInventoryUnit,county,andspeciesgroup,N
ebraska,2009
26
Softwoods
Har
dwoo
dsFo
rest
Inve
ntor
yA
llCedar/
Pon
dero
saW
hite
Tota
lBlack
Cot
ton-
Unitandcounty
species
juniper
pine
pine
softw
oods
Ash
wal
nut
woo
dH
owar
d66
33 --
--
33
--
--
33Jefferson
51
--
--
1 --
4
--
John
son
0 --
--
--
--
--
--
--
K
earn
ey61
--
--
--
--
2 --
53
Lanc
aste
r88
--
--
--
--
11
79M
adis
on80
--
--
--
--
--
--
80Merrick
139
71 --
--
71
2 --
66
Nance
101
35 --
--
35
--
--
66Nem
aha
100
--
--
0 --
9
0Nuckolls
0 --
--
--
--
--
--
--
O
toe
7 --
--
--
--
--
7
--
Paw
nee
40
--
--
0 --
2
--
Phelps
00
--
--
0 --
--
--
P
ierc
e64
--
--
--
--
--
--
64P
latte
116
34 --
--
34
--
--
82Polk
117
36 --
--
36
00
79R
icha
rdso
n37
--
--
--
--
027
4S
alin
e13
--
--
--
--
02
4Sarpy
175
--
--
--
--
2 --
15
8S
aund
ers
690
0 --
--
0
20
672
Sew
ard
81
--
--
11
30
She
rman
64
1 --
6
--
--
--
Tabl
e 7.
–Con
tinue
d
27
Softwoods
Har
dwoo
dsFo
rest
Inve
ntor
yA
llCedar/
Pon
dero
saW
hite
Tota
lBlack
Cot
ton-
Unitandcounty
species
juniper
pine
pine
softw
oods
Ash
wal
nut
woo
dS
tant
on29
--
--
--
--
--
--
29Th
urst
on7
--
--
--
--
--
7 --
W
ashi
ngto
n5
--
--
--
--
--
5 --
W
ayne
112
0 --
--
0
--
--
112
Web
ster
620
--
--
02
053
York
135
--
--
51
16
Tota
l3,
542
326
20
328
2274
2,99
1W
este
rn U
nit
Antelope
551
0 --
1
00
53B
row
n16
16 --
--
16
--
--
--
Che
rry
187
10 --
17
00
--
Che
yenn
e1
--
--
--
--
--
--
0D
awes
162
116
1 --
16
2 --
--
--
H
olt
22
--
--
2 --
--
--
K
eya
Pah
a94
1974
--
930
0 --
K
imba
ll2
--
--
--
--
0 --
1
Knox
247
--
--
7 --
0
17Li
ncol
n10
80
--
90
0 --
Loup
11
--
--
1 --
--
--
Rock
55
--
--
5 --
--
--
S
herid
an1
--
1 --
1
--
--
--
Sioux
157
015
5 --
15
6 --
1
--
Tota
l54
667
402
--
469
12
71
Tabl
e 7.
–Con
tinue
d
28
Har
dwoo
dsFo
rest
Inve
ntor
ySoft
Redoak
Whi
teO
ther
Tota
lUnitandcounty
Elm
Hackberry
maple
group
oakgroup
Syc
amor
eha
rdw
oods
hard
woo
dsEa
ster
n U
nit
Ada
ms
1 --
--
--
5
--
--
61B
oone
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
22Buffalo
2 --
--
--
5
--
--
64B
urt
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
6B
utle
r --
--
--
--
0
--
--
6C
ass
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
0C
edar
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
128
Cla
y --
--
--
--
0
--
--
0Colfax
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
138
Cum
ing
--
0 --
--
--
--
0
16C
uste
r --
--
--
--
--
--
--
0
Dakota
--
--
--
--
0 --
--
32
2D
awso
n --
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
Dixon
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
162
Dod
ge1
01
05
--
015
4D
ougl
as2
12
110
--
117
5Franklin
2 --
--
--
5
--
--
61Gage
00
1 --
3
--
--
12Greeley
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
33H
all
2 --
--
--
5
--
--
61H
amilt
on --
--
--
--
--
--
--
1
How
ard
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
33
Tabl
e 7.
–Con
tinue
d
29
Har
dwoo
dsFo
rest
Inve
ntor
ySoft
Redoak
Whi
teO
ther
Tota
lUnitandcounty
Elm
Hackberry
maple
group
oakgroup
Syc
amor
eha
rdw
oods
hard
woo
dsJefferson
--
--
--
--
0 --
--
4
John
son
--
--
--
--
--
--
00
Kea
rney
1 --
--
--
5
--
--
61La
ncas
ter
10
1 --
5
--
088
Mad
ison
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
80Merrick
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
68Nance
--
--
--
--
1 --
--
66
Nem
aha
--
--
--
0 --
--
0
10Nuckolls
--
--
--
--
0 --
--
0
Oto
e --
--
--
--
--
--
--
7
Paw
nee
--
--
--
--
1 --
0
4Phelps
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
Pie
rce
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
64P
latte
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
82Polk
0 --
--
--
--
--
--
80
Ric
hard
son
--
--
11
30
--
37S
alin
e0
--
2 --
4
--
--
13Sarpy
21
2 --
10
--
117
5S
aund
ers
21
2 --
10
--
169
0S
ewar
d0
00
--
1 --
--
6
She
rman
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
Sta
nton
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
29Th
urst
on --
--
--
--
--
--
--
7
Tabl
e 7.
–Con
tinue
d
30
Har
dwoo
dsFo
rest
Inve
ntor
ySoft
Redoak
Whi
teO
ther
Tota
lUnitandcounty
Elm
Hackberry
maple
group
oakgroup
Syc
amor
eha
rdw
oods
hard
woo
dsW
ashi
ngto
n --
--
--
--
0
--
--
5W
ayne
--
--
--
--
0 --
--
11
2W
ebst
er2
00
--
5 --
0
62York
--
--
--
--
1 --
--
8
Tota
l16
512
385
05
3,21
4W
este
rn U
nit
Antelope
--
--
--
--
0 --
--
54
Bro
wn
--
--
--
--
--
--
00
Che
rry
--
--
--
--
0 --
--
1
Che
yenn
e0
--
--
--
--
--
--
1D
awes
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
Hol
t --
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
K
eya
Pah
a --
--
--
--
0
--
--
1K
imba
ll0
--
--
--
--
--
--
2Knox
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
17Li
ncol
n --
0
--
--
--
--
--
1Loup
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
Rock
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
She
ridan
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
Sioux
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
1To
tal
10
--
--
1 --
0
77S
tate
tota
l17
512
386
05
3,29
1
All
tabl
e ce
lls w
ithou
t obs
erva
tions
are
indi
cate
d by
-- .
Tabl
e va
lue
of 0
indi
cate
s th
e vo
lum
e ro
unds
to le
ss th
an 1
thou
sand
cub
ic fe
et. C
olum
ns a
nd ro
ws
may
not
add
to
thei
r tot
als
due
to ro
undi
ng.
Tabl
e 7.
–Con
tinue
d
31
ALLUNITS
Pro
duct
All
Excelsior/
Oth
erSpeciesgroup
products
Saw
logs
Ven
eer l
ogs
shav
ings
Pos
tsproducts
a
MC
FbM
BFc
MC
FbM
BFc
MC
FbM
CFb
Mpiecesd
MC
FbM
CFb
Softw
oods
Cedar/juniper
393
385
82 --
--
29
610
87
Ponderosapine
404
1,94
433
8 --
--
66
--
--
--
Whitepine
00
0 --
--
--
--
--
--
To
tal
797
2,33
042
0 --
--
36
210
87
Har
dwoo
dsA
sh24
139
24 --
--
--
--
--
--
Blackwalnut
7647
272
284
--
--
--
--
Cot
tonw
ood
3,06
314
,820
2,28
71,
378
315
461
--
--
--
Elm
1710
517
--
--
--
--
--
--
Hackberry
533
5 --
--
--
--
--
--
Softm
aple
1274
12 --
--
--
--
--
--
Redoakgroup
315
3 --
--
--
--
--
--
Whiteoakgroup
8648
286
--
--
--
--
--
--
Syc
amor
e0
30
--
--
--
--
--
--
Oth
er h
ardw
oods
525
4 --
--
--
2
1 --
To
tal
3,29
116
,168
2,51
01,
406
319
461
21
--
Sta
te to
tal
4,08
718
,498
2,93
01,
406
319
823
129
7
Table8.–Industrialroundw
oodproductionbyForestInventoryUnit,speciesgroup,andproduct,N
ebraska,2009
32
EASTE
RNUNIT
Pro
duct
All
Excelsior/
Oth
erSpeciesgroup
products
Saw
logs
Ven
eer l
ogs
shav
ings
Pos
tsproducts
a
MC
FbM
BFc
MC
FbM
BFc
MC
FbM
CFb
Mpiecesd
MC
FbM
CFb
Softw
oods
Cedar/juniper
326
117
25 --
--
29
66
50
Ponderosapine
210
2 --
--
--
--
--
--
Whitepine
00
0 --
--
--
--
--
--
To
tal
328
127
27 --
--
29
66
50
Har
dwoo
dsA
sh22
131
22 --
--
--
--
--
--
Blackwalnut
7445
670
284
--
--
--
--
Cot
tonw
ood
2,99
114
,358
2,21
51,
378
315
461
--
--
--
Elm
1610
116
--
--
--
--
--
--
Hackberry
530
5 --
--
--
--
--
--
Softm
aple
1274
12 --
--
--
--
--
--
Redoakgroup
315
3 --
--
--
--
--
--
Whiteoakgroup
8547
885
--
--
--
--
--
--
Syc
amor
e0
30
--
--
--
--
--
--
Oth
er h
ardw
oods
524
4 --
--
--
2
1 --
To
tal
3,21
415
,670
2,43
31,
406
319
461
21
--
Unittotal
3,54
215
,797
2,45
91,
406
319
757
86
0
Tabl
e 8.
–Con
tinue
d
33
WESTE
RNUNIT
Pro
duct
All
Excelsior/
Oth
erSpeciesgroup
products
Saw
logs
Ven
eer l
ogs
shav
ings
Pos
tsproducts
a
MC
FbM
BFc
MC
FbM
BFc
MC
FbM
CFb
Mpiecesd
MC
FbM
CFb
Softw
oods
Cedar/juniper
6726
857
--
--
--
43
7Ponderosapine
402
1,93
533
6 --
--
66
--
--
--
Tota
l46
92,
203
393
--
--
664
37
Har
dwoo
ds --
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
A
sh1
81
--
--
--
--
--
--
Blackwalnut
216
2 --
--
--
--
--
--
C
otto
nwoo
d71
462
71 --
--
--
--
--
--
E
lm1
41
--
--
--
--
--
--
Hackberry
02
0 --
--
--
--
--
--
Whiteoakgroup
14
1 --
--
--
--
--
--
O
ther
har
dwoo
ds0
20
--
--
--
--
--
--
Tota
l77
498
77 --
--
--
--
--
--
Unittotal
546
2,70
147
0 --
--
66
43
7
All
tabl
e ce
lls w
ithou
t obs
erva
tions
are
indi
cate
d by
-- .
Tabl
e va
lue
of 0
indi
cate
s th
e vo
lum
e ro
unds
to le
ss th
an 1
uni
t of m
easu
re. C
olum
ns a
nd ro
ws
may
not
add
to th
eir
tota
ls d
ue to
roun
ding
.a Includescabinlogsandothermiscellaneousproducts.
b Thousandcubicfeet.
c Thousandboardfeet,International¼
-inchrule.
d Thousandpieces.
Tabl
e 8.
–Con
tinue
d
34
Receipts
Pro
duct
ion
Per
cent
Per
cent
Speciesgroup
2006
2009
chan
ge20
0620
09ch
ange
Softw
oods
Cedar/juniper
305
372
22%
322
385
20%
Ponderosapine
100
139
39%
8,17
41,
944
-76%
Whitepine
--
0 --
--
0
--
Spruce
13 --
--
13
--
--
Tota
l41
851
122
%8,
508
2,33
0-7
3%H
ardw
oods
Ash
9415
060
%10
313
935
%B
assw
ood
141
--
--
151
--
--
Blackwalnut
304
216
-29%
499
472
-5%
Cot
tonw
ood
20,8
5717
,501
-16%
19,2
5914
,820
-23%
Elm
142
116
-18%
142
105
-26%
Hackberry
160
38-7
6%10
533
-69%
Hickory
--
6 --
--
--
--
Hardmaple
3 --
--
3
--
--
Softm
aple
174
80-5
4%13
374
-45%
Redoakgroup
4516
-64%
6315
-76%
Whiteoakgroup
550
592
8%49
248
2-2
%S
ycam
ore
1 --
--
11
3-7
1%O
ther
har
dwoo
ds1
3161
03%
125
4999
%To
tal
22,4
7218
,747
-17%
20,9
6216
,168
-23%
Sta
te to
tal
22,8
9019
,259
-16%
29,4
7018
,498
-37%
All
tabl
e ce
lls w
ithou
t obs
erva
tions
are
indi
cate
d by
-- .
Tabl
e va
lue
of 0
indi
cate
s th
e vo
lum
e ro
unds
to le
ss th
an 1
thou
sand
boa
rd fe
et. C
olum
ns a
nd ro
ws
may
not
add
to
thei
r tot
als
due
to ro
undi
ng.
Table 9.–S
awlogreceiptsandproduction,inthousandboardfeet,International¼
-inchrule,byspeciesgroup,Nebraska,2006and2009
35
SOURCEOFMATE
RIAL
Growingstock
Non-growingstock
Tota
lw
ood
mat
eria
lus
ed
Tota
lw
ood
mat
eria
lno
t use
d
Tota
lw
ood
harv
este
d
Usedfor
products
Logg
ing
resi
due
(not
us
ed)
Tota
lgr
owin
gstock
Usedforproducts
Logg
ing
slas
h(n
ot
used
)
Tota
l no
n-gr
owin
g-stock
Saw
-tim
ber
Pol
e-tim
ber
Lim
b-w
ood
Saplings
Cul
ltre
esD
ead
trees
Non-
forest
trees
Speciesgroup
Softw
oods
Cedar/juniper
359.
330
.627
.541
7.4
--
2.0
0.7
0.4
--
38.6
41.7
393.
066
.145
9.1
Pon
dero
sa
pine
397.
26.
042
.244
5.4
--
--
0.4
--
--
53.9
54.3
403.
696
.049
9.6
Whitepine
0.0
--
0.0
0.1
--
--
0.0
--
--
0.0
0.0
0.0
0.0
0.1
Tota
l75
6.6
36.6
69.6
862.
8 --
2.
01.
00.
4 --
92
.596
.079
6.6
162.
195
8.8
Har
dwoo
dsA
sh21
.5 --
8.
930
.40.
6 --
1.
7 --
--
8.
210
.423
.817
.140
.9Blackwalnut
63.8
--
6.0
69.8
1.3
--
1.9
--
9.2
19.3
31.7
76.2
25.3
101.
5C
otto
nwoo
d3,
020.
941
.941
2.1
3,47
5.0
--
--
--
--
--
850.
185
0.1
3,06
2.8
1,26
2.3
4,32
5.1
Elm
14.4
--
1.6
16.0
--
--
1.8
0.5
--
5.0
7.2
16.7
6.5
23.2
Hackberry
4.5
--
0.5
5.0
--
--
0.6
0.1
--
1.5
2.2
5.2
2.0
7.2
Softm
aple
10.1
--
1.1
11.2
--
--
1.3
0.3
--
3.5
5.1
11.7
4.6
16.3
Redoak
group
1.7
0.1
0.5
2.3
0.0
--
0.9
--
--
0.7
1.6
2.7
1.2
3.9
Whiteoak
group
54.6
3.0
17.7
75.3
0.0
--
28.4
--
--
22.0
50.5
86.1
39.7
125.
8
Syc
amor
e0.
4 --
0.
00.
5 --
--
0.
10.
0 --
0.
10.
20.
50.
20.
7O
ther
ha
rdw
oods
4.0
0.2
0.4
4.7
0.0
0.0
0.6
0.1
0.1
1.2
2.1
5.2
1.6
6.8
Tota
l3,
195.
945
.244
9.0
3,69
0.1
2.0
0.0
37.2
1.1
9.3
911.
696
1.2
3,29
0.8
1,36
0.6
4,65
1.4
Sta
te to
tal
3,95
2.5
81.8
518.
64,
552.
92.
02.
138
.21.
59.
31,
004.
11,
057.
24,
087.
41,
522.
75,
610.
1
All
tabl
e ce
lls w
ithou
t obs
erva
tions
are
indi
cate
d by
-- .
Tabl
e va
lue
of 0
indi
cate
s th
e vo
lum
e ro
unds
to le
ss th
an 0
.1 th
ousa
nd c
ubic
feet
. Col
umns
and
row
s m
ay n
ot a
dd to
th
eir t
otal
s du
e to
roun
ding
.
a Basedonfactorsobtainedfrom
regionalutilizationstudies.
Table10.–Woodmaterialharvestedforindustrialroundw
ood,inthousandcubicfeet,byspeciesgroupandsourceofm
aterial,Nebraska,2009a
36
Softwoods
Har
dwoo
dsFo
rest
Inve
ntor
yUnitandcounty
All
Cedar/
Pon
dero
saW
hite
Tota
lBlack
Cot
ton-
species
juniper
pine
pine
softw
oods
Ash
wal
nut
woo
d
East
ern
Uni
tA
dam
s69
--
--
--
--
2 --
61
Boo
ne26
1 --
--
1
--
--
25Buffalo
720
--
--
02
063
Bur
t7
--
--
--
--
--
--
7B
utle
r7
0 --
--
0
--
06
Cas
s0
--
--
--
--
--
0 --
C
edar
147
0 --
--
0
--
--
147
Cla
y0
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
Colfax
188
36 --
--
36
--
--
153
Cum
ing
201
1 --
1
1 --
17
Cus
ter
00
--
--
0 --
0
--
Dakota
371
--
--
--
--
--
037
0D
awso
n1
1 --
--
1
--
--
--
Dixon
186
0 --
--
0
--
018
6D
odge
208
36 --
0
362
016
3D
ougl
as19
8 --
--
--
--
2
--
181
Franklin
69 --
--
--
--
2
--
61Gage
130
--
--
00
25
Greeley
7236
--
--
36 --
--
36
Hal
l70
1 --
--
1
2 --
61
Ham
ilton
1 --
--
--
--
--
1
--
Table11.–Growing-stockremovalsfromtimberlandforindustrialroundw
ood,inthousandcubicfeet,byForestInventoryUnit,county,andspeciesgroup,N
ebraska,2009
37
Softwoods
Har
dwoo
dsFo
rest
Inve
ntor
yUnitandcounty
All
Cedar/
Pon
dero
saW
hite
Tota
lBlack
Cot
ton-
species
juniper
pine
pine
softw
oods
Ash
wal
nut
woo
d
How
ard
7236
--
--
36 --
--
36
Jefferson
41
--
--
1 --
3
--
John
son
0 --
--
--
--
--
--
--
K
earn
ey69
--
--
--
--
2 --
61
Lanc
aste
r99
--
--
--
--
11
91M
adis
on92
--
--
--
--
--
--
92Merrick
152
77 --
--
77
2 --
73
Nance
110
37 --
--
37
--
--
72Nem
aha
100
--
--
0 --
8
1Nuckolls
0 --
--
--
--
--
--
--
O
toe
7 --
--
--
--
--
7
--
Paw
nee
30
--
--
0 --
2
--
Phelps
00
--
--
0 --
--
--
P
ierc
e74
--
--
--
--
--
--
74P
latte
127
36 --
--
36
--
--
90Polk
127
39 --
--
39
00
87R
icha
rdso
n35
--
--
--
--
025
5S
alin
e13
--
--
--
--
02
5Sarpy
197
--
--
--
--
2 --
18
1S
aund
ers
771
0 --
--
0
30
755
Sew
ard
71
--
--
11
30
She
rman
64
1 --
6
--
--
--
Sta
nton
33 --
--
--
--
--
--
33
Thur
ston
6 --
--
--
--
--
6
--
Tabl
e 11
.–C
ontin
ued
38
Softwoods
Har
dwoo
dsFo
rest
Inve
ntor
yUnitandcounty
All
Cedar/
Pon
dero
saW
hite
Tota
lBlack
Cot
ton-
species
juniper
pine
pine
softw
oods
Ash
wal
nut
woo
d
Was
hing
ton
4 --
--
--
--
--
4
--
Way
ne12
90
--
--
0 --
--
12
9W
ebst
er70
0 --
--
0
20
61York
145
--
--
51
17
Tota
l3,
956
352
20
354
2968
3,39
3W
este
rn U
nit
Antelope
631
0 --
1
00
62B
row
n16
16 --
--
16
--
--
--
Che
rry
197
11 --
18
00
--
Che
yenn
e1
--
--
--
--
--
--
0D
awes
179
117
8 --
17
9 --
--
--
H
olt
11
--
--
1 --
--
--
K
eya
Pah
a10
019
81 --
10
00
0 --
K
imba
ll2
--
--
--
--
1 --
1
Knox
277
--
--
7 --
0
19Li
ncol
n10
80
--
81
0 --
Loup
11
--
--
1 --
--
--
Rock
55
--
--
5 --
--
--
S
herid
an1
--
1 --
1
--
--
--
Sioux
173
017
2 --
17
2 --
1
--
Tota
l59
766
443
--
509
22
82S
tate
tota
l4,
553
417
445
086
330
703,
475
Tabl
e 11
.–C
ontin
ued
39
Har
dwoo
dsFo
rest
Inve
ntor
ySoft
Redoak
Whi
teO
ther
Tota
lUnitandcounty
Elm
Hackberry
maple
group
oakgroup
Syc
amor
eha
rdw
oods
hard
woo
dsEa
ster
n U
nit
Ada
ms
1 --
--
--
4
--
--
69B
oone
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
25Buffalo
1 --
--
--
5
--
--
72B
urt
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
7B
utle
r --
--
--
--
0
--
--
7C
ass
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
0C
edar
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
147
Cla
y --
--
--
--
0
--
--
0Colfax
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
153
Cum
ing
--
0 --
--
--
--
0
18C
uste
r --
--
--
--
--
--
--
0
Dakota
--
--
--
--
0 --
--
37
1D
awso
n --
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
Dixon
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
186
Dod
ge1
01
05
--
017
2D
ougl
as2
12
19
--
119
8Franklin
1 --
--
--
4
--
--
69Gage
00
1 --
3
--
--
12Greeley
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
36H
all
1 --
--
--
4
--
--
69H
amilt
on --
--
--
--
--
--
--
1
How
ard
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
36Jefferson
--
--
--
--
0 --
--
4
Tabl
e 11
.–C
ontin
ued
40
Har
dwoo
dsFo
rest
Inve
ntor
ySoft
Redoak
Whi
teO
ther
Tota
lUnitandcounty
Elm
Hackberry
maple
group
oakgroup
Syc
amor
eha
rdw
oods
hard
woo
dsJo
hnso
n --
--
--
--
--
--
0
0K
earn
ey1
--
--
--
4 --
--
69
Lanc
aste
r1
01
--
4 --
0
99M
adis
on --
--
--
--
--
--
--
92
Merrick
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
75Nance
--
--
--
--
0 --
--
72
Nem
aha
--
--
--
0 --
--
0
9Nuckolls
--
--
--
--
0 --
--
0
Oto
e --
--
--
--
--
--
--
7
Paw
nee
--
--
--
--
1 --
0
3Phelps
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
Pie
rce
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
74P
latte
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
90Polk
0 --
--
--
--
--
--
88
Ric
hard
son
--
--
11
30
--
35S
alin
e0
--
2 --
3
--
--
13Sarpy
21
2 --
9
--
119
7S
aund
ers
21
2 --
9
--
177
1S
ewar
d0
00
--
1 --
--
6
She
rman
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
Sta
nton
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
33Th
urst
on --
--
--
--
--
--
--
6
Tabl
e 11
.–C
ontin
ued
41
Har
dwoo
dsFo
rest
Inve
ntor
ySoft
Redoak
Whi
teO
ther
Tota
lUnitandcounty
Elm
Hackberry
maple
group
oakgroup
Syc
amor
eha
rdw
oods
hard
woo
dsW
ashi
ngto
n --
--
--
--
0
--
--
4W
ayne
--
--
--
--
0 --
--
12
9W
ebst
er2
00
--
4 --
0
69York
--
--
--
--
1 --
--
9
Tota
l15
511
275
04
3,60
2W
este
rn U
nit
Antelope
--
--
--
--
0 --
--
62
Bro
wn
--
--
--
--
--
--
00
Che
rry
--
--
--
--
0 --
--
1
Che
yenn
e0
--
--
--
--
--
--
1D
awes
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
Hol
t --
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
K
eya
Pah
a --
--
--
--
0
--
--
1K
imba
ll0
--
--
--
--
--
--
2Knox
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
20Li
ncol
n --
0
--
--
--
--
--
1Loup
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
Rock
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
She
ridan
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
Sioux
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
1To
tal
10
--
--
1 --
0
88S
tate
tota
l16
511
275
05
3,69
0
All
tabl
e ce
lls w
ithou
t obs
erva
tions
are
indi
cate
d by
-- .
Tabl
e va
lue
of 0
indi
cate
s th
e vo
lum
e ro
unds
to le
ss th
an 1
thou
sand
cub
ic fe
et. C
olum
ns a
nd ro
ws
may
not
add
to
thei
r tot
als
due
to ro
undi
ng.
Tabl
e 11
.–C
ontin
ued
42
Softwoods
Har
dwoo
dsFo
rest
Inve
ntor
yA
llCedar/
Pon
dero
saW
hite
Tota
lBlack
Cot
ton-
Unitandcounty
species
juniper
pine
pine
softw
oods
Ash
wal
nut
woo
dEa
ster
n U
nit
Ada
ms
395
--
--
--
--
10 --
36
1B
oone
150
2 --
--
2
--
--
147
Buffalo
411
1 --
--
1
101
372
Bur
t40
--
--
--
--
--
--
40B
utle
r36
1 --
--
1
--
231
Cas
s2
--
--
--
--
--
2 --
C
edar
869
2 --
--
2
--
--
867
Cla
y0
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
Colfax
976
192
--
--
192
--
--
784
Cum
ing
115
43
--
73
--
101
Cus
ter
11
--
--
1 --
1
--
Dakota
2,18
6 --
--
--
--
--
2
2,18
2D
awso
n0
0 --
--
0
--
--
--
Dixon
1,09
81
--
--
1 --
1
1,09
6D
odge
1,15
319
2 --
0
192
72
918
Dou
glas
1,14
6 --
--
--
--
12
--
1,07
0Franklin
397
--
--
--
--
10 --
36
1Gage
681
--
--
12
1529
Greeley
383
192
--
--
192
--
--
192
Hal
l40
14
--
--
410
--
361
Ham
ilton
4 --
--
--
--
--
4
--
Table12.–Saw
timberrem
ovalsfromtimberlandforindustrialroundw
ood,inthousandboardfeet,International¼
-inchrule,byFo
restInventoryUnit,county,andspecies
group,Nebraska,2009
43
Softwoods
Har
dwoo
dsFo
rest
Inve
ntor
yA
llCedar/
Pon
dero
saW
hite
Tota
lBlack
Cot
ton-
Unitandcounty
species
juniper
pine
pine
softw
oods
Ash
wal
nut
woo
dH
owar
d38
319
2 --
--
19
2 --
--
19
2Jefferson
263
--
--
3 --
22
--
John
son
1 --
--
--
--
--
--
--
K
earn
ey39
4 --
--
--
--
10
--
361
Lanc
aste
r57
6 --
--
--
--
6
453
5M
adis
on54
2 --
--
--
--
--
--
54
2Merrick
803
404
--
--
404
12 --
38
7Nance
577
192
--
--
192
--
--
383
Nem
aha
591
--
--
1 --
53
3Nuckolls
0 --
--
--
--
--
--
--
O
toe
41 --
--
--
--
--
41
--
Paw
nee
181
--
--
1 --
12
--
Phelps
11
--
--
1 --
--
--
P
ierc
e43
4 --
--
--
--
--
--
43
4P
latte
685
192
--
--
192
--
--
493
Polk
670
207
--
--
207
12
458
Ric
hard
son
207
--
--
--
--
115
727
Sal
ine
68 --
--
--
--
1
1229
Sarpy
1,14
4 --
--
--
--
12
--
1,07
0S
aund
ers
3,99
51
--
--
112
13,
918
Sew
ard
407
--
--
74
191
She
rman
2720
7 --
27
--
--
--
Sta
nton
195
--
--
--
--
--
--
195
Tabl
e 12
.–C
ontin
ued
44
Softwoods
Har
dwoo
dsFo
rest
Inve
ntor
yA
llCedar/
Pon
dero
saW
hite
Tota
lBlack
Cot
ton-
Unitandcounty
species
juniper
pine
pine
softw
oods
Ash
wal
nut
woo
dTh
urst
on38
--
--
--
--
--
38 --
W
ashi
ngto
n28
--
--
--
--
--
28 --
W
ayne
761
1 --
--
1
--
--
759
Web
ster
400
2 --
--
2
100
361
York
7423
--
--
234
639
Tota
l22
,019
1,84
010
01,
850
138
425
19,1
02W
este
rn U
nit
Antelope
369
31
--
40
136
3B
row
n73
71 --
--
71
--
--
--
Che
rry
9530
59 --
90
12
--
Che
yenn
e4
--
--
--
--
--
--
3D
awes
955
495
0 --
95
5 --
--
--
H
olt
11
--
--
1 --
--
--
K
eya
Pah
a52
084
433
--
516
12
--
Kim
ball
10 --
--
--
--
3
--
4Knox
147
31 --
--
31
--
111
4Li
ncol
n43
351
--
363
2 --
Loup
77
--
--
7 --
--
--
Rock
2020
--
--
20 --
--
--
S
herid
an4
--
4 --
4
--
--
--
Sioux
924
291
7 --
91
9 --
6
--
Tota
l3,
170
288
2,36
7 --
2,
654
914
484
Sta
te to
tal
25,1
892,
128
2,37
70
4,50
414
743
919
,587
Tabl
e 12
.–C
ontin
ued
45
Har
dwoo
dsFo
rest
Inve
ntor
ySoft
Redoak
Whi
teO
ther
Tota
lUnitandcounty
Elm
Hackberry
maple
group
oakgroup
Syc
amor
eha
rdw
oods
hard
woo
dsEa
ster
n U
nit
Ada
ms
6 --
--
--
17
--
--
395
Boo
ne --
--
--
--
--
--
--
14
7Buffalo
9 --
--
--
18
--
--
410
Bur
t --
--
--
--
--
--
--
40
But
ler
--
--
--
--
1 --
--
34
Cas
s --
--
--
--
--
--
--
2
Ced
ar --
--
--
--
--
--
--
86
7C
lay
--
--
--
--
0 --
--
0
Colfax
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
784
Cum
ing
--
2 --
--
--
--
1
108
Cus
ter
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
1Dakota
--
--
--
--
2 --
--
2,
186
Daw
son
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
Dixon
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
1,09
7D
odge
52
51
18 --
2
961
Dou
glas
105
102
33 --
5
1,14
6Franklin
9 --
--
--
16
--
--
397
Gage
12
7 --
11
--
--
67Greeley
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
192
Hal
l9
--
--
--
16 --
--
39
7H
amilt
on --
--
--
--
--
--
--
4
How
ard
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
192
Tabl
e 12
.–C
ontin
ued
46
Har
dwoo
dsFo
rest
Inve
ntor
ySoft
Redoak
Whi
teO
ther
Tota
lUnitandcounty
Elm
Hackberry
maple
group
oakgroup
Syc
amor
eha
rdw
oods
hard
woo
dsJefferson
--
--
--
--
1 --
--
23
John
son
--
--
--
--
--
--
11
Kea
rney
6 --
--
--
16
--
--
394
Lanc
aste
r5
25
--
16 --
2
576
Mad
ison
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
542
Merrick
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
399
Nance
--
--
--
--
2 --
--
38
5Nem
aha
--
--
--
1 --
--
1
58Nuckolls
--
--
--
--
0 --
--
0
Oto
e --
--
--
--
--
--
--
41
Paw
nee
--
--
--
--
4 --
1
17Phelps
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
Pie
rce
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
434
Pla
tte --
--
--
--
--
--
--
49
3Polk
1 --
--
--
--
--
--
46
3R
icha
rdso
n --
--
4
510
3 --
20
7S
alin
e1
--
12 --
12
--
--
68Sarpy
105
10 --
33
--
51,
144
Sau
nder
s10
510
--
34 --
5
3,99
4S
ewar
d1
22
--
3 --
--
33
She
rman
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
Sta
nton
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
195
Thur
ston
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
38
Tabl
e 12
.–C
ontin
ued
47
Har
dwoo
dsFo
rest
Inve
ntor
ySoft
Redoak
Whi
teO
ther
Tota
lUnitandcounty
Elm
Hackberry
maple
group
oakgroup
Syc
amor
eha
rdw
oods
hard
woo
dsW
ashi
ngto
n --
--
--
--
0
--
--
28W
ayne
--
--
--
--
1 --
--
76
0W
ebst
er9
00
--
17 --
0
398
York
--
--
--
--
3 --
--
52
Tota
l90
2765
928
53
2420
,168
Wes
tern
Uni
tAntelope
--
--
--
--
1 --
--
36
5B
row
n --
--
--
--
--
--
1
1C
herr
y --
--
--
--
1
--
--
5C
heye
nne
1 --
--
--
--
--
--
4
Daw
es --
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
H
olt
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
Key
a P
aha
--
--
--
--
0 --
--
4
Kim
ball
2 --
--
--
--
--
--
10
Knox
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
115
Linc
oln
--
2 --
--
--
--
--
7
Loup
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
Rock
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
She
ridan
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
Sioux
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
6To
tal
42
--
--
2 --
1
516
Sta
te to
tal
9329
659
287
325
20,6
85
All
tabl
e ce
lls w
ithou
t obs
erva
tions
are
indi
cate
d by
-- .
Tabl
e va
lue
of 0
indi
cate
s th
e vo
lum
e ro
unds
to le
ss th
an 1
thou
sand
boa
rd fe
et. C
olum
ns a
nd ro
ws
may
not
add
to
thei
r tot
als
due
to ro
undi
ng.
Tabl
e 12
.–C
ontin
ued
48
Softwoods
Har
dwoo
dsFo
rest
Inve
ntor
yA
llCedar/
Pon
dero
saW
hite
Tota
lBlack
Cot
ton-
Unitandcounty
species
juniper
pine
pine
softw
oods
Ash
wal
nut
woo
dEa
ster
n U
nit
Ada
ms
31 --
--
--
--
1
--
27B
oone
110
--
--
0 --
--
11
Buffalo
320
--
--
01
027
Bur
t3
--
--
--
--
--
--
3B
utle
r2
0 --
--
0
--
02
Cas
s0
--
--
--
--
--
0 --
C
edar
640
--
--
0 --
--
64
Cla
y0
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
Colfax
374
--
--
4 --
--
33
Cum
ing
80
0 --
0
0 --
7
Cus
ter
00
--
--
0 --
0
--
Dakota
161
--
--
--
--
--
016
1D
awso
n0
0 --
--
0
--
--
--
Dixon
810
--
--
0 --
0
81D
odge
554
--
04
10
47D
ougl
as87
--
--
--
--
1 --
79
Franklin
31 --
--
--
--
1
--
27Gage
60
--
--
00
12
Greeley
84
--
--
4 --
--
4
Hal
l31
0 --
--
0
1 --
27
Ham
ilton
0 --
--
--
--
--
0
--
How
ard
84
--
--
4 --
--
4
Table13.–Harvestresiduegeneratedbyindustrialroundwoodharvesting,inthousandcubicfeet,byForestInventoryUnit,county,andspeciesgroup,N
ebraska,2009
49
Softwoods
Har
dwoo
dsFo
rest
Inve
ntor
yA
llCedar/
Pon
dero
saW
hite
Tota
lBlack
Cot
ton-
Unitandcounty
species
juniper
pine
pine
softw
oods
Ash
wal
nut
woo
dJefferson
20
--
--
0 --
1
--
John
son
0 --
--
--
--
--
--
--
K
earn
ey30
--
--
--
--
1 --
27
Lanc
aste
r44
--
--
--
--
10
39M
adis
on40
--
--
--
--
--
--
40Merrick
189
--
--
91
--
8Nance
124
--
--
4 --
--
8
Nem
aha
30
--
--
0 --
3
0Nuckolls
0 --
--
--
--
--
--
--
O
toe
2 --
--
--
--
--
2
--
Paw
nee
10
--
--
0 --
1
--
Phelps
00
--
--
0 --
--
--
P
ierc
e32
--
--
--
--
--
--
32P
latte
194
--
--
4 --
--
16
Polk
185
--
--
50
012
Ric
hard
son
14 --
--
--
--
0
92
Sal
ine
6 --
--
--
--
0
12
Sarpy
87 --
--
--
--
1
--
79S
aund
ers
267
0 --
--
0
10
259
Sew
ard
31
--
--
10
10
She
rman
22
0 --
2
--
--
--
Sta
nton
14 --
--
--
--
--
--
14
Tabl
e 13
.–C
ontin
ued
50
Softwoods
Har
dwoo
dsFo
rest
Inve
ntor
yA
llCedar/
Pon
dero
saW
hite
Tota
lBlack
Cot
ton-
Unitandcounty
species
juniper
pine
pine
softw
oods
Ash
wal
nut
woo
dTh
urst
on2
--
--
--
--
--
2 --
W
ashi
ngto
n2
--
--
--
--
--
2 --
W
ayne
560
--
--
0 --
--
56
Web
ster
310
--
--
01
027
York
62
--
--
20
03
Tota
l1,
366
430
044
1624
1,22
7W
este
rn U
nit
Antelope
270
0 --
0
00
27B
row
n6
6 --
--
6
--
--
--
Che
rry
52
3 --
5
00
--
Che
yenn
e0
0 --
--
--
--
--
0
Daw
es43
042
--
43 --
--
--
H
olt
00
--
--
0 --
--
--
K
eya
Pah
a17
710
--
160
0 --
K
imba
ll1
0 --
--
--
0
--
0Knox
113
--
--
3 --
0
8Li
ncol
n3
30
--
30
0 --
Loup
11
--
--
1 --
--
--
Rock
22
--
--
2 --
--
--
S
herid
an0
00
--
0 --
--
--
Sioux
410
41 --
41
--
0 --
To
tal
157
2396
--
119
11
36S
tate
tota
l1,
523
6696
016
217
251,
262
Tabl
e 13
.–C
ontin
ued
51
Har
dwoo
dsFo
rest
Inve
ntor
ySoft
Redoak
Whi
teO
ther
Tota
lUnitandcounty
Elm
Hackberry
maple
group
oakgroup
Syc
amor
eha
rdw
oods
hard
woo
dsEa
ster
n U
nit
Ada
ms
0 --
--
--
2
--
--
31B
oone
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
11Buffalo
1 --
--
--
3
--
--
32B
urt
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
3B
utle
r --
--
--
--
0
--
--
2C
ass
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
0C
edar
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
64C
lay
--
--
--
--
0 --
--
0
Colfax
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
33C
umin
g --
0
--
--
--
--
08
Cus
ter
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
0Dakota
--
--
--
--
0 --
--
16
1D
awso
n --
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
Dixon
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
81D
odge
00
00
3 --
0
52D
ougl
as1
01
05
--
087
Franklin
1 --
--
--
2
--
--
31Gage
00
1 --
1
--
--
5Greeley
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
4H
all
1 --
--
--
2
--
--
31H
amilt
on --
--
--
--
--
--
--
0
How
ard
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
4
Tabl
e 13
.–C
ontin
ued
52
Har
dwoo
dsFo
rest
Inve
ntor
ySoft
Redoak
Whi
teO
ther
Tota
lUnitandcounty
Elm
Hackberry
maple
group
oakgroup
Syc
amor
eha
rdw
oods
hard
woo
dsJefferson
--
--
--
--
0 --
--
1
John
son
--
--
--
--
--
--
00
Kea
rney
0 --
--
--
2
--
--
30La
ncas
ter
00
0 --
2
--
044
Mad
ison
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
40Merrick
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
9Nance
--
--
--
--
0 --
--
8
Nem
aha
--
--
--
0 --
--
0
3Nuckolls
--
--
--
--
0 --
--
0
Oto
e --
--
--
--
--
--
--
2
Paw
nee
--
--
--
--
1 --
0
1Phelps
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
Pie
rce
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
32P
latte
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
16Polk
0 --
--
--
--
--
--
13
Ric
hard
son
--
--
01
10
--
14S
alin
e0
--
1 --
2
--
--
6Sarpy
10
1 --
5
--
087
Sau
nder
s1
01
--
5 --
0
267
Sew
ard
00
0 --
0
--
--
2S
herm
an --
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
S
tant
on --
--
--
--
--
--
--
14
Thur
ston
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
2
Tabl
e 13
.–C
ontin
ued
53
Har
dwoo
dsFo
rest
Inve
ntor
ySoft
Redoak
Whi
teO
ther
Tota
lUnitandcounty
Elm
Hackberry
maple
group
oakgroup
Syc
amor
eha
rdw
oods
hard
woo
dsW
ashi
ngto
n --
--
--
--
0
--
--
2W
ayne
--
--
--
--
0 --
--
56
Web
ster
10
0 --
2
--
031
York
--
--
--
--
0 --
--
4
Tota
l6
25
139
02
1,32
2W
este
rn U
nit
Antelope
--
--
--
--
0 --
--
27
Bro
wn
--
--
--
--
--
--
00
Che
rry
--
--
--
--
0 --
--
0
Che
yenn
e0
--
--
--
--
--
--
0D
awes
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
Hol
t --
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
K
eya
Pah
a --
--
--
--
0
--
--
0K
imba
ll0
--
--
--
--
--
--
1Knox
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
8Li
ncol
n --
0
--
--
--
--
--
1Loup
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
Rock
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
She
ridan
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
Sioux
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
0To
tal
00
--
--
0 --
0
38S
tate
tota
l7
25
140
02
1,36
1
All
tabl
e ce
lls w
ithou
t obs
erva
tions
are
indi
cate
d by
-- .
Tabl
e va
lue
of 0
indi
cate
s th
e vo
lum
e ro
unds
to le
ss th
an 1
thou
sand
cub
ic fe
et. C
olum
ns a
nd ro
ws
may
not
add
to
thei
r tot
als
due
to ro
undi
ng.
Tabl
e 13
.–C
ontin
ued
54
Residuetype W
ood
resi
due
ForestInventoryUnit
and disposition
Tota
l all
resi
dues
Tota
l woo
d re
sidu
eC
oars
eaFi
neb
Bark
Softwood
Har
dwoo
dSoftwood
Har
dwoo
dSoftwood
Har
dwoo
dSoftwood
Har
dwoo
dSoftwood
Har
dwoo
dA
ll U
nits
Industrialfuel
1,91
810
,020
1,91
210
,014
203
5,64
01,
708
4,37
47
6Residentialfuel
289
290
232
204
229
204
3 --
57
85M
ulch
2426
,448
1518
,616
413
,051
115,
565
97,
833
Mis
cella
neou
sc21
713
,079
213
10,8
7613
15,
800
835,
076
32,
203
Notused
4,43
711
,669
3,42
38,
655
3,19
26,
803
230
1,85
11,
014
3,01
5To
tal
6,88
461
,506
5,79
548
,365
3,76
031
,498
2,03
516
,867
1,08
913
,141
East
ern
Uni
tIndustrialfuel
1,89
410
,020
1,88
810
,014
179
5,64
01,
708
4,37
47
6Residentialfuel
9827
576
194
7619
4 --
--
22
81M
ulch
2426
,448
1518
,616
413
,051
115,
565
97,
833
Mis
cella
neou
sc42
13,0
7738
10,8
7411
5,80
028
5,07
43
2,20
3Notused
3,98
411
,494
3,09
38,
520
2,98
06,
708
113
1,81
289
12,
973
Tota
l6,
041
61,3
155,
110
48,2
183,
250
31,3
931,
860
16,8
2593
113
,096
Wes
tern
Uni
tIndustrialfuel
24 --
24
--
24 --
--
--
--
--
Residentialfuel
191
1415
610
153
103
--
354
Mis
cella
neou
sc17
52
175
212
0 --
55
2 --
--
Notused
452
175
330
134
213
9511
739
123
41To
tal
843
192
685
147
510
105
175
4215
845
a Suitableforchippingsuchasslabs,edgings,veneercores,etc.
b Notsuitableforchippingsuchassawdust,veneerclippingsetc.
c Livestockbedding,smalldimension,specialtyitem
s,etc.
Tabl
e m
ay n
ot s
um d
ue to
roun
ding
.
Table14.–Dispositionofresiduesproducedatprim
arywood-usingmills,ingreentons,byForestInventoryUnit,disposition,residuetype,andsoftwoodsandhardw
oods,
Nebraska,2009
Printed on Recycled Paper
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Visit our Web site: www.nrs.fs.fed.us
Published by:
Fax: 740-368-0152
Abstract
In 2009 there were 62 active primary wood-processing mills in Nebraska. These mills processed 4.1 million cubic feet of industrial roundwood. There was 4.09 million cubic feet of industrial roundwood harvested from Nebraska forests. The majority of roundwood harvested was for saw logs, accounting for 72 percent of the total. The harvesting of industrial roundwood products generated 1.5 million cubic feet of harvest residues. Primary wood-processing mills generated 68,000 green tons of mill residues.
Walters, Brian F.; Adams, Dennis M.; Piva, Ronald J. 2012. Nebraska timber industry: an assessment of timber product output and use, 2009. Resour. Bull. NRS-69. Newtown Square, PA: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Northern Research Station. 54 p.
Presents recent Nebraska forest industry trends; production and receipts of industrial roundwood; and production of saw logs, veneer logs, pulpwood, and other products in 2009. Logging residue generated from timber harvest operations is reported, as well as wood and bark residue generated at primary wood-using mills and disposition of mill residues.
KEY WORDS: Industrial roundwood, harvest residue, mill residue, production, pulpwood, receipts, saw logs, veneer logs
Cover Photo
Mill yard log deck. Photo by U.S. Forest Service, bugwood.org.
Northern Research Station
www.nrs.fs.fed.us
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