Basal Area
Benchmark Value
Scoring Curve
This curve shows how a field measurement for this indicator would score across all available benchmark forms in this context. The scoring engine uses 19 benchmarks together — the OptimalRange form drives the primary score, while 18 guard(s) constrain the result.
Contributing Benchmarks
Evidence & Context
Proposed Optimal Range: 10 - 20 m²/ha
Basal area, defined as the cross-sectional area of tree stems at breast height per unit of land (e.g., m²/ha)
This benchmark defines the optimal basal area range balancing ecological health and agricultural productivity in agricultural crop production on Australian tropical/subtropical maritime islands.
Synthesized from lower critical and upper detrimental thresholds to define a multifunctional agroecosystem range
Sources (1)
"A Review of Traditional Agroforestry in Micronesia" (Manner, 1992)
View SourceSupporting Sources (5)
Additional references from the underlying research that informed this benchmark.
"Basal area (m²/ha) for different tropical rain forests of the Far East" (Jaffré & Veillon, in Adansonia, 2021)
View SourceAustralian dryland soils are acidic and nutrient-depleted, and have unique microbial communities compared with other drylands - PMC, accessed July 21, 2025
View SourceForestry stocking guides for temperate hardwood stands
View SourceUN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) definition of forest canopy cover minimum
View SourceStudy in a South Indian agricultural landscape on vegetation cover and crop yield
View Source