Bare Ground
Benchmark Value
Scoring Curve
This curve shows how a field measurement for this indicator would score across all available benchmark forms in this context.
Evidence & Context
"total area of soil surface disturbed by [snig tracks and log landings] must not exceed 20% of the net harvest area"
Total area of soil surface disturbed by infrastructure
This benchmark sets the maximum allowable proportion of soil surface disturbed by snig tracks and log landings in production forestry to prevent excessive catchment-scale disturbance.
Prevents excessive catchment-scale disturbance
Sources (1)
Forestry Corporation of NSW (2022). Private Native Forestry Code of Practice for Southern New South Wales.
View SourceSupporting Sources (8)
Additional references from the underlying research that informed this benchmark.
ABARES (2023). Indicator 5.1a: Contribution of forest ecosystems to the global carbon cycle. Australia's State of the Forests Report.
View SourceCunningham, S. C., & Walsh, N. G. (2004). Treeless subalpine vegetation of the Kosciuszko region. Cunninghamia, 8(4), 439-452.
View SourceFoulkes, J., & Corkrey, R. (2021). Assessing the post-fire recovery of alpine shrublands: A study in the Tasmanian Highlands. Fire, 4(3), 32.
View SourceWood, S. W., et al. (2015). The Ausplots Forest Monitoring Network: Tall eucalypt forests. PLOS ONE.
View SourcePrivate Forests Tasmania (2021). Management of Natural regeneration in eucalypt plantations.
View SourceWahren, C. H., Papst, W. A., & Williams, R. J. (1999). Long-term vegetation change in the Bogong High Plains, Victoria.
View SourceForest Practices Authority Tasmania (2010). Technical Bulletin 2: Eucalyptus delegatensis forests.
View SourceNew South Wales Government. (2022). Private Native Forestry Code of Practice for Southern NSW.
View Source