English to Gujarati Dictionary silviculture

silviculture

વન સંવર્ધન
definition
noun
Central to their beliefs was the idea that small farmers and trees did not mix, that agriculture and silviculture did not mix.
the growing and cultivation of trees.
translation of 'silviculture'
વનવર્ધન,
વનવૃક્ષવિજ્ઞાન
example
Current activities, such as navigation channel dredging, hydroelectric power production, agriculture, and 'silviculture' , will not be stopped by the listing of the sturgeon.
Central to their beliefs was the idea that small farmers and trees did not mix, that agriculture and 'silviculture' did not mix.
Experience from other countries shows that major gains in forest productivity can result from incremental or intensive 'silviculture' combined with improvements to tree species.
Five sites each occurred within forested landscapes disturbed by agriculture and those disturbed by 'silviculture' .
Although adjacent to dense forests altered by 'silviculture' , vegetation in the swale resembles that of boggy pine savannas or flatwoods.
The solution was to separate agrarian and 'silvicultural' production.
Most 'silviculturists' plant 1000 seedlings per hectare at $1.25 per seedling for a cost of $1250.
Wells then offers a series of journalistic ‘field trips’ that recount interviews and tours of the forest taken with the forest manager, a 'silviculturist' , an environmental activist, and the forest's recreation planner.
His accidental career choice eventually led to his current position as a 'silviculturist' for Tahoe National Forest, one he's held for the past 14 years.
Generally, these 'silvicultural' openings are less than 2 hectares in size.
Farmers and co-operatives using sound 'silvicultural' management on their farms are encouraged to enter this category.
Scale is key to the success, says a San Juan district 'silviculturist' .
Whitebark pines are what 'silviculturists' term a keystone species of upper subalpine ecosystems.
Monoculture plantations and 'silvicultural' thinning create stands with fewer tree species than in natural forests.
According to the proponents of the 'silvicultural' hypothesis, several processes combined to make forests increasingly vulnerable to budworm outbreaks.
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