Talk:Plantation

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If anyone is really upset, then revert my changes. But I have not removed any material that was there. --Red King 16:43, 22 Apr 2005 (UTC)

Now that I look at it more closely, I see another hand (as History confirms). I've made TREES a specific to try to make it more generic. It still needs work! --Red King 16:56, 22 Apr 2005 (UTC)
Hey! it looks better already. --Wetman 18:43, 22 Apr 2005 (UTC)

Contents

[edit] tree farm

I took out tree farm , though this latter term more typically refers to specialist tree nurseries which produce the seedling trees used to create plantations. A" tree farm" trees grown for harvest, they could be natural. An "American tree farm" is a progam from the 1940 to improve forest parctices on farmsKAM 22:i like little boys i am michael jackson02, 30 Apr 2005 (UTC)

Perhaps tree farm shold have its own article. It redirects here. It seems to me that tree farm is used here only because saying monoculture one more time would be monotonous. KAM 3 July 2005 15:51 (UTC)

[edit] Impacts of non-native species

Red King added: "Where non-native varieties or species are grown, few of the native fauna are adapted to exploit these and further biodiversity loss occurs. In some cases, the imported species can bring predators for which there is no local control and the crop can adversely be affected.

Red King's wording strikes me as a little bit too absolute - the harmful effects of exotic plantations is by no means universal. I'm also a bit uncertain as to what is meant by imported species can bring predators - I'm guessing "predators" should really be "pests and pathogens", but more importantly I can't think of examples - can you provide some citations? Thanks. Guettarda 14:38, 9 May 2005 (UTC)


The examples I had in mind were: mass planting of conifers in place of broadleaf woodland producing an environment in which very few other flora and fauna can survive. The other example is the cane toad in Australia - it was introduced (I believe) to control native insects that attacked the cane. But the Cane-toad article doesn't mention this, so it may be apocryphal. In any case, my addition confuses two issues (a) introduced Ps and Ps that attack other things and (b) local Ps and Ps that attack the introduced crop. So I'll revert it and leave for someone more expert to write. --Red King 00:06, 10 May 2005 (UTC)

[edit] Plantation, settlement and Colony

A plantation is a place where people plant things, sometimes the people called themselves planters. The Dictionary definition of plantation is 1. a settlement and 2. a colony. Colony and plantation are sometimes used interchangeably but it seems to me that a plantation refers more to the area and a colony to the people or government. For example Plymouth colony ended when it became part of Bay State Colony and Plymouth plantation ended when it became the town of Plymouth. This is the case in Maine. When a plantation got enough population it became a town.KAM 14:09, 24 May 2005 (UTC)

Agreed. There was something like this in the original text, but it just got lost in the undergrowth <grin>. The solution, disambiguation, was ideal. At present, there is a very brief disambiguation statement at the beginning. It looks like you have written most of a new article above, so I suggest you merge the existing preface with yours and then change the preface to point to it. --Red King 17:55, 24 May 2005 (UTC)
If I may support my own suggestion(!), the multiply revised preface has become a bit of mess - so tightly edited to keep it terse that the meaning is getting lost.

I am not sure if this is the direction you were thinking. Also it is hacked up a little. Needs some work The things I left out (plantation economy) can be worked back in.KAM 23:52, 24 May 2005 (UTC)

  • * No, not at all! The colony plantations (in Ireland and New England) were to insert people, not plants. You are interpreting 17th century words through using 21st century usage, and it doesn't work like that. No doubt this usage is not familiar to you: may I invite you to read Plantations of Ireland to explain why I'm so excited about it. You have completely changed and lost the meaning, so I shall have to revert. I'll write the article Plantation (settlement or colony) that I proposed above. --Red King 09:51, 25 May 2005 (UTC)
I see your point, I think this looks good.KAM 11:11, 25 May 2005 (UTC)

[edit] Natural forest vs tree plantation

This article is about various plantations: tree tobacco, sugarcane, pineapple, etc. All these plantations are grown as monoculture for the production of a crop “as opposed to a natural forest” there all are often nonnative, have no decaying wood etc etc. and “are not a fitting substitute for old-growth forests” (what is?). It is probably safe to say most crop plantations were formerly forest. A tree plantation, even of non-native species, is probably preferably, ecologically speaking, to any other crop such as tea or sugar. Why then is this information in the forestry secion and is this not being said about, say, sugar plantations?

The answer is, I think, that nobody is asserting that sugar plantations make a good substitute for a natural forest. From reading this article one could surmise that someone is asserting that tree plantations can be substituted for natural forest and that this article is the rebuttal or augment against.

Of course a natural forest and a tree plantation both can produce wood and a plantation can produce more wood on less land (an argument made by the "three island word problem"). Is the argument here that it is better to harvest wood from a natual forest? KAM 17:54, 10 Jun 2005 (UTC)

"Plantations may also involve draining wetlands to replace mixed hardwoods that formerly predominated, with pine species" Is this a common practice? My guess is that this much site preparation might make a plantation unprofitable.KAM 13:25, 14 Jun 2005 (UTC)

A plantation is not a natural ecosystem.. this statment is subjective. KAM 3 July 2005 15:51 (UTC)

I cut back on comparison to natural forest. The article at agriculture for example has material about environmental impacts but does not compare monoculture non-native crops to a natural forest. Plantations are not established as wildlife preserves, why hold them to that standard? A discussion of land use or forestry belongs elsewhere. KAM 14:59, 14 December 2005 (UTC)

Roger A. Sedjo and Botkin are good sources for for plantations, KAM 11:52, 2 November 2006 (UTC)

[edit] Forestry section is getting too good

Wow! The forestry section is getting so good that it is beginning to swamp the other types of plantation. Perhaps most of this great content should be moved to a silviculture or tree farm or forestry page, leaving a condensed version that won't swamp out cotton plantations, coffee plantations, and every other non-timber plantation. -The Gomm 21:01, 1 September 2006 (UTC)

That's because it is the overwhelming meaning of the term plantation in modern English. It would make more sense to move out the other aspects (cotton, coffee, etc) to other pages. - MPF 11:04, 21 September 2006 (UTC)
I beg to differ. In Google
about 6,770,000 for plantation forest
about 10,300,000 for plantation cotton OR coffee OR tea OR slave

[edit] photo captions POV

Going by the photo captions it seems that forestry plantations can't win. In the photo of the Douglas fir the caption says note the "lack of diversity in the ground flora" The second photo the Eucalyptus which shows diversity in the ground flora the caption points out the danger of brush fires. Contrast those captions to the non-forest plantations. What was the forest like on Cuba before being cleared for sugar plantations in the 19th century? KAM 20:40, 2 June 2007 (UTC)

Saw your comment here, agreed so I've taken the liberty of removing the comment on the DF photo. I could quite rightly be accused of acting too hastily but sure anyone can put it back. The Boy that time forgot 16:40, 3 June 2007 (UTC)
Actually, both photos show very poor ground flora diversity; the Eucalyptus pic shows a planted (straight!) hedge in the foreground, and a ground flora consisting of two species (Pteridium aquilinum, and another fern probably Dryopteris sp.), plus a few self-sown Eucalyptus saplings. Also perhaps even more important is the lack of diversity in the trees; no significant variation in age, no dead wood, etc. I think the bushfire comment is less relevant; if that needs illustrating, use a pic of a burning or burnt forest (e.g. Image:Burnt pine forest.jpg) - MPF 10:57, 31 August 2007 (UTC)