Forestry England Subcompartments 2024
Summary
All organisations hold information about the core of their business. Forestry England holds information on trees and forests. We use this information to help us run our business and make decisions.
The role of the Forest Inventory (the Sub-compartment Database (SCDB) and the stock maps) is to be our authoritative data source, giving us information for recording, monitoring, analysis and reporting. Through this it supports decision-making on the whole of the FE estate. Information from the Inventory is used by FE, wider government, industry and the public for economic, environmental and social forest-related decision-making.
Furthermore, it supports forest-related national policy development and government initiatives, and helps us meet our national and international forest-related reporting responsibilities. Information on our current forest resource, and the future expansion and availability of wood products from our forests, is vital for planners both in and outside FE. It is used when looking at the development of processing industries, regional infrastructure, the effect upon communities of our actions, and to prepare and monitor government policies. The Inventory (SCDB and stock maps), with ‘Future Forest Structure’ and the ‘rollback’ functionality of Forester, will help provide a definitive measure of trends in extent, structure, composition, health, status, use, and management of all FE land holdings.
We require this to meet national and international commitments, to report on the sustainable management of forests as well as to help us through the process of business and Forest Design Planning. As well as helping with the above, the SCDB helps us address detailed requests from industry, government, non-government organisations and the public for information on our estate. FE's growing national and international responsibilities and the requirements for monitoring and reporting on a range of forest statistics have highlighted the technical challenges we face in providing consistent, national level data. A well kept and managed SCDB and GIS (Geographical Information System - Forester) will provide the best solution for this and assist countries in evidence-based policy making. Looking ahead at international reporting commitments; one example of an area where requirements look set to increase will be reporting on our work to combat climate change and how our estate contributes to carbon sequestration. We have put in place processes to ensure that at least the basics of our inventory are covered:
- The inventory of forests;
- The land-uses;
- The land we own ( Deeds);
- The roads we manage.
We depend on others to allow us to manage the forests and to provide us with funds and in doing so we need to be seen to be responsible and accountable for our actions. A foundation of achieving this is good record keeping. A subcompartment should be recognisable on the ground. It will be similar enough in land use, species or habitat composition, yield class, age, condition, thinning history etc. to be treated as a single unit. They will generally be contiguous in nature and will not be split by roads, rivers, open space etc. Distinct boundaries are required, and these will often change as crops are felled, thinned, replanted and resurveyed. In some parts of the country foresters used historical and topographical features to delineate subcompartment boundaries, such as hedges, walls and escarpments. In other areas no account of the history and topography of the site was taken, with field boundaries, hedges, walls, streams etc. being subsumed into the sub-compartment. Also, these features may or may not appear on the OS backdrop, again this was dependent on the staff involved and what they felt was relevant to the map. The main point is that, as managers we may find such obvious features in the middle of a subcompartment when nothing is indicated on the stock map, while the same thing would be indicated elsewhere.
Attributes;
FOREST Cost centre Nos. COMPTMENT Compartment Nos. SUBCOMPT Sub-compartment letter BLOCK Block nos. CULTCODE Cultivation Code CULTIVATN Cultivation PRIHABCODE Primary Habitat Code PRIHABITAT Primary Habitat PRILANDUSE Land Use of primary component PRISPECIES Primary component tree species PRI_PLYEAR prim. component year planted PRIPCTAREA Prim. component %Area of sub-compartment SECHABCODE Secondary Habitat Code SECHABITAT Secondary Habitat SECLANDUSE Land Use of secondary component SECSPECIES Secondary component tree species SEC_PLYEAR Secondary component year planted SECPCTAREA Secondary component %Area of sub-compartment TERLANDUSE Land Use of tertiary component TERSPECIES Tertiary component tree species TER_PLYEAR Tertiary component year planted TERPCTAREA Tertiary component %Area of sub-compartment TERHABITAT Tertiary Habitat TERHABCODE Tertiary Habitat Code.
Any maps produced using this data should contain the following Forestry Commission acknowledgement: “Contains, or is based on, information supplied by the Forestry Commission. © Crown copyright and database right 2024 Ordnance Survey AC0000814847”.
Categories
Use limitation statement
There are no public access constraints to this data. Use of this data is subject to the licence identified.
Licence
Open Government LicenceAttribution statement
Crown copyright and database right 2024 Ordnance Survey AC0000814847
Technical information
Update frequency
annually
Lineage
‘The Sub-Compartment Database (SCDB) is a physical description of the land that FE manages on behalf of the public’. As its name implies it was originally a database of individual site or subcompartment records which contained both crop and site information. As the forest is the core asset that FE is charged to manage and the SCDB is the core information on that asset, it helps us manage that asset effectively and is therefore very important. The SCDB is in effect the hub of sustainable forest management and we should not underestimate its importance. The SCDB is not just about trees however, 70% of the land that we manage is of a forest nature, yet 30% by definition is not. This non-forest land covers, farmland, open mountaintops, heathland, estuarine and riparian habitats. View the SCDB not only as a ‘tree thing’, but also as a land management tool. Keeping site or stand records (today’s subcompartments) began shortly after the Commission was formed. 1. In the early 1920s paper records were created and stored as the inventory. 2. There was also a paper tape era, and the time when the SCDB and production forecast were hosted by the University of London Computing Centre. 3. To help query and manage these individual records, they were converted to punch cards in the 1950s and 1960s. 4. In 1974 a decision was taken to migrate these individual records into an electronic database in anticipation of the 1977 Quinquennial Forecast. This greatly helped interrogation of the inventory data. 5. To further this electronic management of the inventory data it was moved into a Rapport database in the late 1970s / early 1980s and then converted into an Oracle database environment in the late 1980s. Throughout this evolution there was never a direct link between the SCDB and the maps. However, the maps and SCDB were kept in parallel through manual checks and procedures. In 1999 both the maps and SCDB were linked in Forester GIS, ensuring that both parts of the data matched and ‘said the same thing’ for the first time. SUBCOMPARTMENTS; Ideally, the area bounded by a subcompartment should be uniform in terms of: 1. Species; 2. Relative mix of tree species; 3. Relative mix of tree age classes; 4. Presence/absence of distinct storeys; 5. Spatial distribution of trees; 6. Yield class (for each species/component); 7. Habitat type. Forester GIS ensures that a minimum sub-compartment size of 0.5 ha is observed. This is the rule that was in the old Survey Handbook. However, as there was no way of measuring and monitoring this in the paper maps, a lot of smaller subcompartments slipped through the ‘paper’ net. This occurred more in some FDs than others. Many of these were cleaned out (if erroneous) or converted to components in 1999 as part of the conversion to GIS. However, for some FDs the minimum mappable unit or subcompartment size threshold rule was lowered within Forester to allow these smaller subcompartments to exist. Approximately 10% of all subcompartments as of 31/03/05 are under 0.5ha in size. We recommend that sub-compartments are no smaller than a minimum of 0.5ha. However, for a building or residence, a minimum of 0.1 ha is acceptable. Most sub-compartments have areas between 1ha and 12 ha. The largest sub-compartment is currently 4,542.1 ha and has a land use code of Open. As broad habitats are mapped, most of these larger subcompartments will disappear as they are broken down into their separate habitats. This is because habitats form part of the sub-compartment / component and offer a higher resolution than the land use classifications. Before 1999, if a sub-compartment was spread over several discrete smaller areas, then areas of 0.1 ha were allowed, as long as they totalled to 0.5ha. Since 1999 individual areas like this had to equate to the minimum FD sub-compartment polygon size or the minimum mappable unit. Subcompartment area is generated automatically from the mapped area. Forester also ensures that the total area of subcompartments agrees with the area of the compartment in which they are located. The largest element will contain the full labelling and single letters are then allocated by the system to denote each smaller specific element of the subcompartment. Processes such as ‘cookie cutting’ for the Production Forecast will round subcompartment area to the nearest 0.1 ha. Reports taken directly from the SCDB generally calculate the area in square metres and round the result to the nearest 0.1ha. Sub-compartment data is used for a range of applications and is important to us for a number of reasons: 1. In Forester GIS they provide the basic map showing where forests are. 2. SCDB data provides the description and the record of ‘what is actually on the ground’, i.e. what stands consist of and what stage of development they have reached. 3. SCDB data is used for a range of important business applications like Production Forecasting (PF) see Operational Guidance Booklet 32.
Spatial information
Coordinate reference system
http://www.opengis.net/def/crs/EPSG/0/27700Geographic extent
- Latitude from: 49.943 to 55.816
- Longitude from: -6.236 to 2.072
Metadata information
Language
English
Metadata identifier
372d84b9-3a98-4a41-9c70-7106bc3f287d
Published by
Forestry Commission
Contact publisher
mapping.geodata@forestry.gov.ukDataset reference dates
Creation date
04 August 2024
Revision date
16 September 2024
Publication date
23 October 2024
Period
- From: 01 April 2023
- To: 31 March 2024
Search
Data and Supporting Information
Data services and download by area of interest | Link | Action |
---|---|---|
Forestry Commission Open Data Site | Open link |