New Jersey Administrative Code
Title 7 - ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
Chapter 50 - PINELANDS COMPREHENSIVE MANAGEMENT PLAN
Subchapter 6 - MANAGEMENT PROGRAMS AND MINIMUM STANDARDS
Part IV - FORESTRY
Section 7:50-6.46 - Forestry standards
Universal Citation: NJ Admin Code 7:50-6.46
Current through Register Vol. 56, No. 24, December 18, 2024
(a) Notwithstanding the other standards of this subchapter, forestry operations shall be approved only if the applicant can demonstrate that the standards set forth in this Part are met.
1. All forestry
activities shall serve to maintain Pinelands native forest types, including
those which are locally characteristic, except in those stands where other
forest types exist;
2. Any newly
developed access to lands proposed for harvesting shall avoid wetland areas
except as absolutely necessary to harvest wetlands species or to otherwise gain
access to a harvesting site.
3. The
following actions shall be required to encourage the reforestation of Atlantic
White Cedar in cedar and hardwood swamps:
i.
Clearcutting cedar and managing slash;
ii. Controlling competition by other plant
species;
iii. Utilizing fencing and
other retardants, where necessary, to protect cedar from
overbrowsing;
iv. Utilizing
existing streams as cutting boundaries, where practical;
v. Harvesting during dry periods or when the
ground is frozen; and
vi. Utilizing
the least intrusive harvesting techniques, including the use of winches,
corduroy roads and helicopters, where practical.
4. All forestry activities and practices
shall be designed and carried out so as to comply with the standards set forth
in N.J.A.C. 7:50-6.27 and 6.33. The
species accounts provided in the "Recommended Forestry Management Practices
Report," Appendix I - Endangered Animals, dated March 2006, as amended and
supplemented and available at the principal office of the Commission or at
http://www.nj.gov/pinelands,
may be utilized as a guide for meeting these standards.
5. All forestry activities and practices
shall be designed and carried out so as to comply with the standards set forth
in N.J.A.C. 7:50-6.79, except as
expressly authorized in this Part.
6. All forestry activities and practices
shall be designed and carried out so as to comply with the standards set forth
in N.J.A.C. 7:50-6.151 through
6.158.
7. A vegetated streamside
management zone shall be maintained or established adjacent to streams, ponds,
lakes and marshes, except that no streamside management zone shall be required
when Atlantic White Cedar is proposed to be harvested, established, restored or
regenerated. The streamside management zone shall be at least 25 feet in width.
Where soils are severely erodible, slopes exceed 10 percent or streamside
vegetation is not vigorous, the streamside management zone shall be increased
up to a maximum of 70 feet to buffer the water body from adjacent forestry
activities.
8. Stream crossings,
access roads, timber harvesting, skid trails, log decks, portable sawmill
sites, site preparation, and reforestation shall be designed and carried out so
as to:
i. Minimize changes to surface and
ground water hydrology;
ii.
Minimize changes to temperature and other existing surface water quality and
conditions;
iii. Prevent
unnecessary soil erosion, siltation and sedimentation; and
iv. Minimize unnecessary disturbances to
aquatic and forest habitats.
9. The following standards shall apply to
silvicultural practices for site preparation, either before or after
harvesting:
i. In areas with slopes of
greater than 10 percent, an undisturbed buffer strip of at least 25 feet in
width shall be maintained along roads during site preparation to catch soil
particles;
ii. Herbicide treatments
shall be permitted, provided that:
(1) The
proposed treatment is identified in the forestry application submitted to the
Commission pursuant to
N.J.A.C.
7:50-6.44(b)10;
(2) Control of competitive plant species is
clearly necessary;
(3) Control of
competitive plant species by other, non-chemical means is not
practical;
(4) All chemicals shall
be expressly labeled for forestry use and shall be used and mixed in a manner
that is consistent with relevant State and Federal requirements; and
(5) In Pine-Shrub Oak Native Forest Types,
herbicide treatments shall only be permitted as a method to temporarily
suppress shrub-oak understory in order to facilitate pine regeneration. All
such herbicide treatments shall be applied in a targeted manner so that there
will be no significant reduction in tree or shrub-oak re-sprouting outside
those areas subject to the herbicide treatment;
iii. Broadcast scarification and mechanical
weeding shall be permitted in all Pinelands Native Forest Types;
iv. Disking shall be permitted, provided
that:
(1) It shall not be permitted in Pine
Plains Native Forest Types;
(2)
Disking shall only be permitted in Pine-Shrub Oak Native Forest Types as a
method to temporarily suppress shrub-oak understory in order to facilitate pine
regeneration, and shall be limited as follows:
(A) Disking may occur one time during the
first year of the establishment of a stand to assure the successful growth of
pine seedlings and may be repeated one time during the second year of the
growth of the stand only in areas where pine seedling establishment has not
successfully occurred; and
(B) Only
single-pass disking, which penetrates the soil no deeper than six inches, shall
be permitted;
(3) It
shall not occur in wetlands, except as may be necessary to establish, restore
or regenerate Atlantic White Cedar. When so used, disking shall be limited to
shrub-dominated parcels and recently abandoned agricultural lands;
and
(4) It shall follow land
contours when slopes are discernible;
v. Root raking shall be permitted, provided
that:
(1) It shall not be permitted in
Pine-Shrub Oak Native Forest Types or Pine Plains Native Forest
Types;
(2) When used to establish,
restore or regenerate Atlantic White Cedar, root raking shall be limited to
shrub-dominated parcels and recently abandoned agricultural lands;
and
(3) Root raking debris shall
not be piled in wetlands;
vi. Bedding shall be permitted only in
recently abandoned, cultivated wetlands where there are no established
Pinelands Native Forest Types; and
vii. Drum chopping shall be permitted,
provided that:
(1) It shall not be permitted
in Pine Plains Native Forest Types except to create road shoulder fuelbreaks,
which shall be limited to 25 feet in width, or to create scattered early
successional habitats under two acres in size;
(2) It shall not be permitted in wetlands,
except as may be necessary to establish, restore or regenerate Atlantic White
Cedar. When so used, drum chopping shall be limited to shrub-dominated parcels
and recently abandoned agricultural lands; and
(3) It shall adhere to the following
procedures:
(A) No more than two passes shall
be permitted except to create scattered early successional habitats under two
acres in size;
(B) Drums shall
remain unfilled when used during the dormant season;
(C) Chop up and down the slope on a parcel so
the depressions made by the cleats and chopper blades run parallel to the
contour of the land to help reduce the occurrence of channeled surface
erosion;
(D) Chop so the
depressions made by the cleats and chopper blades run parallel to a wetland or
water body; and
(E) Avoid
short-radius, 180-degree turns at the end of each straight pass.
10. The
following standards shall apply to silvicultural practices for harvesting:
i. Clearcutting shall be permitted, provided
that:
(1) It shall not be permitted in Pine
Plains Native Forest Types;
(2) It
shall be limited to 300 acres or five percent of a parcel, whichever is
greater, during any permit period;
(3) A 50-foot-wide buffer strip, in which
only periodic pruning and thinning may occur, shall be maintained between any
clearcut and the parcel boundaries;
(4) A buffer strip, in which only periodic
pruning and thinning may occur, shall also be maintained to separate each
25-acre or larger clearcut from other 25-acre or larger clearcuts, coppice cuts
and seed tree cuts that occur within a 15-year period. The buffer strip
separating two 25-acre harvests shall be 50 feet in width and, for a larger
harvest, shall increase in width by one foot for each acre of that harvest
above 25, to a maximum of 300 feet in width;
(5) Where present on a parcel, a minimum of
18 dead snags per acre of at least 10 inches diameter breast height (DBH) and
six feet in height shall be left on the parcel for a minimum of five years;
and
(6) The area of the parcel
subject to the clearcut shall have contoured edges unless the boundary of the
clearcut serves as a firebreak in which case straight edges may be
used;
ii. Coppicing
shall be permitted in all Pinelands Native Forest Types, provided that:
(1) It shall be limited to 500 acres in size
or 10 percent of a parcel, whichever is greater, during any permit
period;
(2) A 50-foot-wide buffer
strip, in which only periodic pruning and thinning may occur, shall be
maintained between any coppice cut and the parcel boundaries;
(3) A buffer strip, in which only periodic
pruning and thinning may occur, shall also be maintained to separate each 25
acre or larger coppice cut from other 25-acre or larger clearcuts, coppice cuts
and seed tree cuts that occur within a 15-year period. The buffer strip
separating two 25-acre harvests shall be 50 feet in width and, for a larger
harvest, shall increase in width by one foot for each acre of that harvest
above 25, to a maximum of 300 feet in width;
(4) Where present on a parcel, a minimum of
18 dead snags per acre of at least 10 inches DBH and six feet in height shall
be left on the parcel for a minimum of five years; and
(5) The area of the parcel subject to the
coppice cut shall have contoured edges unless the boundary of the coppice cut
serves as a firebreak in which case straight edges may be used;
iii. Seed tree cutting shall be
permitted in all Pinelands Native Forest Types, provided that:
(1) It shall be limited to 500 acres in size
or 10 percent of a parcel, whichever is greater, during any permit
period;
(2) A 50-foot-wide buffer
strip, in which only periodic pruning and thinning may occur, shall be
maintained between any seed tree cut and the parcel boundaries;
(3) A buffer strip, in which only periodic
pruning and thinning may occur, shall also be maintained to separate each
25-acre or larger seed tree cut from other 25-acre or larger clearcuts, coppice
cuts and seed tree cuts that occur within a 15-year period. The buffer strip
separating two 25-acre harvests shall be 50 feet in width and, for a larger
harvest, shall increase in width by one foot for each acre of that harvest
above 25, to a maximum of 300 feet in width;
(4) Where present on a parcel, a minimum of
18 dead snags per acre of at least 10 inches DBH and six feet in height shall
be left on the parcel for a minimum of five years;
(5) The area of the parcel subject to the
seed tree cut shall have contoured edges unless the boundary of the seed tree
cut serves as a firebreak in which case straight edges may be used;
(6) Dominant residual seed trees shall be
retained at a distribution of at least seven trees per acre; and
(7) Residual seed trees shall be distributed
evenly throughout the parcel; and
iv. Shelterwood cutting, group selection and
individual selection shall be permitted in all Pinelands Native Forest
Types.
11. The following
standards shall apply to silvicultural practices for forest regeneration:
i. Natural regeneration shall be permitted in
all Pinelands Native Forest Types and shall be required in the Pine Plains
Native Forest Type, except as provided in (a)11ii below; and
ii. Artificial regeneration shall be
permitted in all Pinelands Native Forest Types provided that:
(1) The use of non-native cuttings, seedlings
or seeds shall not be permitted;
(2) The use of hybrid cuttings, seedlings or
seeds shall be permitted if it can be demonstrated that the cutting is from a
locally native, naturally occurring hybrid which will be planted within its
natural range and habitat;
(3)
Cuttings, seedlings or seeds shall be collected and utilized so as to ensure
genetic diversity; and
(4) When
used in Pine Plains Native Forest Types, artificial regeneration shall only be
permitted to restore drastically disturbed sites if seeds or seedlings from the
immediate vicinity have been collected from local, genetically similar
sources.
12.
Following site preparation and harvesting activities, slash shall either be
retained in piles on the parcel, distributed throughout the parcel, removed
from the parcel or burned.
13.
Thinning shall be permitted in all Pinelands Native Forest Types, including
that which serves to maintain an understory of native plants and/or manage
stand composition, density, growth and spatial heterogeneity.
14. A copy of the approved municipal forestry
permit shall be conspicuously posted on the parcel which is the site of the
forestry activity.
(b) The New Jersey Forestry and Wetlands Best Management Practices Manual developed by the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection, dated October 1995, as amended, may be used as a guide in determining the extent to which the proposed forestry activity meets the standards of (a) above.
Disclaimer: These regulations may not be the most recent version. New Jersey may have more current or accurate information. We make no warranties or guarantees about the accuracy, completeness, or adequacy of the information contained on this site or the information linked to on the state site. Please check official sources.
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