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K
kilning
Drying
wood under controlled temperature and humidity.
L
latex
A
thick white or whitish liquid produced by certain plants. For example,
Antiaris toxicaria and Bridelia micrantha both have a latex sap. A
more popular example is the rubber tree (Hevea braziliensis). Some types
of latex can be harmful, especially if the latex gets into the
eyes.
litter
Uppermost
layer, on the soil surface, of loose organic debris (for example, as in
forests), consisting of freshly fallen or slightly decomposed organic
materials.
live
fence
A way
of establishing a boundary by planting a line of trees and/or shrubs (the latter
usually from large stem cuttings or stumps), at relatively close spacing and by
fixing wires to them. If animals are to be kept in or out, more uprights (dead
sticks) can be tied to the wires. Also called a 'living
fence'.
lopping
1. Cutting
one or more branches of a standing tree, for example, for fuel or
fodder.
2. A
technique used to collect fodder for animals by cutting side branches, not the
main stem. Animals can be allowed to eat the lopped branches of the tree, or
they can be carried to the animals as in a zero-grazing
system.
lumber
Sawn
timber. A unit of measure is the 'board foot', that is, a board 12 inches long
by 12 inches wide by 1 inch thick.
M
mangroves
1. Open
or closed stands of trees and bushes occurring in the tropics in inter-tidal
zones, usually around the mouths of rivers, creeks and lagoons where soils are
heavy textured and have a fluctuating salt content and soil
level.
2. A name
used collectively for the assemblage of plants, as well as to refer to
individual genera or species, for example, woody members of the Rhizophoraceae,
Combretaceae and Verbenaceae. These have knee-like roots that are
'pneumatophores' (roots with air spaces). Grown for wood and
tannins.
miombo
A form
of woodland found in southern Africa in hot, semi-arid regions with a monomodal
rainfall (for example, in Tanzania, Zimbabwe, Malawi, Zambia). Rainfall is high
(> 1000 mm) and soils are poor in nutrients and acid. The vegetation is
dominated by slow-growing, mainly deciduous, caesalpiniaceous trees (for
example, Brachystegia, Julbernardia).
mixed
garden
A
land-use form on private lands outside the village, dominated by planted
perennial crops, mostly trees, under which annual (seasonal) crops are
cultivated. When spices are grown they are called 'spice
gardens'.
mixed
stand
A
stand in which less than 80% of the trees in the main canopy are of a single
species.
multiple-use
forestry
Any
practice of forestry that fulfils two or more objectives of management, whether
products, services or other benefits. Also called 'multipurpose
forestry'.
multipurpose
tree
A
woody perennial that is purposefully grown to provide more than one significant
contribution to the production or service functions (for example, shelter,
shade, land sustainability) of the land-use system that it occupies. Also called
'agroforestry tree'.
multistorey
cropping
Multispecies
crop combinations involving both annuals and perennials with an existing stand
of perennials. An association of tall perennials with shorter statured crop
species.
multistorey
system
An
agroforestry system, such as a homegarden, that has a number of plant components
of differing stature so that several layers of canopy are
formed.
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