Diameter of tree | Points |
One to three inches | 2 |
>Three to seven inches | 4 |
Seven to 12 inches | 6 |
>12 inches | 8 |
Aerial photography is an appropriate first step in identifying a forest since it is easier and less costly than doing extensive sampling. If an area includes areas of sporadic coverage that an applicant believes do not constitute forest area, the applicant must overlay a grid system (available from the Department's website) on the photographs to determine whether areas with sporadic coverage contain sufficient coverage to be identified as forest. The use of the grid to identify forest cover is consistent with the New Jersey No Net Loss Reforestation Act, N.J.S.A 13:1L-14.1 et seq.
The on-the-ground methodology for determining a forest on a site by measuring the trees and their density on the ground reflects the Highlands methodology. Onsite sampling is only necessary if the Department identifies additional areas of potential forest that were not identified by the applicant using aerial photography. Diameters and corresponding point values are based on data from the U.S. Forest Inventory Field Procedures Manual (U.S. Forest Service), Forest Statistics for New Jersey 1987 and 1999 (Griffith and Widmann, 2001), and Forests of the Garden State Resource Bulletin NE163 (Widmann, 2005) and are consistent with the Highlands method.
N.J. Admin. Code § 7:7-13.5