| 1. | Coppicing is used to encourage growth and indefinite succession young stems.
|
| 2. | The site has been managed by coppicing for over 400 years.
|
| 3. | Evidence suggests that coppicing has been continuously practiced since pre-history.
|
| 4. | Coppicing of the riverside alder trees is still carried out.
|
| 5. | The coppicing allows for charcoal burning, with the products sold locally.
|
| 6. | Clearcutting also differs from a coppicing system, by allowing revegetation by seedlings.
|
| 7. | Leaves are lobed when coppicing or juvenile, somewhat resembling an oak leaf.
|
| 8. | Leaf shaft winged, sometimes broadly so when coppicing.
|
| 9. | Coppicing of willow, alder and poplar for energy wood has proven commercially successful.
|
| 10. | The woodland glades are kept open by coppicing.
|