- About Forestry
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Private Land Forestry
- Planning and Design
- On-Farm Benefits
- Species Selection Guides
- Individual Species
- Site Establishment or Regeneration
- Health and Nutrition
- Monitoring the Health of Timber Plantations
- Farm Forestry During a Drought
- Fire Risk Management for Farm Forestry Plantations
- Wildfire & Farm Forestry
- Protecting White Cypress-Pine and Buloke in the Shepparton Irrigation Region
- Using Trees to Control Groundwater Recharge: How Many are Enough?
- Productive Reuse of Effluent on Tree Plantations
- Fertiliser Use in Farm Forestry
- Managing Remnant Vegetation
- Forestry Industry Brigades
- Protecting Box Woodlands in the Shepparton Irrigation Region
- Pruning, Thinning and Harvesting
- Forest Products and Processing
- Marketing and Value-Adding
- Safety in Forestry Operations
- Public Land Forestry
- Pests, Diseases and Weeds
- Innovation and Research
- Environment and Community
- Education and Training
- Investment and Trade

Health and Nutrition
Timber growers can improve the health and productivity of their plantations by monitoring for pests, diseases and nutrient disorders.
Regular and systematic surveillance and monitoring of tree health facilitates early detection of damaging agents and thus early intervention to protect a plantation owner’s investment.
- Farm Forestry During a Drought
- Fertiliser Use in Farm Forestry
- Fire Risk Management for Farm Forestry Plantations
- Forestry Industry Brigades
- Managing Remnant Vegetation
- Monitoring the Health of Timber Plantations
- Protecting White Cypress-pine and Buloke in the Shepparton Irrigation Region
- Protecting Box Woodlands in the Shepparton Irrigation Region
- Productive Reuse of Effluent on Tree Plantations
- Wildfire & Farm Forestry - Being Prepared, Learning from the Past

