PREAMBLE
In pursuance of rule 8 of the Indian Forest Service
(Probation) Rules, 1968, the Central Government, in consultation with the State
Government and the Union Public Service Commission hereby makes the following
regulations, namely :
Regulation - 1. Short title and commencement.
(1) These regulations may be called
the Indian Forest Service (Probationers' Final Examination) Regulations, 1968.
(2) They shall be deemed to have come
into force on 1st April, 1968.
Regulation - 2. Definitions.
(1) In these regulations, unless the
context otherwise requires, "Schedule" means a Schedule appended to
these regulations.
(2) All other words and expressions
used in these regulations and not defined shall have the meanings respectively
assigned to them in the Indian Forest Service (Probation) Rules, 1968.
Regulation - 3. Final Examination.
(1) Every probationer shall, during
and at or about the end of the period of training at the Institute, appear at
the Final Examination comprising
(i) written and practical
examinations;
(ii) exercises; and
(iii) qualifying tests.
(2) The written and practical
examinations shall be held as follows :
(i) First year Examination at or
about the end of the first year of training at the Institute, and
(ii) Second year Examination at or
about the end of the second year of training at the Institute.
(3) Exercises in field work shall be
held during the course of training at the Institute and during tours undertaken
according to a phased programme.
(4) The Final Examination shall be
conducted by the President in the manner laid down in these regulations.
(5) The dates on which and the-places
at which the various examinations and tests shall be held shall be fixed by the
Central Government in consultation with the President.
Regulation - 4. Subjects and Syllabus for
[(A) Written and Practical
Examinations, and (B) Exercises.The subjects for written and practical
examinations and exercises shall be as mentioned below namely :
(A) Written and Practical
Examinations
The subjects for these examinations and the maximum
marks allotted to each of them shall be as follows namely :
|
|
Group
|
Subjects
|
Paper
|
Theory
|
Practical
|
Total
|
Total of Group
|
|
|
1
|
2
|
3
|
4
|
5
|
6
|
7
|
|
|
First Year
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Forestry I
(General)
|
1. Land Management and Soil Conservation
|
|
15
|
|
15
|
25
|
|
|
2. Range Management
|
|
10
|
..
|
10
|
|
|
Forestry II (Core)
|
3. Silviculture
|
I
|
25
|
..
|
25
|
25
|
|
|
Silviculture
|
II
|
25
|
..
|
25
|
|
|
4. Mensuration
|
I
|
20
|
..
|
20
|
85
|
|
|
Mensuration
|
II
|
20
|
..
|
20
|
|
|
Mensuration
|
III
|
20
|
..
|
20
|
|
|
Earth Sciences
|
5. Geology
|
|
15
|
10
|
25
|
55
|
|
|
6. Soil Sciences
|
|
20
|
10
|
30
|
|
|
Physical Science
|
7. Surveying
|
|
25
|
25
|
50
|
85
|
|
|
8. Engineering
|
I
|
35
|
..
|
35
|
|
|
Biological
|
9. Botany
|
I
|
20
|
20
|
40
|
40
|
|
Sciences
|
|
|
|
..
|
|
|
|
Forest Utilisation
|
10. Forest Utilisation
|
I
|
35
|
..
|
35
|
|
|
Forest Utilisation
|
II
|
20
|
..
|
20
|
55
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total
|
|
305
|
65
|
|
370
|
|
|
|
|
Second Year
|
|
|
|
..
|
|
|
|
Forestry I (General)
|
1. Wild Life Management
|
|
20
|
..
|
20
|
|
|
2. Environmental Conservation
|
|
10
|
..
|
10
|
45
|
|
|
3. World Forestry
|
|
15
|
..
|
15
|
|
|
Forestry II (Core)
|
4. Silviculture Silviculture Viva Voce in Silv.
|
III
IV
|
25
25
30
|
..
|
25
25
30
|
200
|
|
|
5. Forest Management
|
|
30
|
..
|
30
|
|
|
6. Working Plans
|
|
60
|
..
|
60
|
|
|
7. Forest Economics , and Valuation
|
|
30
|
..
|
30
|
|
|
Forestry III
|
8. Forest Production
|
|
15
|
..
|
15
|
50
|
|
|
9. Forest Policy and Law
|
|
15
|
..
|
15
|
|
|
10. Social Forestry
|
|
10
|
..
|
10
|
|
|
11. Tribal Welfare
|
|
10
|
..
|
10
|
|
|
Physical Science
|
12. Engineering
|
II
|
35
|
|
35
|
45
|
|
|
13. Forest Machinery
|
|
10
|
..
|
10
|
|
|
Biological Science
|
14. Botany
|
II
|
20
|
20
|
40
|
|
|
15. Zoology and Entomology
|
|
20
|
10
|
30
|
90
|
|
|
16. Mycology and Pathology
|
|
15
|
5
|
20
|
|
|
Forest Utilisation
|
17. Forest Utilisation
|
III
|
30
|
10
|
40
|
70
|
|
|
Forest Utilisation
|
IV
|
30
|
|
30
|
|
|
Electives
|
18. Genetics or Statistics or Ecology or Advanced
Forest Biometry or Advanced Forest Economics and Valuation or Wildlife
Management
|
|
25
|
|
25
|
25
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total
|
420
|
105
|
|
525
|
|
|
(B) Exercises
The subjects of these exercises and the maximum
marks allotted to each of them shall be as follows :
|
SI. No
|
Subjects
|
First Year
|
Second Year
|
Total
|
|
1.
|
Study and practical work on tour
|
90
|
60
|
150
|
|
2.
|
Botanical collections during tours
|
12
|
8
|
20
|
|
3.
|
Engineering Plates
|
5
|
10
|
15
|
|
4.
|
Survey Plates
|
5
|
|
5
|
|
5.
|
Road Alignment
|
|
15
|
15
|
|
|
Total
|
112
|
93
|
205
|
|
Grand total for examination exercises
|
482
|
618
|
1100
|
The syllabus for the written and practical
examinations and exercises shall be as specified in Part I of the First Schedule.
Regulation - 5. Qualifying tests.
[(1) Qualifying tests in the
following subjects shall be conducted by the President and the maximum marks
allotted to each of them shall be as follows, namely :
|
(i) First aid
|
10
|
|
|
(ii) Weapon Training
|
10
|
|
|
(iii)
|
Equitation Training
|
10
|
|
(iv)
|
Regional language
|
20
|
|
(v)
|
Hindi
|
20
|
|
(vi)
|
Use and Maintenance of mechanised equipment
|
20
|
|
(vii)
|
Swimming
|
10
|
The syllabus for the qualifying tests shall be as
specified in Part II of the First Schedule.]
(2) Every probationer shall be examined in the regional language or one
of the regional languages shown in column 2 of the Second Schedule against
the [cadre to
which he is allocated. Where more than one regional language is shown against a
[cadre
the President shall ascertain whether the probationer is already familiar with
any of them and thereafter decide in consultation with the State Government in
which one of the regional languages the probationer shall be examined :
[Provided that probationers
allocated to the following cadres shall be examined in one of the regional
languages shown against them only with effect from such date as the Central
Government may, by order, specify in this behalf, namely :
|
Cadre
|
Regional Language
|
|
Assam-Meghalaya
|
Khasi or Garo
|
|
Nagaland
|
[Nagamese in Roman Script
|
|
Union Territories
|
Mizo]
|
Regulation - 6. Minimum pass marks for examinations and standards of qualifying tests.
Every probationer shall obtain in each group of
subject a minimum of 50% and in the maximum aggregate 55% of the total member
of marks at the written and practical examinations and exercises in the first
year final examination and the second year final examination under Regulation 4
and to pass the qualifying tests conducted by the President under Regulation 5
by such standards as he may prescribe.
Regulation - 7. Award of the Associate of Indian Forest College diploma.
[Every probationer who is
successful at the final examination by obtaining the minimum pass marks at the
written and practical examinations and exercises and passes the qualifying
tests as prescribed under Regulation 6 shall be awarded a diploma as
"Associate of the Indian Forest College".]
FIRST SCHEDULE
[See
Regulations 4 and 5]
PART I
SYLLABUS
FOR THE
INDIAN
FOREST SERVICE PROBATIONERS' FINAL EXAMINATION
I. WRITTEN AND PRACTICAL EXAMINATIONS IN FIRST YEAR
(1) Land Management and Soil Conservation
Introduction Soil conservation definition, scope,
rule in national economy, land use pattern; historical review problems,
programmes and achievements.
Erosion Definition and extent of erosion;
principles or mechanics or soil erosions; agencies of erosion, wind and water,
gravity geological versus" accelerated erosion; water erosion,
types-splash, sheet, rill and gully; Wind erosion types of soil movements siltation,
suspension gravity, factors effecting wind erosion, prediction equation.
Hydrological Cycle Hydrological cycle and its
importance; rainfall, characteristics, their measurement, intensity, duration
frequency, dropsize distribution, infiltration, percolation; evaporation and
transpiration; runoff, definition, measurement of runoff; calculation of
runoff, peak rates of runoff, time of concentration, water resources of India
and world.
Soil and Water Conservation Measures General
principles of erosion, control and land reclamation; contour cultivation,
contour trenching design and layout; bunding and terracing, design,
construction, maintenance; erosion control and water conservation structures
like spillways, their types, design, construction and maintenance; gully
control, principles of planning, safety of works, use, design and maintenance
of check dams; stream bank control; torrent control, control measures in
catchment and in channel, landslide, definition, extent, cansatini factors and
control measures; wind erosion control, wind breaks, shelterbelts, sand dunes
fixation.
Soil Conservation Planning Government policy and
legislation, heed for public cooperation, multiple land use; soil conservation
planning in the field; unit of planning; watershed, sub-watershed,
micro-catchment, village farm; watershed management, watershed workplan,
priority determination in watershed management; soil survey and capability map,
preparation and problem; collection of basic information for soil conservation
planning pertaining to soil, climate, landuse, crop yields, agronomic
practices, engineering and forestry practices, population needs and customs,
cattle census and allied details; proposed treatment dealing with watershed
management practices, agronomic and forest practices, land treatment,
structural measures, miscellaneous specifications, phasing of project work,
provision for cost estimate, cost benefit ratio and general evaluation.
Agronomic practices in soil conservation Contour
farming, cover crops and lagumes; strip cropping; mixed and rotational
cropping; composting; green manuring and mulch farming; terracing and dry land
farming.
Practicals Designing of spillways and check dams in
hilly areas; stream gauging and reservoir survey; watershed management
exercise.
(2) Range Management
Cattle resources of India and world; fodder
requirements of India; fodder resources quantitative and qualitative; range
lands or grasslands (definition); grassland types of the country and their
distribution; ecological status "of Indian grasslands; principles of
grassland management, basic requirements of animals, plants and land, carrying
capacity definition, method of calculation, importance, conditional
classification different standard methods, work done in India, USDA (Soil
Conservation Service), USDA (Forest Service), CAZRI condition classification
system etc.
Soil and Water Conservation Measures Erosion
control in grasslands, contour Turrows, contour trenching, gully control;
moisture conservation, basin listing, water spreading, irrigation.
Grazing Management Controlled grazing, continuous
controlled grazing, rotational grazing, deferred grazing, deferred rotational
grazing.
Grassland Management and Improvement Closures Legal,
voluntary, complete, partial/seasonal; method of effecting range protection type
of fencing with cost stone wall fencing, barbed wire fencing, cattle proof
trenches; effect of closure on forage yield, forage quality, palatability,
nutritive value, forage vigour on soil and water resources; Seeding and
planting, seed production, seed rates/seed weight, method of cultivation of
important species, broadcast sowing, pellet sowing, seed, fertilizer rolls and
aerial sowing, controlled burning, uniform grazingentry points, weed control;
need for weed , control, methods of weed control mechanical, chemical, effect
of weed control; fertilizer application dosages, methods, results in term of
yield (forage) income and expenditure.
Utilisation Silage, definition, method of
preparation, storage and feeding, time of harvesting, hay, definition, methods
of preparation and storage; hay banks.
Tree and shrub feeds.
Forest grazing Assessment of fodder resources,
carrying capacity of forest areas, selection and introduction of shade
tolerant, grasses/shrubs as under growth.
Practicals Measurement, yield determination,
botanical composition, basal area, grassland improvement plan, visit to Indian
Grassland and Fodder Research Institute, Jhansi.
Excursion
(3) Silviculture
3.1. Paper
I(Foundation of Silviculture including Ecology)Introduction, definition, extent
of forest in India and other countries; role of forests productive, protective,
recreational, ameliorative in industrial development; history of forests and
forestry in India; Silviculture; foundations of silviculture, practices of
silviculture, silvical basis of rational silvicultural practice.
Environment of forests Environment or site, factors
of site, climatic factors, edaphic factors, physiographic factors, biotic
factors; site quality; classification of site factors on their mode of
affecting vegetation.
Solar Radiation Importance; radiant heat and light;
effects of solar radiation on forest vegetation, effects of light, duration of
radiation (direct, diffused, cloudiness) and effects; temperature effect.
Air-temperature Sources of a tree's heat;
absorption of heat by a tree; injurious effects of high and low temperature;
critical temperatures, extension of a tree's range; air-temperature and forest
vegetation, acclimatization.
Atmospheric Moisture Water and Vital processes in
trees; sources of precipitation; mechanical action of rain, snow, sleet, hail
etc., on forest vegetation; atmospheric humidity and its effect on vegetation;
evaporation; transpiration; ratio of precipitation to evapor transpiration and
its significance; precipitation-vapour pressure deficit quotient.
. Climate and Weather Definition of climate and
weather, importance of climate and weather in forestry; elements of climate and
the factors which influence them temperature, temperature and latitude,
temperature zones.
annual range, or frost ground and pool,
precipitation and humidity rainfall, its distribution, summer monsoons, winter
monsoons and seasonal distribution; annual variation; heavy rains and floods,
rainfall intensity; drought, rainy days and their significance; dew, invisible
condensation, fog and mist; light or insolation, wind (pressure, velocity
diurnal variation), lightening, atmospheric impurties periodicity in climate,
climatic provinces integration of climatic factors, bioclimate, climate and
potential protentivity.
Physiographic conditions Earth configuration;
altitude and its effects on insolation, temperature, rainfall, wind etc.;
aspect and its effect on various climatic factors; slope and its effects on
various climatic factors; topography and surface conditions.
Soil conditions, soil moisture and site influence
on forest vegetation, etc. will be dealt with in 'forest soils'.
Biotic factors Competition; inter-relationship
between plants; importance of plant parasites; effects on animals; interference
by man.
Interaction of locality factors Measuring
effectiveness of site factors; effect of site factors on forest vegetation;
compensating factors; most significant factors; modification of site factors in
silvicultural practice.
Influences of forests on their environment Reaction
of forest vegetation on its physical environment, effect of forest vegetation
on air-temperature, soil-temperature, atmospheric humidity, precipitation
(local and general), effect of forest vegetation on conservation of water;
evaporation (from free crowns and ground); transpiration loss; surface run off;
seepage and water retention; springs; stream-flow; floods effect of forest
vegetation on air currents, how windbreaks act, effect of wind breaks on air
and soil temperature, effect of forest vegetation on erosion; microclimate or
forest stands; effect of forests on animal life including mankind effect on
animal life, effect on mankind, forest aesthetics.
Forests Form and life of forest trees Structure and
functions; species, varieties, sport varieties, sport forms, races,
individuals, hybrids and crossbreeds; trees form; form of crown and branching,
form of hole crotched or double topped trees, epicormic branches and water
sprouts, stool shoots and coppico shoots.
Growth and development Growth characteristics of
chief importance, height growth, diameter growth volume increase, quality
growth, reproduction seed production, germination and establishment.
Crop morphology Differentiation of stands;
developmental stages in stands; differentiation of stands on the basis of
composition; differentiation of stands on the basis of density; crown and
canopy; crown classification, root closure and root competition, conditions
which influence density of boles; development of stands.
Hardiness and tolerance Injury at low temperatures;
frost injury and frost hardiness; drought injury, and drought hardiness; injury
at high temperatures; correlations between resistance to various factors;
relative hardiness of species.
Forest composition and distribution Competition
between species; concept of succesion and climax, classification of forest types,
definition of forest types, bases of classification, criteria for delimiting
forest types, forest types in relation to climate, forest types in relation to
soil, forest types in relation to topography, forest types in relation to
biotic factors; geographical distribution, distribution of species, botanical
areas; principal forest types of India and their distribution.
3.2. Paper
II(Practice of Silviculture, Regenenration and Tending) Natural regeneration;
natural regeneration by seed, natural regeneration by coppice; natural
regenerations by root suckers; cultural operations.
Artificial regeneration General consideration,
objects of artificial regeneration, artificial versus natural regeneration,
choice of species, hardwoods versus softwoods, quick versus slow growing
species, exotics versus indigenous species, pure versus mixed crops, sowing
versus planting, spencing organisation of staff and labour, village taungya
plantation, time table, protection problems, irrigation, paths and roads, seed
supply general, seed collection, seed extraction etc., seed testing, seed
certification, seed received from outside sources, seed storage and transport,
pre-sowing treatment of seed, seed orchards; preparation of plantation area clearing,
burning, planting plan, direct sowing; nursery work general consideration, site
and area, seed-beds, method of sowing, quantity of seed, time of sowing,
protection of seed sown, shading, watering and damping off, weeding and soil
working. including herbicides for the nursery, thinning out, transplanting, use
of containers, maintenance of fertility; vegetative propagation general
considerations, root sucker, stem and branch cuttings, harmone stimulants to
rooting, root and rhinome cuttings, layering, grafting, budding; planting out survey
and map, season of planting, size and age of stock, preparation of stock,
transport to planting site, method of planting, watering, use of fertilizers,
mixture of species, nurse crops, cover crops; mechanization general
considerations, site preparations, nursery work, pruning; maintenance weeding
soil working, watering, mulching, grazing, cost and financing plantation costs,
fencing cost, plantation records, statistics of plantation; artificial
regeneration of fast growing species definition, species, nursery practices,
planting techniques, site preparation, after care cultivation of agricultural
crops, genetical aspects; artificial regeneration of special sites; protection
of plantations and natural regeneration; site maintenance and improvement;
sites maintenance in regeneration operations; site maintenance in forest
stands; tending introductory; necessity of tending, weeding and cleaning,
weeding natural regeneration, weeding artificial regeneration, climber control,
thinning in plantations; thinning in natural regeneration; thinning in
irregular crops; pruning; use of fertilizers; excursions (nursery work thinning
planting)
(4) Forest Measuration
4.1. Paper IMeasurements of individual trees and of
populations Measurement of characteristics of individual treesDiameter and
girth measurement objects of these measurements, various instruments used,
their construction and use, relative accuracy of each instrument, reference
points of measurement i.e. breast height and other points, measurements of standing
trees at these points, measurements of forked, buttressed, fluted and abnormal
trees; bark thicknessneed for measurement and method thereof, bark per cent
tables.
Height measurementsObjects of height measurement,
reference points for measurement; various instruments used for height
measurements, their construction and relative accuracies, sources of error in
measurement.
Measurement of crown of trees e.g., crown length,
crown width etc.
Measurement of failed treesDirect measurements of
volume (xvlometric) and estimation of volume through sectional areas, length
etc. Various formulae for volume estimation; description of various types of
volumes, e.g., standard total timber, standard stem timber, branchwood volume
including, commercial volumes, effect for errors in measurement of volumes,
effect of using calliper, tapes and of length of log sections; units of
measurement, F.R.I. rocedure of measurement of volume for felled trees.
Estimation of volume of standing treesWhy
estimation; different methods of estimation e.g., ocular, through measurement
of diameter and heights; form of trees various theories to explain form; form
factor and form quotients; taper tables; various kinds of out-turn from a tree
e.g. plywood, sawn pieces, pulp etc., estimation of out-turn and conversion
factors.
Determination of age of treesStanding trees, ocular
estimate, from records, from annual ring count, from borings, counting of
whorls of branches; through successive measurements and application of formulae
for trees without annual rings; age of felled trees; ring count; methods for
trees without annual rings.
Growth of treesVarious kinds of growthgrowth in
diameter, height, volume, quality and value; methods of determination of growth
of trees with annual ringsstem analysis, stump analysis and increment borings
with Pressler's borer, determination of growth of trees without annual rings
from data from continuous inventory, sample' plots, linear increment plots;
M.A.I, and C.A.I. characteristics of growth curves for trees; relationship
between volume of trees and other variables e.g. diameter, form, site quality
etc.
Volume tables and form class, taper tablesNeed for
the volume tables, kinds of volume tables, direct and indirect methods,
graphical techniques, an elementary idea of least square solutions and use of
regressions (without actually solving these), tests of precision; taper tables.
4.2. Paper
IIForest Inventories and crop measurementsDefinitions, basic concepts, e.g.
population, quantitative and qualitative characteristics, frequency
distributions, histograms, frequency polygon and frequency curves; concept of
population mean (diameter, height etc.); sample estimate of population mean;
dispersion of values, variance and standard deviation, co-efficient of variation,
standard error of estimate; normal distribution, errors and distribution,
expected values of mean and confidence limits.
Enumerations and samplingsComplete
enumerationadvantages and disadvantages; calculation of population mean and
standard deviation; non-sampling errors; sample enumerationadvantage and
precision of results; complete u/s partial enumeration; the use of wedge prism
and relaskop; small scale intensive surveys; layout of permanent sample plots
including methods of computation of volumes including mean tree methods and
grouping (arithmetic, Urich's, Hartig's and Block's) the F.R.I. method now
adopted; layout and measurements and uses of L.I.Ps., continuous inventory
plots, preservation plots, etc.
Large scale extensive surveysObjectives of surveys;
decision about the design of surveys' design of field forms and decision on
final tables.
Design of surveysWhy a design; role of statics in
minimising cost at a given level of precision; some elementary designs for
forest surveys, simple random sampling, stratified random sampling, stratified
systematic sampling; what these are and why followed (in brief).
Estimation of volume of cropsCrop volume tables;
estimations for crops volumes (regression estimations, use of volume tables,
etc.).
Growth estimations of standsConcept of growth and
definitions of growth, stand growth and tree growth, steps in estimating
growth; continuous inventory; yield tablespreparation and uses; site quality
determination, density thinning grades growth estimation; money yield tables;
stand tables; use of stand tables; stand table projection; Dynamics of forest
stands population.
Recent trends in mensurational studies (use of
computers, mathematical models, etc., only brief indications).
4.3. Paper
IIIRemote sensing techniques in forestryGeneral (brief theoretical discussion)
on aerial photography and photogrammetry; types of aerial photographs, taking
of aerial photographs, obtaining and handling of aerial photographs, storage,
measurement on aerial photos, how a photo differs from a map scale and
horizontal measurement, displacements on a single photo, stereoscopy,
displacement in stereoscopic pair of photographs; agencies, for obtaining
aerial photographs (new or old) in India, what are formalities given here,
forms prescribed by Survey of India for requisition of photos (only briefly);
Satellite imageriestheir techniques, uses and limitations.
Basic exercisesProper orientation of aerial
photographs under stereoscopic transfer of points, construction of principal
points, flight or course lines or match lines, indexing of aerial photographs
on map; recognition and identification of objects on photographs, orientation
and use of parallax bars; measurements of distances, angles and area in a
stereoscopic model, measurement of height, contour and form line drawing using
parallax bar.
Forestry applicationsMeasurement of characteristics
of single tree; measurement of characteristics of a stand; area determination
and stock maps, kinds of maps, planimetries and topo maps (Discuss relations,
precision, time and cost involved in doing one of standard alternatives), use
of aerial photographs in forestry inventory; use of aerial photographs in
forest management; forest maps; forest record e.g., aerial photographs as
records for past history, insect and disease survey; silvicultural and
ecological surveys, timber scale, road location, logging plan, afforestation,
wildlife management.
Compilation of photo interpretative mapspreparation
of minor control -plot and combination by Arundel method; combination by
allotted template method; air survey compilation of base map; transfer of photo
interpretation data to base map by various methods e.g. ocular, sketchmaster,
photograph etc.
Specimen report of a Forest Survey with use of
aerial photo interpretation.
(5) Geology
5.1. Paper I
(Theory)IntroductionGeology, its relation to other sciences; earth as a planet,
views about its origin.
Relief of earth.
Topography and GeomorphologyHumid regions; and
regions; dissected topography and morphology of mountain region.
Classification of land forms and their significance
in forestry.
Rocks and mineralsRocks and minerals of the crust;
minerals and components of rocks; identification of mineral through physical
characters; important rock forming and ore-forming minerals; igneous
rocksforms, types; sedimentary rocks; metamorphic rocks.
Geological structures and their topographical
expressions.
Classification of geological formationsPrinciples
followed; methods adopted; correlation of widely separated formations; standard
geological sequence; geological formations of India.
Weathering and Soil formationMineral constituents
of various rocks; weathering action and agencies responsible; residual soils
from various rocks; soil minerals, soil clays and their effect on soil
properties.
Correlation of geological formations with forests.
5.2. Paper II
(Practical) Minerals Physical characters of minerals; important rock forming
minerals.
Rocks Igneous rocks; sedimentary rocks; metamorphic
rocks.
Fossils Introduction of fossils.
Maps Simple geological maps.
(6) Soil Science
6.1. Paper I
(Theory)IntroductionDefinition of soil and concept of soil-plant relationship,
soil and site; soil with special reference to forestry.
Social compositionMineral composition of soil;
mineral constituents of soil.
Soil profileDefinition of soil profile; development
of soil profileeffect of soil forming factors and soil forming process,
development of some typical soil profile.
Soil propertiesPhysical propertiesSoil texture of
particle size distribution, soil water, soil structure, soil air; chemical
propertiessoil pH, cation exchange in soils and its significance, availability
of nutrients; biological properties; organic matter decomposition and
significance of C : N ratio, role of microbes in nutrient transformations, role
of mycorrhiza in mineralisation of nutrients.
Soil survey and classificationObjectives of soil
survey; types of soil survey; soil classification.
Soil types of India.
Plant nutritionEssential nutrients and role of
nutrients in plants metabolism; deficiency symptoms of nutrient elements on
plants.
Soil fertility evaluation and fertilisation of
soilsSoil fertility evaluation techniques and usefulness; applicability of
these techniques; fertilization of soil with inorganic materials, fertilisation
of soils with organic materials.
Improvement of problem soilsImprovement of acid soils;
improvement of salt affected soils, improvement of soils affected by diseases
and pests.
Management of forest soilsNursery soil management;
management for optimum returns from the inputs.
6.2. Paper II
(Practicals)Handling soil samples for the laboratory analysis; determination of
soil pH; mechanical analysis of soil; soil moisture determination; soil organic
matter determination; determination of nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium in
soil; determination of bulk density and porosity in soil.
(7) Forest Surveying
7.1. Paper I
(Theory)Objects and scopeIntroductions; definitions, plane and geodetic
surveys; cadastral, topographical, geographical, city, route and engineering
surveysfield and office work; principles of surveying; errors in
surveyingcumulative and compensating errors and mistakes; scope of surveying in
forestry.
ScalesDefinition, representative fraction;
construction of scales, requirements of a good scale, simple diagonal, vernier
and comparative scales; choice of scales and scales generally adopted.
Maps and map readingIntroduction, definitions,
objects of map reading-scope in forestry, conventional signs; history of map
publication in Indiathe 1824 and 1905 schemes; classification and nomenclature
of maps, geographical and topographical mapsforest maps; the map cataloguehow
to obtain maps; map reading; orientation of map, methods of finding true North;
finding one's own position on the map; relief and its representation; hachures
hill shading spot height, contours and form lineslayer tints.
Measurement of distancesUnits of measurements-the
foot and the metre; direct measurement and computations; the field party and
equipment; the chain and arrows; the steel band; the tapes; the ranging rods,
the cross staff and optical squarestheir construction and use; linear
measurements, ranging of chain and lines, testing and adjustment of chains,
chaining the line on flat ground, chaining on sloping ground and hypo-tenusal
allowance, sources of error in ordinary chaining and measures to minimise them,
correction of distances and areas measured with incorrect chains; chaining
round obstacles.
Chain SurveyingPrinciple, suitability surveys with
straight and irregular boundaries, the lines and offsets, field work,
reconnaissance, selection of stations and well conditional triangles, marking
of stations, the base line, running survey line and accuracy of offsets,
oblique offsets and offsets to different kinds on objects such as buildings,
fences, river margin etc., the field bookssingle and double line systems, method
of recording, method of plotting, the drawing Board and recording, method of
plotting, the drawing board and plotting scale; arrangement of work on the
sheet including the title, North point and scale, lettering, printing, inking
and colouring.
Measurement of anglesObjects, triangulation;
instruments, prismatic compass, construction, use testing, sources of error and
corrections; magnetic bearings, forward and back-bearings and their
relationship, whole circle bearing and reduced bearing and their relationship;
the meridian true, magnetic, grid and arbitrary meridians; the magnetic
declination and its variationsisogonic and agonic lines, dip of the needle and
isoclinic lines; local attraction-causes and correction.
Chain and compass surveyingMethods of surveying,
radiation, intersection and traversing; the closed and open traverse-comparison
with chain survey, applicability; the field bookdata for plotting sources of
error and measures to minimise them, accuracymethods of checking closed and
open traverse data, interior and exterior angles, latitudes and departures,
Northings and Southings; methods of plottingparallel meridian, the paper
protractor, consecutive coordinates and the independent coordinates; Sale's
Traverse Table; closing error, its distributiongraphically and by computation;
field problems to find horizontal distance to an inaccessible point, supplying
omission of one side of a closed traverse; laying out coupe, its demarcation.
Plane table surveyInstrumentsPlane table, alidade
declinator, plumbing fork and bob; mounting of paper; centering and
orientation; methods of plane tablingradiation, intersection, traversing and
resertion; the three point problem and its solutionmechanical trial and error
and the Bessel's graphical solutions, the two point problem and its solution;
sources of error in plane tabling; advantages and disadvantages of plane
tabling, applicability.
LevellingIntroduction definitions and scope, the
level surface; horizontal and vertical planes, datum surface and reduced
levels.
Topographical surveyingIntroduction, utility and
scope; methods of contouringdirect and indirect/by interpolation, indirect
contourings by radiating lines, spot height and grids; characteristics of
contours; uses of contours.
Computation of areasComputation field notes, by
offset distances from a straight survey line, midordinate; average ordinate,
Trapezoidal and Simpson's rule; from the planby division into triangles and
trapeziums, by area squares and polar planimeter.
Copying, enlargement and reduction of
mapsCopyingmapstracing, pricking and ferro-printing, enlargement and reduction
by proportional compassby squares, by pantograph, by photography.
7.2. Paper II
(Practicals)Drawing equipment and their uses; lettering construction of
diagonal and verneir scales map reading; chain surveying instruments; chain
survey of an areafield work plotting and finishing; prismatic compass and
theodolite; chain and compass surveyingintersection; traversing; plotting and
distribution of error; Gales traverse table, plane tablingsurveying and
finishing; two and three point problems.
Computation of areasThe popular planimeter.
Copying, enlargement and reduction of
mapsProportional compass and pantograph.
(8) Forest Engineering I
Building materialsStonesClassification,
characteristics, quarrying and dressing, natural bed; bricks and tilessuitable
earth, method of manufacture, characteristics of good bricks and tiles,
standard size, lime stone and surkhi sources and classification, burning of
lime stone, storing and uses of lime, bulking of sand; cement-properties,
types, storing uses; mortarsdefinition, kinds, proportions, mixing, laying,
curing, quantities needed for masonry and brick work; concretelime and cement
concrete, essentials of good concrete, . proportions, mixing, laying and curing
of concrete, water-cement ratio and consistency, quantities of ingredients
needed; reinforced cement concrete principles and advantages, location of
reinforcements in simple supported beams T-beams, beams, slabs, lintels,
balanced cantilevered beams and slabs, columns and their bases, formwork or
shuttering; finishingproportions of lime and cement plasters, method of
application and curing, pointing, proportion of ingredients, method of
pointing, kinds of pointing, transparent washing, colour washing and distempering;
timber characteristics of a good structural timber, paints and
varnishescharacteristics, methods of painting timber and steel structures, wood
ceiling, tarring.
Building constructionSelection of site for a forest
building or forest colony, preparation of site; foundationobjects, causes of
failure and precautions, foundation bed, safe bearing capacities of soils, safe
loads on masonry and foundation beds, footing, width of foundation beds,
thickness of concrete bed, depth of foundation bed by Rankine's rule, improving
bearing power of soft soils, methods of securing safe foundations on soft
soils, setting out of buildings, excavation of trenches, plinth courses
precautions against termites, damp proof courses; super structurethickness of
walls, scaffoldings stone versus brick, methods of constructing mud, brick,
masonry C.G.I. and wooden walls, bonds in brick workkinds, difference between
English and Flemish bonds, details of English bond at corners, junctions and
intersection of 1 brick and ½ brick walls, construction of different kinds of
masonry walls. Ashlar, Ashlerfaced, random and coursed rubble and dry rubble
masonry and dry stone revetments; sills, lintels and archeskinds of sills and
intels and their construction, position of reinforcements in RCC lintels, uses
of arches in building and their classification, names of parts, principles of
construction and centerings; carpentryprinciples of jointing, types of joints,
lengthening, bearing and framing joints, common types of joints used in wooden
floors, door leaves, roof trusses, roofstypessloping and flat roof, sloping
roofssingle, double or purlin and trussed roofs, roof slopes, nature of
stresses in roof memberswall bearingwind filling gable and hipped roofs flat
the jack arch roof, terraced and RCC flat roofs; roof coveringsthatching,
country tiles roofings, Allahabad tiling, Mongalore tiling C.G.D. and sheeting,
salting, flashings gutters, hips and valleys, ceilings; floorstrench and
basement filling, earth floor, stone floor, tile floor, concrete and wooden
floor, doors and windows, fan light, ventilator, clerestory types and sizes
normally used, fittingsthe frame work, typesledged and braced batten doors,
pancelled, glazed, ventilated and wire gauge doors, swing doors, of and dormer
windows, sky light stairsthe stair case, types of stairs, straight, dog-legged,
open wall, Newal, bifurcated and geometrical stairs, location and design of
stair cases, fire places and chimneyslocation, essential parts and common sizes
of fire-places, chimney stack, the smokeless chullah and cooking range,
lighting conductors principle materials used, earth connections,
estimatingprinciples and essential parts, project report, specifications, units
of measurements, procedure and proformas for detailed measurements and bill of
quantities for buildings, taking out quantities for simple buildings, abstracts
of cost, plinth area and cube rate estimates, analysis of rates, measurement
book; drawingsplan, section and elevation of small building.
Strength of materialsIntroduction to stress and
strainHook's law, Poisson ratio, elastic limitelastic constants and their
mutual relationship, ultimate strength, factor of safety and working stresses,
application to timber; bending moments and shear forcedefinition, BM and SF
diagrams, cases of simply supported beams and cantilevers carrying concentrated
and uniformly distributed loads.
PracticalsLocation of reinforcements in RCC
lintels, beams and slabs, columns and weather shades; foundations of buildings,
standard foundations and design by Rankine's formula; bonds in brickwork,
English bond at corners, junctions and intersections of one and one timber
joints in roof trusses and timber stairs; doors and windows different types;
plan, section and elevation of a small building with gable roof half brick
walls; hipped roof; preparation of a building estimate; BM and SF diagramscases
of simply supported beams and cantilevers, carrying concentrated/uniformly
distributed loads.
(9) Botany I
9.1. Paper I
(Theory)Histologycellcell structure, physical and chemical nature of cytoplasm,
nucleus and plastids, cell wall, growth and thickening of cell wall, cell
inclusion i.e. carbohydrates, proteins, aminoacids, fats and oils, minerals,
crystals, latex, etc., cell formation; tissuesmeristematic tissues of stem and
rootspermanent tissues and tissue systems, xylem and phloem; anatomy of
stemsdicot; monocot and gymnosperms with one example of each, anatomy of roots,
dicot and monocot roots; anatomy of leaves, secondary growth in thickness of
dicot stems, formation of bark, leaf fall, development of knots and healing of
wounds.
PhysiologyAbsorption and conduction of water and
mineral salts, escent of saptheories regarding transpirationmechanism and
important factors affecting transpiration and' adaptations for regulating the
same; photosynthesis mechanism and factors affecting the same transportation
and storage of foods, carbohydrates, fats and oils; nitrogen fixation and
assimilation by plants, root nodules; special modes of nutrition carnivorous
plants; symbionts, saprophytes and parasites; respirationconditions affecting
respiration; growth and movements; reproductionvegatative, asexual and sexual.
GeneralInstructions for botanical collection
(before first tour); general instructions regarding identification of plants
and use of flora.
9.2. Paper II
(Practicals)Morphologyalgae, fungi, mosses, ferns, etc. and use of microscope,
parts of flowering plants, leaf and leaf parts, phyllotaxy, flower and floral
parts, aestivation, inflorescencestypes, fruits and seeds, placentation, stem
and root modifications, description of plants: histology anatomy of stem and
roots, anatomy of leaves, secondary growth (only slides to be shown);
collection of botanical specimen and their preservation.
(10) Utilisation
10.1. Paper
IDefinition scope and terminology; development of logging in Indiaof research,
development, training, users and manufacturers; logging development process,
coordination; basic logginghand tools and their maintenance, power; chair saw,
short bar power chain sawuse and attachments, felling (including felling of
leaning trees)cross cutting, delimbing etc., of road transportground skidding,
various kinds of tractors and attachments used in skidding, dragging winches,
winches, aerial transportation; major transportationloading devices, truck
transportation, water transportation; departmental logging and its merits;
marketing and sales; timber depotssize, organisation and management; forest
labours organisation and management, wages to labourers; physiological studies
in logging; logging planningvarious factors and their impact, investment
calculationsmachine cost calculator's for various forestry machines, road
planning, logging organisation and administration control; work study and its
application in logging; safety measures in logging; logging machines in
advanced countries.
PracticalsMaintenance of saws, hand tools, work
study methods and planning.
10.2. Paper
IIIntroductiondefinition; non-timber forest products of India and their
importance in rural and industrial economy of the country; survey of non-timber
forest products; fibres and flossesfibre yielding plants; method of cultivation
of important fibre yielding plants; grasses, bamboos and canes, various grasses
and their uses; bamboosspecies of bamboo, their occurrence, cultivation,
exploitation and uses, bamboo survey, important species of canestheir
distribution, practice of cultivation harvesting, processing and uses;
essential oilsmethods of extraction of essential oils; essential oil bearing
plants of commercial importance and the methods of their cultivation and
exploitation.
Oil seedsImportant oil seeds obtained from forests,
their methods of collection, processing, packing and storage.
Gum resins and oleoresinsCommercial gums, resins
and oleoresins and their economic importance; methods of tapping of important
gums, resins and oleoresins; processing, grading, packing and storage of gums.
Tans and dyes vegetable tanning materials obtained from forests, their
extraction, processing handling and storage; important dyes.
Drugs, poisons and insecticidesImportant drugs
available from forests, method of cultivation, harvesting; processing and
grading; poisons and insecticides.
Edible plants, nuts and spices.
Rubber and gutta percha; method of tapping,
processing and uses of rubber.
CharcoalVarious types of kilns used for manufacture
of charcoal; charcoal dust briquettes.
Miscellaneous productsBidi leaves; products of
destructive distillation of wood, leaf folder, others.
Animal productsLac and shellac; silk and tassar,
miscellaneous productshoney wax and ivory etc.
Mineral products.
II. EXERCISES IN THE FIRST YEAR
(1)
Study and practical work
during tours
1.1. Summer
tourStudy of locality factors leading to forest vegetation and site quality.
Forestry terminology; stem analysis; stump analysis; increment boring, sample
plot layout; enumeration; field botany, soil profile and its description.
1.2. Dehra Dun,
Punjab and Himachal Pradesh tourSoil Conservation, watershed management, farm
forestry; ravine reclamation.
Succession, nursery practices, enumeration,
compartment description, forest types and field botany.
1.3. Winter
tourStudy of ecological succession, natural and artificial regeneration,
tending, mechanized plantations of fastgrowing species, yield and volume tables
forest types. Natural and artificial regeneration, taungya technique,
afforestation techniques in various types of areas; forest types forest based
industries; cooperative management of forests.
(2)
Botanical collections during
each tour
Collection and submission of complete botanical
specimens of not less than 30 plants properly dried, mounted and labelled at
the end of each of the tours mentioned in 1 above.
(3)
Engineering Plates
Brick bonds, foundations; plait's elevations and
cross-sections of two simple buildings, sketch plans of buildings, bridges,
lime kiln etc. made during the tours in a graph note book.
(4)
Surveying Plates
Drawing worklettering, chain survey, prismatic
compass and chain survey, plan table and chain survey, topographic survey.
III. WRITTEN AND PRACTICAL EXAMINATION IN SECOND
YEAR
(1)
Wildlife Management
IntroductionConcept of wildlife and history of
wildlife management; * relationship with the. allied subject.
Wildlife values and conflictsValuesaesthetic,
economic, scientific, ecological, religious, recreational; conflictslanduse
priorities, crop destruction, disease carriers.
Biological and ecological base of
managementDistribution and behaviour of animals as affected by various
environmental factors and adaptations, concepts of niche, habitat and
ecosystem, environmental gradients; zoogeo-graphic regions of world with
special reference to wildlife in India; fundamental requirements of wildlifefoodconcepts
of food chains, food webs, pyramid of numbers, water pinch period,
shelterterritory, home range, edge effect, factors affecting animal
populationsconcepts of age and sex structure, mortality and natility, density
and saturation point, gregariousness and flocking, breeding potential,
biological pressure, environmental resistance, internal adjustment factors,
biological surplus and extinction threshold, social organisation and
behaviouranimal communities, general inter and intraspecific relationship,
dominance, predator and pre-relationship, engestive, eliminative and aganistic
behaviour, commenselism, mutualism, parasitism, symbiosis.
Techniques of field studies of wildlife
populationsField observations and records; tracks, trails and other animal signs;
trapping, capturing and marking; rumen and focal matter analysis.
Population estimationCensuses and estimatesvisual
counts (direct counts and indirect counts), use of animal tracks and signs;
sample estimates King's method and its modifications, peliet group counts, use
of pug marks; indicesLincoln's index.
Rare and threatened species in IndiaStudies of
important rare and threatened species of India and steps taken for their
preservation.
Sanctuaries, national parks and zoological
parksGeneral concepts of their creation and administration; discussion of some
important national parks, sanctuaries and zoological parks of the country.
Wildlife legislationWildlife Preservation Act,
1972, Games Act, Shooting Rules, Arms Act; international and national organisations
for wildlife conservation.
(2)
Environmental conservation
Introduction, environmentits definition,
components, ecosystems; environmental conservation and management; the nature
of natural resources renewable and non-renewable; the major biotic regions of
India and world; man's record on the earth, land, its characteristics, use and
problems agriculture, forestry, livestock, wildlife; water, its uses and
problems, resources, the conservation of environments; the problem of
population, the outlook; rural and landscaping; pollution aspectsair, water,
noise, rural, urban, industrial; pollution monitoring; environmental
policyeducation, research and coordination in India; environmental legislation
in India.
(3)
World forestry
Forest geography of the worldfactors influencing
the world distribution of forests; historical background and present
distribution of world forests.
Forest resources and forestry practices in
different regions of the worldNorth American region; Central American region
(Tropical); South American region; Scandanavian region; European region;
Mediterranean region; U.S.S.R.; Central Africa (Tropical); South Africa; South
East Asia; Eastern Asia (Japan and China); Australia.
Regional development of wood based industries in
the world.
Trade patterns in forest raw materialsTo be given
greater importance.
World geographyPhysical features; climate,
vegetation types; distribution of forests and types.
HistoricalHistorical phytogeography, evaluation and
migration of plants; historical zoogeography, evolution and migration of
animals.
World forestry literature (periodicals, journals,
etc.) with display.
World forest organisationDevelopment world agencies
and organisations, e.g. SID., D. NIDA and others; world forestry research
agencies and organisations, e.g. IUFRO, IUCN, WWF and others; status of world
forestry research and education.
Congresses, commissions, conferences and
conventions relevant to forestry on global basis.
(4)
Silviculture
4.1. Paper
IIISilviculture of Indian TreesGeneral description Dealing with general nature,
growth characteristics, distribution (Geographic and Geological) phenology,
silvicultural characters, autecology, synecology, community environment,
regeneration methods and management of Indian species of economic importance.
At Headquarters
Main speciesBroad leaved, Acacia nilotica, Acacia
catechu, Dipterocarps. Dalbergia sissoo, Santalum album, Juglans regia. Bombax
ceiba, Anacardium occidentale; exoticsstudy of below mentioned exotics under
the headings like importance, their role in forest economy, purpose of
introduction, suitability of species, ecological and economic factors, means of
establishment, management and other consideration for the following
speciescasurina equisetifolia. Prosopis juliflora, exotic conifers (tropical
pine in particular), species of secondary importanceToona ciliata. Ailanthus
excelsa. A grandis, A malabaricum. Dalbergia latifolia. Gmelina arborea Adina
cordifolia, Lagerstromia species, Holoptelea integrifolia, Terminalas,
Hymenodictyon excetsum. Quercus species. Boswilia serrata, Hopea parviflora.
Pterocarpus species, Anogeissus pendula.
On Tours
Main species ConifersCedrus deodara, Picea
smithiana, Abits pindro pinus excelsa, Pinus roxburghii : Broad leavedShorea
robusta, Tectona grandis. Bamboosgeneral, Dendrocalamus and Bambusa
arundinacea; ExoticsEucalyptus, Eucalyptus camalolulensis (Mysore gum), Tan
bark wattles specially Asacia mearnsi, Poplars.
4.2. Paper
IVSilvicultural SystemsIntroduction, definition and objectives, classification.
Clearfelling systems and its modifications.
Shelterwood systems (involving concentrated
regeneration fellings) Uniform system, group system, irregular shelter system.
Shelterwood system (involving scattered removal of
trees)selection system.
Coppice systemSimple coppice system, coppice with
standards, coppice with reserves.
ConversionReasons for conversion from one system to
another; types of conversionconversion from selection to uniform, conversion
from coppice to high forests.
Modification and combination of various systems to
suit local conditions in IndiaDiscussion on the justification of giving new
names to modifications of systems in India. U.P. Selection System, Punjab
Shelterwood System, Coppice with Reserves.
4.3. Viva Voce in
SilvicultureThis shall cover general silviculture, Silviculture of Indian
trees, Silvicultural systems etc.
(5)
Forest Management
IntroductionDefinition and scope, management of
forests and its peculiarities, principles of forest management and their
application.
Objects of ManagementPurpose and policy, choice of
objectives, owner's attitudes and social role of forestry.
Sustained YieldGeneral definitions, e.g. felling
series, rotation felling cycle, cutting series etc., concept and meaning of
sustained yield.
RotationDefinition, kinds of rotation, factors
affecting choice of rotation, rotation and conversion periods.
The Normal ForestDefinition and concept, normality
in regular forests, normality in irregular forests.
The actual growing stock and its incrementGeneral
considerations, distribution of age gradations or classes in regular
forestsnormal and actual; distribution of age gradations or classes in
irregular forestsnormal and actual; distribution of age gradations or classes
in forests under coppice systems;
growth estimation and reduction factors for
density, quality, miscellaneous quality and price increment and forest per
cent.
Yield regulationGeneral principles of yield
calculation; silvicultural systems in relation to yield regulation; methods of
yield regulationyield regulation in regular forests, by areareduced areas and
Hufnegl's modification, by volume and increment methods yield regulation in irregular
forests methods based on growing stock only, Von Mantel's formula and its
modifications, methods based on increment onlyBiolley's method du controlle,
methods based on volume and incrementAustrian method. Hufnegl's, French method
of 1883 and its modification, method based on number of trees in various age
classes and time taken to pass from one age class to the nextBrandis' method,
Hufnegl's method, Smythies safeguarding formula.
Application and control of the different methods of
yield regulation in forest management in Indian Forestry.
Multiple Uses of Forestry.
(6)
Working plan
IntroductionDefinition, object, scope, sphere,
necessity for revisions, division of forests into various units, maps, concepts
of national, regional and local plans, project formulation, evaluation and
appraisal.
Preparation of a Working PlanPreliminary working
plan report; field workstock mapping, checking of maps, compartment
description, collection of statistical data, collection of other data, evaluation
of management alternatives.
Office workCollection of data for Part I and
analysis, writing of Part I and II, Management of information systems for
working plans.
Control of Working Plan.
Working Plan exercise will be conducted in any
suitable sal or other forest covering as many types as possible. Each trainee
will be required to write up a working plan for an area not less than 1,000
hectares.
(7)
Forest Economics and valuation
IntroductionDefinition, role and relevance to
forestry; general tools of economic analysis; peculiarities of forest
economics; role of forestry in Indian economy.
Demand and supplyTheory of consumer behaviour;
concepts of demand and supply; concept of elasticity of demand and supply;
demand and supply of forest products.
The marketMarket structures; pricing of forest
products; market structure for forest products.
Production and costsFactors of production; law of
diminishing returns; long and short run productions function; cost of
production.
Timber production economicsFactors influencing
timber production; timber production and its economic peculiarities, locational
theory and transportation.
Wood products economicsDemand, supply and pricing
of major forest products; demand, supply and pricing of minor forest products;
forecasting techniques.
Forest valuationConcept of interest on capital;
present worth, internal and rate of return with practical examples; land
expectation value and concept of profit with illustration; stumpage appraisal.
Non-wood productsTechniques of evaluating non-market
values; general concepts of wildlife economics; application of economic
theories to outdoor (forest) recreation.
Forestry planning and budgetingPlanning in
forestry; project formulation and evaluation; concepts of budgeting with
applications to forestry.
Operation research techniquesOptimisation methods
in forestry; practical application.
(8)
Forest Protection
General considerationThe place of forest protection
in Indian forestry; classification of injurious agenciesanimals, insects,
plants, atmospheric agencies.
PreventionIts importance.
Man as a source of injury to forestFollowing fires;
causes and character of forest fires; five prevention activities;
presuppression activities in fire control; fire suppression; fire control
policy and objectives.
Protection against shifting cultivation and faulty
land use.
Protection against mismanagement; protection
against domestic animals and wildlife; protection against injurious plants;
protection against atmospheric agencies.
(9)
Forest policy and law
Forest policyDefinition, necessity, scope, range
and various considerations; foundations of a stable forest policy; contents of
a national forest policy; India's national forest policy; contents of the 1952
forest policy and its correlation with the policy of 1894; need for a revised
forest policy for India.
Forest lawLegal definitions, application of Penal
Code to forests; general principles of criminal law; legal principles of
punishment; the Criminal Procedure Code as applied to forestry matters; the Law
of Evidence and the Indian Evidence Act as applied to forestry matters; objects
of special forest law; the Indian Forest Act; general provisions; detailed
study; legal organization of the forest service.
Connected laws (dealing with wildlife etc.)
Forest administration (including forest cadres,
forest manuals etc.)
(10)
Social Forestry
IntroductionDefinition, scope, necessity, special
significance in the context of energy and small timber requirements of India,
environmental pollution and recreation place of social forestry in the national
forest policy in India.
Farm forestryIts need and scope on and around
agricultural lands; role in rural economy and its effect on agricultural
practices; establishment of farm forests, choice of species, planting
techniques, maintenance; organization of the programme, role of the forest
departments protection.
Social forestryObjectives and scope vis-a-vis farm
forestry; raising of trees for fodder, timber, firewood, creation of pasture
lands; avenue plantations, canal bank plantations, plantations along railway
lines; choice of species, techniques, maintenance; extension approach,
organisation of the programme, role of the forest department; protection.
Recreation forestryNeeds of the urban population;
scope of its application in forests, city forests and concept of integrated
town planning and forestry; creation of forest parks in natural forests close
to urban centres.
Wind breaks, shelterbelts and catchment forestScope
of creation of wind breaks, shelterbelts; choice of species, techniques,
maintenance; scope in the catchment forests of water works, etc.; protection.
Organisation, legislation and publicityExtension,
organisation, training and demonstration, public participation and publicity;
need for a defined policy, suitable legislation to support the programme.
(11)
Tribal welfare
GeneralDefinition, types, distribution and
demography of tribes, racial classification.
Concept of races, tribe, family, clan and kinship,
principles of social grouping.
Cultural traditions, customs, ethos, beliefs and
practices of tribals in general, political organisations and social controls.
Tribal economy.
Details of few important tribes of India, e.g.
Bhils, Santhals, Gonds and nomadic tribes.
Administration of tribal affairs, constitutional
provisions for their welfare and tribal development plans.
Approaches towards tribal policies of isolation,
assimilation and middle path.
Tribals and forests, their symbiotic relationship.
PracticalsCase studies of FLCS (forest labourer
co-operative societies), Case studies on colonisation of tribal communities.
Case studies on exercise of right and concessions
by tribals.
(12)
Engineering II
RoadsIntroductionnecessity of roads,
classification, cross-section, systems of metalling, road gradients;
alignmentreconnaissance, obligatory points, alignment of a plain road,
alignment of a hill road, preliminary survey, paper location, demarcation;
designroad and land width, the shoulders, camber, section on hill sides,
gradients, earth work, drainage of plain and hill roads, road curves;
superelevation, widening and sighting distance, retaining walls and breast
wallsnecessity, materials used, forces acting, conditions of stability and
thumb rules for design of brick-work, masonry and timbercrib retaining walls;
estimatingprinciples, earthwork by trapezoidal and prismoidal rules, the slope
template, the abstract of cost; setting outuse of the field level and boning
set for setting out gradients, instrumentlevelling instrument, dumpy level,
adjustments, difference of levelsback sight, intermediate sight, fore-sight,
height of instrument and change partaxes of telescope and line of collineation,
negative readings, reduction of levels, rise and fall system and the
collineation or HI system, their relative merits, arithmetical checks, the
level book, classification of levellingsimple, compound or differential,
profile, cross-sectioning, reciprocal levelling; setting out buttings and
embankments, setting out of simple circular curves by the method of ordinates from
the long chord, vertical curves; construction, organisation of labour, tools,
clearing, economical digging, load and lift, construction of earth stabilized
and water-bound macadam roads, cordurcy roads, use of camber template;
maintenancegeneral wear of roads, surface maintenance, improvement of existing
roads, renewal of surface, road water-tables and pole drains, road signs,
notice boards and guard stones.
BridgesIntroductionTypes of forest bridges, the
ford, Irish bridge, causeway, road syphon, culverts, timber bridges, cantilever
bridges, suspension bridges; selection of site and waterwayselection of
sitefactors affecting afflux and free board, provision of waterwayfactors
affecting waterway for culverts and small bridges, scour and its prevention; masonry
arched culvertsnames of parts, economical spans, thumb rules for design,
principles of construction centering; simple wooden bridgesa typical small
wooden bridge, the abutment and piers, the timber bank seat, timber post, pile
and masonry abutments and pierssingle and double trestle pierstimber crib
piers, construction of the super-structures, the through and deck span timber
girder bridges, common suspension bridgesparts, stability, principles of
constructiontowers and anchorages, the roadway.
Water supplyIntroductionSources of supply, springs,
streams and rivers, ponds and lakes, dams and reservoirs and wells, types of
wellsshallow wells, deep wells and artisan wells, bore wells and tube wells;
sinking of wellsselection of site for shallow and deep wells, staining, sinking
of masonry lined wells; yield calculationssprings, streams and rivers, ponds
lakes and dams, wells, spacing of well; purification of waterprinciples,
clarification and sterilization, cleaning and protection of wells.
Design of timber structureSimple elastic theory of
bendingbending and shear stresses in simply supported beams and cantilevers
carrying concentrated and uniformly distributed loads, direct and bending
stresses; stress diagrams-stress diagrams for roof trusses with and without
wind loads; designtimber beams, short timber columnsties and struts of a framed
structure.
PracticalsRoad designcross-section of a road in the
plains/hills and retaining walls; preparation of road estimateearthwork
calculations; setting out road curves by ordinates; a masonry arch culvert; a
simple timber girder bridge; a cantilever bridge; a suspension bridge; stress
diagrams for timber trusses with and without wind load; design of ties and
struts of a timber frame.
A masonry arch culvert.
A simple timber bridge.
A cantilever bridge.
A suspension bridge.
Stress diagrams for timber trusses with and without
wind load.
Design of ties and struts of a timber frame.
(13)
Forest Machinery
Motor MechanicsPetrol and diesel engines; 4-stroke
and 2-stroke engines; fuel system; ignition system, lubrication system;
transmission system; cooling system; fault detection and daily checks.
Maintenance and operation of machineriesnursery;
plantations; harvesting; transport; fire fighting.
(14)
Botany
14.1. Paper I
(Theory)Taxonomy and its significancebrief history of classification; systems
of classification, viz., Bentham and Hooker, Engler and Prantl and Hutchinson.
Plant nomenclatureImportance of plant nomenclature;
brief history.
Modern trends in plant taxonomy.
Systematic botany of Indian forest plants following
Bentham and Hookers system, with emphasis on families of forestry importance
(tree species), their distribution, field characters and their economic
importance.
DicotyledonsPolypetaolao
(1) Magnoliaceae
(2) Guttiferae
(3) Dipterocarpaceae
(4) Malvaceae
(5) Stereuliaceae
(6) Rutaceae
(7) Moliaceae
(8) Sapindaceae
(9) Anacardiaceae
(10) Leguminocae
(11) Rosaceae
(12) Rhizophoraceae
(13) Combretaceae
(14) Myrtaceae
(15) Lythraceae
Gamopetalae
(16) Rubiaceae
(17) Sapotaceae
(18) Ebenaceae
(19) Bleaceae
(20) Apocynaceae
(21) Bignoniaceae
(22) Verbenaceae
Apetalae
(23) Lauraceae
(24) Euphorbiaceae
(25) Urticaceae
(26) Cupuliferae
(27) Salicaceae
Monocotyledons
(28) Pal-maceae
(29) Grasineae
14.2. Paper II
(Practical).Dissection, sketching, description and identification (with flora)
of forest plants.
(15)
Zoology and Entomology
15.1. Paper I
(Theory).Introductionimportance of forest entomology.
Animal ecologyRelations of animals to their biotic
and abiotic environments; riche, habitat and ecosystem; inter-relationship of
insect populations, forest stands and forest practices.
Elementary EntomologyInsect anatomy; inset
biologies, life histories, metamorphosis and hibernation; insect
taxonomyclassification into orders.
Forest EntomologyInsect pests of standing trees
(plantations and natural forests)-injury, biology, life history and control of
insects of economic importance in forestry with special reference to the
following tree speciessal, teak, toon, mahogany, cacia, cashew, semul,
ailanthus, mechellia, gmelina, eucalyptus, poplars, willows, deodar, tropical
pines and high level conifers (spruce and fir); insect pests of felled and
converted timbers injury, biology, life history and control; insect pests of
nurseries and their control; insect pests of seedsinjury and methods of seed
storage, control; termites in relation to forestry and timberbiology, ecology,
life history and control; insect vectors of plant diseases with special
reference to sandal spike disease; ecological classification of harmful and
beneficial insects.
Principles and methods of insect pest
controlGeneral principles integrated control measures; methodschemical control,
insecticides, technique (appliances), biological control, biological control
agents, silvicultural control (management), mechanical and physical control,
attractants and repelants, male sterile technique etc., legislative control and
plant quarantine measures.
15.2. Paper II
(Practical).Visit to entomology museum to see insect pests and their damage
with particular reference to the following pests of standing forest trees, sal
heartwood borer, teak defoliators, teak canker grub, meliecene shoot borer,
ailanthus defoliator, champ bug, gamhar defoliator, poplar stem borer, deodar
defoliator, bark beetles, spruce budworm, pine shoot borer; nursery pests,
cutworms, chafen/grubs and circkets; seed pests, bruchids, weevils and microlepidoptera;
insect vectors of plant diseases. Cocolidia indica and Nephotettix impicticeps;
termite nest, termite castes; timber entomology pests of felled timber, bark
borers, pin hole borers, ambrosia beetle, sapwood borers, shot hole borers, heartwood
borers, drywood borers; beneficial insects; parastites, wasps and flies,
predators, bugs, beetles, mantids, wasps, lac insect, honey bees, silk worms.
Visit to insectaryDiagnosis of insect attack by
symptoms; how to report and send specimen to Forest Research Institute asking
for advice.
Spraying equipment and demonstration of spraying.
Insect collectionSetting, pinning and
preservationprobationers shall submit a collection of 50 insects to cover 9
orders and 20 families collected during their tours, field observations of the
collection to be written in fieldsnote book, collection (wet and dry, damage
and life histories) should he systematically and biologically grouped, labelled
and identified upto family.
Excursion to forest areas, felling sites and timber
depots.
(16)
Mycology and Pathology
16.1. Paper I
(Theory).Fungidefinition; position in plant kingdom; broad classification;
important families in Mymenomycetes; important genera in Polyporaceae.
Nutrition in fungiMycorrhiza.
Timber decay and stainCauses; types, effects on
wood.
DiseasesCauses and symptoms.
Protection of timber from decay (after felling in
forests, in storage and in use).
Wilt diseasesNursery diseases; wilt of shisham due
to Fuserium solani; wilt of Casuarina due to Trichosporium vesiculosum.
Root diseasesRoot rots of sal due to Polyporus
shoreae; root rot of hardwoods due to Ganoderma lucidum; root rot of deodar due
to Fome's Annosus.
Heart rots in treesIn sal in blue pine.
Heart rots in coppice forests of sal and teak.
Diseases due to rusts and other microfungiStem
rustsCronartium himalayense on chir and C. ribicola on blue pine; witches
brooms rusts in deodar due to Peridermium cedri and leaf rust of teak due to
Olivea tectonae.
Diseases due to physiological causesDying of sal;
dying of Eucalyptus citriodora; water blister in teak; failure of casuarina.
Virus diseasesSandal spike.
Internationally dangerous forest diseases-plant
quarantine; principle of forest diseases control.
16.2. Paper II
(Practical)Examination of the mycelium of Mucor or Rhizopus growing on a moist
bread and study of asexual reproduction of the fungus;
Study of fruiting structures of an A. Scomycetes
(e.g. Xylaria and Basidiomycetes) (e.g. Polyporus), reproductive structures
(ascus and ascopores in the former and basidia and basidiospores in the latter)
to be examined.
Examination of sporophores in
BasidiomycatesThelephoraceae Hymenochaete (H. rubiginosa);
PolyporaceaePolyporus (P. shoreae), Trametes (T. pini fomes pine), Fomes (F.
annosus; F. caryophylli), Ganoderma (G. lucidum, G. applanatum),
AgaricaceaeArmellaria (A. mella); distinguishing characters of the families in
general to be stressed.
Study of the types of decay in timbertransparent fibrous
rot; transparent picket rot; brown cuboidal rot; dry rot.
Study of rust diseases of coniferscronartium
himalayense on chir; Peridermium cedri on deodar.
Local Excursions to acquaint with common tree
diseases on sal; shisham, khair and other hardwoods.
(17)
Forest Utilisation III
17.1. Paper III
(Wood Technology)Wood structureintroduction-scope of wood anatomy, what is
wood; gross features of wood-pith, heart-wood, sap-wood, bark, earlywood,
latewood, growth ring etc.; minute structure of wood-tracheids, fibres and
vessels, parenchyma, rays-resin canals etc., general propertiescolourfluorescence,
lustre, odour, weight, hardness, grain, texture and figure; ultra-structure of
woodelectron microscope characteristics; identification of timber with key for
25 important timbers.
Properties of wood, defects and
abnormalitiesPhysical properties of wood; mechanical properties of wood;
factors influencing strength properties of wood; suitability indices and their
use; safe working stresses and their evaluation; testing and evaluation of
timber products and stores; classification of defects in wood and their
influences on utilisation characteristics, methods of identification,
measurement and evaluation of defects.
Wood reasoningIntroductionObject, need and
importance of seasoning; general principles of seasoning; air seasoning; kin
seasoning and other special methods of seasoning; seasoning schedules and
classification of timber; design of seasoning kilns, air drying sheds and solar
kilns.
Wood preservationIntroductionNeed of wood
preservation, natural durability of timber and wood destroying agencies; types
of wood preservatives, their characteristics, composition and properties;
preparation of material for treatment; methods of wood preservation; factors
affecting penetration of preservative; properties of treated wood; testing of
wood preservatives and treated timber; treatment of timber for different end
uses including cost aspects.
17.2. Paper
IVIndustries.Composite woodadhesivesmanufacture, properties, uses; plywood
manufactureproperties, uses; fibre boards, manufacture, properties, uses;
particle boardsmanufacture, properties, uses; improved woodimpregnated and
compregnated woods, heat stabilised wood and chemically modified wood; present
status of composite wood industry in India and future expansion plans.
Cellulose and paperChemistry of cellulose,
hemicellulose and lignin; production of mechanical pulp; production of chemical
pulp, production of semi-chemical and semi-mechanical pulps; manufacture of
paper; manufacture of rayon; raw materials for paper and rayon.
Saw millingType of saws and saw mill machinery;
design and layout of saw mills and wood workshops; wood workinghand and machine
tools.
GradingCommercial grading systems; stress grading
including machine grading; existing Indian standards on grading;
Wood based industriesHistorical background of wood
based industries in India; present status of and suitability of Indian timbers
for agricultural implements and furniture industry; present status and
suitability of Indian timbers for mathematical and musical instruments industry
and turnery; present status and suitability of Indian timbers for packing case
industry; present status and suitability of Indian timbers for coach building
and sleeper industry; planning for development of wood based industries.
(18)
Genetics
Introductiondefinition, scope, application to plant
improvement.
HeredityHistory; Mendel's laws of heredity;
physical basis of heredity the cell and chromosomes; cell divisionmitosis
meiosis.
VariationSources of variation; genetic v/s
environmental variation and their estimation.
Qualitative and quantitative charactersSingle gene
and multiple gene determined characters; modification of mendelian ratios;
inheritance of quantitative or polygemic characters.
Forest tree breedingObjectives of tree breeding;
methods of tree breeding; recent advances in vegetation propagation of tree sp.
Selective methods of tree improvementSeed stands
and seed production areas to meet interim need for seeds plus tree selection;
seed orchards and their establishment; management 6f seed orchards; progeny
trialsone parent and two parent for estimation of genetic parameters.
HybridizationObjects of hybridization; inter-racial
and inter-specific hybridizationexploitation of heterosis; seed orchards for
raising hybrid seeds.
Breeding for special charactersFor improvement of
wood characteristics; for incorporating resistance to specific diseases; for
incorporating resistance to specific pests; incorporating resistance to
specific edaphic and climatic factors.
Polyploid and Mutation breedingDefinition
conversation of natural polyploid in some important tree genera; experimented
indication of polyploids with conclusion and method of treatment; utilization
of polyploid in tree improvement mutationdefinition, natural and induced
mutation; experimental induction of mutation with polyploid and physical and
chemical mutagens; utilization of mutants in tree improvement.
PracticalsPreparation of slides for studies of
chromosomes; vegetative propagation and use of growth promuters; plus tree
selection; seed orchards and their establishment; various methods of
hybridization; various types of grafting and budding, controlled pollination,
treatment of seed orchards.
OR
(19)
Forest Ecology
Basic ecological principles and conceptsdefinition
of ecology and forest ecology, scope and importance of ecology in conservation
of natural resources in general, land use, forestry, grasslandmanagement and
wildlife, ecology and its relation to other sciences, sub-division of ecology
including syn and aut-ecology; basic concepts of plant ecology (forest
ecology), concepts of ecosystem habitat and ecological niche, ecosystem
components, biogeochemicals cycles; fundamental concepts related to energy in
ecological systems, the food chain, trophic structure and ecological pyramids.
Forest environmentEnvironment of the forestbiotic
and abiotic components and environment, thereunto relations and importance in
forest ecology, effect of inter-action of different environmental factors on
the development of vegetation; environmental measurementsmeasurement of
environmental factors (instrumentation) like solar radiation, light intensity,
temperature, atmospheric gases, particles and electric properties, etc.,
limiting factors, principles of limiting factors, combined coning factors,
principles of limiting factors of importance as limiting factor, ecological
indicators.
Forest community (syn-ecology)Liotic community
concept; methods of studying vegetationlife forms, structure and physiognomy,
charting and mapping of vegetation, quardrats, transects, etc, methods of
rating for frequency, analysis of data with qualitative and quantitative
methods (indices, coefficients, formulae, symbols, pattern, etc.), description,
classification and ordination of communities, statistical methods and mathematical
methods; concept of ecological dominance, competition, tolerance aggression,
serial and climax communities, ecotones and concept of edge effects vegetation
dynamics (temporal and spatial development of vegetation)origin and development
of vegetation, ecological succession, primary and secondry succession,
retrogression, arrested succession and climax, mono and polyslimaxes, mosaic
theory; phytogeographybasis of classification vegetation types brief
description of the forest types of the world and of India;
palaeo-ecologypalaeobotanical satterns in relation to present distribution,
lines of evidence fossil woods, dendrochronologyradio carbon dating, peat
analysis, pollen analysis, etc.
Aut-ecologyStudies on growth requirement of
species-seed production and their germination, methods of studying competitive
potential, moisture requirements of species, etc.; root developmentstudies on
development of root system in varied habitats.
Ecological adaptations and evolutionAdaptations,
origin or adaptations, fate of adaptations, the genecological classification,
isolation and evolution.
Production ecology (forest productivity)Concept of
productivity; biological productivityproduction of organic matter (plant biomas),
accumulation of organic matter, organic balance sheets; nutrient cycleuptake of
nutrients, nutrient loss, nutrient input, nutrient budget; energy flow, energy
accumulation, energy budget; water circulationinterception of precipitation,
evaporation and runoff, transpiration, soil moisture, water budgets; methods of
assessing forest site quality (forest productivity), direct measurements of
forest productivity, vegetation as indicator of site, indicator type and
indicator spectra, environmental factors as a measure of productivity, climatic
factors and soil factors; site as a dynamic concept.
Radiation ecologyDefinitionradioactive
substancesradiation and environment; nuclear conceptstype of ionizing
radiations, units of measurements,. radioisotopes (radionuclides) of
ecologicals, importance, comparative radiosensitivity; effects of radiation on
individuals, populations, communities and ecosystems; radioactive substances
released into the environment and the manner in which ecological communities
and population control the distribution of radioactivity, the fallout problem,
waste disposal, future radioecological research; use of radioactive tracers in
biological sciences ecology, physiology, etc.
(20)
Forest Statistics
Introduction to theory of probabilityIntroduction
to set theory, events, elementary set theory applied to events; addition and
multiplication theorems of probability, conditional probability; expectation,
random variable random numbers.
Standard distributionsFrequency distributions,
calculation of moments; binomial, poison, normal and other important
probability distribution (negative binomial, rectangular, beta and gamma not in
detail), introductory, calculation of their expected values and variances.
Theory of estimation and tests of hypothesisPoint
estimation and interval estimation, confidence limits, significance; desirable
properties of an estimator, maximum likelihood point estimation, tests of
hypothesis, simple and composite hypothesis, size and power of a test; exact tests
on samples from a normal population (E-test, difference of means in paired
samples), F-test, Z-test, effect of non-normality.
Analysis of varianceTest for homogeneity of
variances; a test for difference of means; two way classification (complete
blocks); estimation of fixed; estimation effects (model I), estimations of
variable treatment effects (components of variances, model II), mixed model
(model III).
Sampling proceduresSimple random sampling for
proportion and percentages, the estimation of sample size; stratified random;
systematic sampling; cluster sampling (one and multistage sampling and
sub-samples of equal and unequal sizes); ratio and regression estimates; double
sampling; sources of error in surveys.
Design of experimentsCompletely randomised,
randomised blocks and latin square design; factorial experiment; compounding
split plot designs; masi latin squares, incomplete block design; balanced and
partially balanced incomplete block design; lattice squares, incomplete latin
squares.
Distribution of pairs of variateClassical
regression problem, bivariate normal surface; linear regression as determined
from a sample, computation of regression and correlation coefficients, variance
regression line; regression when independent variable is not random; functional
ratio between variables, subject to error; contingency table, yates correction
for continuity; chisquare test of homogeneity.
Multiple regression analysis and curve
fittingEquations of multiple regression; the solution of normal equations variance
and covariance matrix; residuals.
(21)
Advanced Forests Biometry
Application of statistical techniques in
forestryintroduction to statistics; use of electronic data processing machines;
sampling techniques; test of significance; regression and correlation analysis;
analysis of variance.
Forest measurementsTree and log volume estimation
from rules and tables; forest inventory application of sampling with
probability proportional to size in forest inventory; use of computers in
analysis of inventory data; measuring instruments and procedure for forest
measurements.
Stand structure and growthStand structure, density,
site quality and yield tables; stand growth analysis of typical growth models;
simulation techniques and application in growth models.
Management information system for forest management
decisions Evaluation of information needs for decision making by forest
managers, application of operations research techniques for collecting stand
information.
Remote sensing techniques for forest measurementUse
of aerial photographs for forest measurements; remote sensing techniques using
satellite imageries; use of aerial photographs in preparation maps; use of
instruments and procedures for preparation of maps.
OR
(22)
Advanced Forest Economics and
Valuation
Review of economic principlesTheory demand; theory
of production; theory of costs and marginal analysis; market structure; theory
of distribution; theory of capital; application of economic principles to
forest resources management.
Analytical tools to decision making to resources
management Optimization models; linear and non-linear programming; game theory;
decision theory; application of other operations research techniques to forest
resource management; use of electronic data processing machines of resource management
decision.
Forest products economicsContribution of forestry
to national economy; forest based industries; problems in estimation of demand
or tangible and intangible goods from forestry; case studies.
Production problems in forestryApplication of
production theory to forestry input and output decisions, analysis of financial
objectives of forestry production; multiple products analysis; case studies.
Analysis of market structure for forestry
productsMarket structure for forestry products; pricing of forest products;
demand and supply of forest products; production, consumption and supply of
forest products; case studies.
Non-timber products economicsMultiple use;
economics of forest recreation; wildlife; forestry and environment; forestry
and quality of life.
Forestry and international affairsBroad trends of
production and consumption of forestry products; trade patterns for forest
products; marketing of forest products international contest.
OR
(23)
Wildlife Management
Wildlife management techniquesField observations;
instrumentation; habitat analysis and evaluation; food habit analysis; post
mortem techniques; field detection of diseases and conditions; toxidermy;
capture and marking techniques; establishment and maintenance of field
laboratories and museum.
Practice of wildlife managementConcept of wildlife
management definition and importance; history of wildlife management in India,
Asia, Africa, Europe, America and Australia; concept of conservation including
multiple use of land.
Measurement of wildlife populationNeed for census;
census types and techniques; collection and analysis of census data.
Control of food and waterVariety of food,
palatability, essential nutrients etc.; food habit studies; availability of
water.
Habitat managementHabitat analysis, species,
composition and indicator plants; techniques of dealing with environment;
control of cover.
Management of wildlife refugesMechanism of use of
refuges; species suited to refuge.
Management of special areaNational parks and
sanctuaries; game farms.
Control of diseasesTypes of diseases; methods of
control.
Predator controlInter-predatorrelationship;
predator-prey relationship; sanitation; food habitat research.
Population problemDeclining and dense population,
shifting population etc.; corridors for dispersion and migration; introduction
of species; population and habitat balance.
Control of huntingPurpose; kinds of control;
balancing species and ecosystem.
Wildlife management plansCollection and analysis of
essential information; special techniques for use in the preparation of
management plan; preparation of method plan.
Management of important wildlife speciesEndangered
species; major wild animal species; important game birds, fish and crocodiles;
case studies on selected problem in wildlife management.
IV. EXERCISE IN THE SECOND YEAR
(1) Study and practical work in tours
1.1. Summer
tour.Study of working plans and management of conifers and temperate
broad-leaved species, introduction of exotis, mechanised jogging, watershed
management planning and practice.
1.2. Winter
tour.Study of working plans and management of task; bamboo deciduous species,
evergreen species; thinning research; utilisation methods including visits to
wood-based industries; industrial planning and correlated industrial
plantations.
(2) Botanical collections during each tour
Collection and submission of complete botanical
specimens of not less than 30 plants properly dried, mounted and labelled at
the end of each of the tours mentioned in 1 above.
(3) Engineering Plates
Stress diagrams, timber beams, roof trusses, timber
bridges, sketch plans of buildings, bridges, lime kiln etc. made during the
tour in a graph note-book.
(4) Forest Road Alignment Exercises
Alignment, mapping and estimation of forest motor
road through a hilly country.
PART II Qualifying Tests
(i) First Aid.The probationers shall be trained and tested in Civil Defence,
First Aid and St. John's Ambulance Drill.
(ii) Weapon Training.The probationers shall be trained and tested in the use
of short-guns, rifles, pistols and revolvers.
(iii) Riding.Shall include the walk, trot, canter gallop and jumps (small
fences and ditches).
(iv) Regional languages.The test shall comprise translation, free
composition, set composition, conversation and dictation. The probationer
knowledge of grammar shall be tested chiefly by composition, conversation and
by passages for grammar shall be tested chiefly by composition, conversation
and by passages for comment.
(v) Hindi.The test shall comprise translation, free composition, set
composition, conversation and dictation. The probationer knowledge of grammar
shall be tested chiefly by composition, conversation and by passages for
comment.
(vi) Use and maintenance of Mechanized Equipment.Shall include maintenance of
motor vehicles and elementary knowledge of their working.
(vii) Swimming.The standard of training and proficiency shall be determined by
the President.
[SECOND SCHEDULE]
[See Regulation 5.21]
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State
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Regional Language
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Andhra Pradesh
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Telugu or Urdu
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Assam-Meghalaya
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Assamese, Bengali, Kashi or Garo
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Bihar
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Hindi
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Gujarat
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Gujarati
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Haryana
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Hindi or Urdu
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Himachal Pradesh
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Hindi
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Jammu and Kashmir
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Urdu, Kashmiri or Dogri
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Karnataka
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Kannada
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Kerala
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Malayalam
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Madhya Pradesh
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Hindi
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Maharashtra
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Marathi
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Manipur-Tripura
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Manipuri, Bengali or Hindi
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Nagaland
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Nagamese in roman Script
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Orissa
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Oriya
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Punjab
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Punjabi in Gurumukhi script or Hindi
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Rajasthan
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Hindi
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Sikkim
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Nepali
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Tamil Nadu
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Tamil
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Uttar Pradesh
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Hindi
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West Bengal
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Bengali or Hindi
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ACMU Arunachal Pradesh
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Assamese, Hindi, Malayalam
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Goa, Mizoram
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Marathi, Mizo, Tamil, Urdu, Gujarati
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Union Territories
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