TITLE: Measuring stick for DBH measurements
DATE: 2022-05-12
AUTHOR: John L. Godlee
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When measuring the diameter of tree stems to estimate above ground 
woody biomass, it’s important to avoid stem features which might 
skew the diameter estimate and misrepresent the stem diameter. 
Burls, swelling at branching nodes, and large wounds should be 
avoided if possible. It’s convention to measure stem diameter at 
1.3 m (DBH, diameter at breast height), but sometimes this will 
need to be changed to avoid these idiosyncratic features.

Recording the height of the stem diameter measurement becomes even 
more important when estimating biomass change over time. If the 
diameter is measured at different heights in different years then 
any biomass change estimates will be unrealistic. Tree stems tend 
to taper upwards, so a diameter measurement at 1 m will generally 
be larger than a measurement at 1.5 m.

In the field instead of using a tape measure every time you want to 
measure the height of the stem diameter measurement, I recommend 
using a measuring stick.

I use a 2 m long piece of thick walled PVC pipe with duct tape 
markings every 10 cm, starting from 1 m and ending at 2 m. Many 
rolls of duct tape are exactly 5 cm wide, so conveniently I can 
also measure in increments of 5 cm if necessary. I mark 1.3 m using 
a different colour duct tape to the rest as this is the most common 
height for diameter measurements. Then I can hold the measuring 
stick up to each stem and quickly choose the appropriate height for 
the diameter measurement.

  ![Close up of the measuring scale on the DBH stick using duct 
tape.](https://johngodlee.xyz/img_full/dbh_stick/dbh_stick_close.jpg
)

  ![The DBH measuring stick, made from 
PVC.](https://johngodlee.xyz/img_full/dbh_stick/dbh_stick_full.jpg)

The stick also comes in handy for knocking leaves out of trees for 
species identification, removing spider’s webs, and probing long 
grass for snakes. I tend to carry it with me everywhere in the plot.

Additionally, I use the stick for other measurements in the plots. 
Counting tree saplings along 2 m wide belt transects is easy by 
holding the stick in the middle of the transect. Any sapling which 
touches the stick is counted.

The stick is also useful as a way to make yourself more visible to 
other people in the plot when the grass is very long. When we 
arrive at a plot generally the first thing we do is lay out tape 
measures to mark the plot perimeter. To ensure these tapes are 
straight it’s necessary to have one person standing at the corner 
so the person holding the tape can walk in a straight line to them. 
Waving the bright green measuring stick in the air makes you much 
more visible. I normally attach some orange flagging tape to the 
top of the stick, or balance my hat on it to make it even more 
visible.

I’ve gone back and forth on writing this brief post for a few 
years now. I thought that maybe it was far too obvious that a 
measuring stick would be useful for measuring the appropriate 
height for a DBH measurement. What changed my mind was having some 
early stage PhD students with me on fieldwork last month. They 
seemed to think it was a genuinely good idea, and they hadn’t 
already thought of it themselves, so I figured I would share it 
here.