ICAR JRF Forestry/Agroforestry & Silviculture (Code 09) — forest production, silviculture, agroforestry, forest resource management, and forest biology.
ICAR JRF Forestry usually covers forest production and utilization, silviculture, agroforestry, forest resource management, forest biology, mensuration, ecology, tree improvement, and related conservation concepts along with the common agriculture base.
Forestry, Agroforestry and Silviculture is commonly listed as Code 09 in the ICAR AIEEA PG subject groups. Students often search this code first to confirm the correct syllabus route.
Most students prioritize silviculture, agroforestry systems, forest production and utilization, forest mensuration, ecology, resource management, and forest biology because these areas recur strongly in revision and PYQs.
Yes. Silviculture is one of the most important scoring areas because students are often tested on regeneration methods, silvicultural systems, nursery practices, tending operations, and stand management basics.
A practical approach is to revise agroforestry system types, tree-crop interactions, ecological and economic benefits, species combinations, and land-use applications through short tables and model examples.
Yes. Forest resource management and mensuration are important because they connect forestry theory with measurement, inventory, planning, yield, and sustainable-use concepts.
Yes. Previous year questions help students identify recurring themes such as silvicultural systems, tree species, agroforestry models, mensuration formulas, forest ecology, and utilization concepts.
A strong order is the common agriculture base first, then silviculture and agroforestry, followed by forest production, resource management, ecology, and mensuration.
Most students revise fastest with system-wise summary notes, tree and model tables, mensuration formulas, silviculture concept sheets, and focused PYQ practice.