Abstract

Traditional uneven-aged forest management seeks a balance between equilibrium stand structure and economic profitability, which often leads to harvesting strategies concentrated in the larger diameter classes. The sustainability (i.e., population persistence over time) and influence of such economically optimal strategies on the equilibrium position of a stand (given by the stable diameter distribution) have not been sufficiently investigated in prior forest literature. This article therefore proposes a discrete optimal control model to analyze the sustainability and stability of the economically optimal harvesting strategies of uneven-aged Pinus nigra stands. For this model, we rely on an objective function that integrates financial data of harvesting operations with a projection matrix model that can describe the population dynamics. The model solution reveals the optimal management schedules for a wide variety of scenarios. To measure the distance between the stable diameter distribution and the economically optimal harvesting strategy distribution, the model uses Keyfitz’s delta, which returns high values for all the scenarios and, thus, suggests that those economically optimal harvesting strategies have an unstabilizing influence on the equilibrium positions. Moreover, the economically optimal harvesting strategies were unsustainable for all the scenarios.

Highlights

  • The goal of traditional uneven-aged forest management is a balance between equilibrium stand structure and economic profitability

  • Using uneven-aged Pinus nigra stands as an example, we propose a discrete optimal control model that can assess whether the economically optimal harvesting strategies are sustainable or stabilizing

  • The main purpose of this study is to determine economically optimal harvesting strategies of uneven-aged Pinus nigra stands in the Spanish Iberian System and to analyze their sustainability and eventual destabilization

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The goal of traditional uneven-aged forest management is a balance between equilibrium stand structure and economic profitability. In pursuing this balance, many harvesting strategies concentrate on the larger diameter classes. Using uneven-aged Pinus nigra stands as an example, we propose a discrete optimal control model that can assess whether the economically optimal harvesting strategies are sustainable or stabilizing. For this model, we rely on an objective function that integrates the financial data of harvesting operations with a matrix model that can describe the population dynamics.

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call