Abstract

Optimal timber production and healthy wild turkey populations can be jointly achieved by balancing cutting cycles, habitat types, and food sources. Expected financial returns from wild turkey management and the habitat required to maintain those returns are estimated. A geographical information system (GIS) is used to illustrate the methodology necessary to distinguish various levels of potential quality turkey habitat, including broad forest conditions across ownerships, like early successional habitat, pine hardwood mixtures, and forest openings, that intermix and combine to form superior wild turkey habitat. A financial analysis framework that considers key financial variables is applied across management regimes to determine net present values, land expectation values, and equivalent annual incomes. Incremental hunting lease revenue from wild turkey hunting leases is shown to impact investment return. The financial framework allows managers to perform sensitivity analyses of costs and revenues to better evaluate management alternatives.

Highlights

  • Restoration of the wild turkey (Meleagris gallapavo) is one of the preeminent success stories in wildlife management [1]

  • net present value (NPV), land expectation value (LEV), and equal annual income (EAI) are calculated in Table 1 and Table 2 indicate the value today of the two alternatives at three interest rates

  • When the two options are put on an equal time basis, the longer rotation is shown to reduce the value of timber production

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Summary

Introduction

Restoration of the wild turkey (Meleagris gallapavo) is one of the preeminent success stories in wildlife management [1]. Starting the early 1900s, wild turkey populations suf-. (2014) Incremental Investment Value of Wild Turkey Management on the South Carolina Piedmont. Serious declines peaked in the 1930s and research on how to reverse this decline began in earnest in the 1940s when turkey populations remained only in areas of extensive timberland that were generally inaccessible to humans due to rough topography and a lack of roads [2] [3]. Wild turkeys have excellent ability to adapt to their surroundings, as long as that environment includes abundant timberland, limited human contact, and minimal ecological disturbances [1] [3]

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