Abstract

The methodology presented here can assist in evaluating the need for pre-harvest clearing. In the long term, similar approaches may help with managing electronic standing sales and enhance the operational environment of roundwood e-marketplaces. In cut-to-length harvesting, pre-harvest clearing is needed when the understory vegetation hinders the visibility of the stems to be harvested. It can facilitate the work of the harvester operators and thereby enhance the productivity and quality of the harvesting operation. Information about where pre-harvest clearing is required is often not available, however, or else it has to be collected during time-consuming field visits. We report here on the development and evaluation of airborne laser scanning (ALS)-based models for estimating the need for pre-harvest clearing. The reference data consisted of 99 circular field sample plots that were photographed and in which stems with diameters at breast height from one to seven centimeters were measured. An online e-questionnaire survey responded to by 66 forest professionals classified the sample plots into five categories ranging from no need for pre-harvest clearing to compulsory pre-harvest clearing. A linear discriminant analysis was used to estimate the need for pre-harvest clearing with an accuracy of 63.6%, whereas a linear model-based method that predicted the understory stem density assessed the need with an accuracy of 64.6%. Use of this method could deliver information about the understory vegetation, offer guidelines for clearing the understory, and reduce the number of field visits before harvesting, thus reducing costs.

Highlights

  • The value of a standing tree stock can be derived from the value of the roundwood in the wood processing yard with its procurement costs deducted

  • We present and evaluate linear discriminant analyses (LDA) and a linear model-based method for estimating the need for pre-harvest clearing based on airborne laser scanning (ALS)-derived variables, field measurements, and an e-questionnaire survey answered by forest professionals that contained pictures taken in the forest area concerned

  • It became obvious that the perceived need for pre-harvest clearing varied between the professionals

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Summary

Introduction

The value of a standing tree stock can be derived from the value of the roundwood in the wood processing yard with its procurement costs deducted. These procurement costs include harvesting and transportation costs plus the fixed overhead costs of the procurement organization. The productivity of cut-to-length (CTL) harvesting is affected by the size, properties, and configuration of the machinery, the capabilities of the operator, and the stand and site conditions (see [1,2,3,4]). It is generally difficult to alter the stand and site conditions in order to improve productivity.

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