Sensitivity analysis on Long-Term fiber Supply
Simulations in Georgia
Shangbin Liu, Chris
J. Cieszewski, Roger C. Lowe, Michal
Zasada
Abstract:
We use long-term simulation analysis in a spatially explicit forest
management model called OPTIONS to investigate the impact of the rotation age,
intensive management practices, and harvesting limits on wood production,
harvesting opportunities, and long-term resource sustainability. The initial
forest inventory is compiled from datasets of the USDA Forest Service Forest
Inventory Analysis Unit, various GIS data, Landsat TM
imagery, and simplified assumptions about the spatial distribution of different
forest cover types. We determined the parameters of the model from published
and unpublished literature, and from interviews with experts in the area of
forest management in the Southeastern US. The
sensitivity analyses reveal the impacts of the individual factors of the
rotation age, intensive management practices, and harvesting limits, and of the
interaction of these factors on the sustainability of the forest resources. The
results of the analyses suggest that the current timberland in Georgia
can easily sustain the current level of harvesting with the current level of
intensive management practices for different choices of the rotation ages. The
volume available for harvesting would increase with an increasing rate of
transition to intensively managed plantations (IMPs)
regardless of the level of harvesting limits and rotation age. To assure
sustainability of forest resources under an increasing harvest scenario, part
of new plantations would be required to convert to intensive management. The higher
the harvesting limit, the more intensively managed plantations needed. The
patterns of the changes in the volume available for harvesting by species
groups were different for cases of keeping current harvesting limits and IMP
levels vs. applying increasing harvesting limits and an increasing transition
rate to IMPs. Harvestable
volumes are significantly different among each level of the three analyzed
factors – transition rate to IMPs, rotation
age, and harvesting limits.
Author Keywords:
intensive management, rotation age, harvesting limits, sustainability,
sensitivity analysis
KeyWords Plus:
Addresses:
M. Zasada,
Assistant Professor, Faculty of Forestry, Agricultural University, 02-528 Warsaw, Poland
Shangbin Liu, Chris J. Cieszewski, Roger
C. Lowe, Warnell School of Forest Resources, University of Georgia,
Athens, GA 30602, USA
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