Title of article
Assessment of harvest blocks generated from operational polygons and forestcover polygons in tactical and strategic planning
Author/Authors
Nelson، John نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2001
Pages
-681
From page
682
To page
0
Abstract
Manually designing harvest units for strategic planning is expensive. This paper compares blocking methods based on forest-cover polygons and manually designed harvest units. Routines are used to split and aggregate polygons into three block size distributions: (i) uniform 40-ha blocks; (ii) uniform 120-ha blocks; and (iii) by area, one-third 20 ha, one-third 60 ha, and one-third 150 ha. Three harvest rules that influence adjacency and the cutting of polygons within a block are applied to each block size distribution to compare forecasts generated by forest-cover and operational blocks. Generally, volume flows from the two methods deviate by less than 5%, and the highest deviations usually occur during the first 20 years. Projected landscape structure, as measured by interior forest area, is also similar under the two blocking methods. The results indicate that forest-cover data provide a reasonable alternative to manual blocking in tactical and strategic plans. This is significant because it removes an important barrier to timely and cost-effective planning, especially for large geographic problems where manual blocking is not an option.
Keywords
Delamination , hoop tension , hoop bending moment , iteration , cracking , radial reinforcement , reinforced con-crete , post-tensioned concrete
Journal title
CANADIAN JOURNAL OF FOREST RESEARCH
Serial Year
2001
Journal title
CANADIAN JOURNAL OF FOREST RESEARCH
Record number
43085
Link To Document