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Economic feasibility of and vegetation responses to biomass harvest in managed loblolly pine plantations
Authors:Ajay Sharma  Kimberly K. Bohn  Jarek Nowak  Puneet Dwivedi
Affiliation:1. University of Florida, West Florida Research and Education Center, Milton, FL, USA;2. Florida Forest Service, Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services, Tallahassee, FL, USA;3. Warnell School of Forestry and Natural Resources, University of Georgia, Athens, GA, USA
Abstract:We evaluated two biomass harvest methods, (1) Whole Tree Thinning (WTT; third-row thinning), and (2) Whole Tree Thinning with Fuelchips (WTTF; third-row thinning plus remove all accessible hardwood stems >2.5 cm diameter at breast height and understory shrubs in thinned area of stand) in a 21-year-old loblolly pine (Pinus taeda L.) plantation in northwest Florida for their harvesting yields and productivities, costs, and effects on groundcover. Both WTT and WTTF produced similar quantities of roundwood (~70 Mg ha?1) and chips (8.43–13.12 Mg ha?1) without significantly added operational time (15.77–28.12 Mg h?1). On-board costs of chip production (US$6.93 to 10.60 Mg?1) and total cost of roundwood and chip production (~22.5 US$ Mg?1) of the two harvest methods also did not differ significantly. Following either WTT or WTTF, overall percent groundcover recovered within 6 months. While shrub and grass cover were similar, forb cover in WTT increased significantly following six months of harvests. Importantly, the study suggests that biomass removal is an attractive option that could be integrated with traditional silvicultural thinning methods to manage vegetation and alleviate hazardous fuel and wildfire conditions, leading to improved forest health.
Keywords:Restoration  harvest methods  southern pine  even-aged stand  forest health  silviculture  bioenergy
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