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Please use this persistent URL to cite or link to this item:
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Title: Historical disturbance regimes as a reference for forest policy in a multiowner province: a simulation experiment.
Authors: Thompson, J.R.
Johnson, K.N.
Lennette, M.
Spies, T.A.
Bettinger, P.
USDA, FS
Source: Canadian journal of forest research. 2006 Feb., v. 36, no. 2, p. 401-417.
NALT Subjects: timber management
logging
forest policy
forest management
simulation models
forest ownership
forest stands
stand composition
stand structure
age structure
forest ecology
forest trees
wildfires
frequency
fire ecology
landscape ecology
forest yields
forest economics
history
Oregon
Other Subjects: rotation age
fire regime
historical disturbance processes
Oregon Coast Range
severity
Landscape Management Policy Simulator (LAMPS)
Issue Date: Feb-2006
Abstract: Using a landscape simulation model, we examined ecological and economic implications of forest policies designed to emulate the historical fire regime across the 2 x 10⁶ ha Oregon Coast Range. Simulated policies included two variants of the current policy and three policies reflecting aspects of the historical fire regime. Policy development was guided by the management intentions of four owner groups: forest industry, nonindustrial private, state, and federal. Fire severity was emulated with green-tree retention standards; fire frequency was emulated with annual harvestable area restrictions; and fire extent was emulated with harvest-unit size regulations. Simulated disturbance-based policies produced age-class distributions closer to the estimated historical range than those created by the current policy. Within 100 years, proportions of younger forests were within the historical range, while older forests moved closer to, but remained below, historical conditions. In the near term, disturbance-based policies produced annual harvest volumes 20%-60% lower than those produced by the current policy. However, relative costs of disturbance-based policies diminished over time. Our results suggest that if expediting a return to historical age-class distributions at a provincial-scale was a goal, then public lands would be needed to provide large patches of old forest. In addition, this experiment illustrated that distributing costs and benefits of conservation policies equitably across multiple private landowners is a significant challenge.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10113/1417
Appears in Collections:USDA Research and Information

Files in This Item:

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IND43839215.pdf252KbAdobe PDFView/Open

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