Implications of the reservation price strategy on the optimal harvest decision and production of nontimber goods in an even-aged forest stand

Author:

Susaeta Andres1,Gong Peichen2,Adams Damian1

Affiliation:

1. School of Forest Resources and Conservation, University of Florida, PO Box 110410, Gainesville, FL 32611, USA.

2. Centre for Environmental and Resource Economics and Department of Forest Economics, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, SLU, SE901 83 Umeå, Sweden.

Abstract

This study analyzes the effects of adopting an adaptive harvest strategy in even-aged forest management under timber price uncertainty on the production of nontimber goods. We use the reservation price strategy (“harvest when the observed timber prices are higher than the reservation prices”) on a longleaf pine (Pinus palustris Mill.) stand and employ the Faustmann–Hartman model as a benchmark. We assume that a longleaf pine stand can be managed for timber production, water production, carbon sequestration, and pine straw raking, depending on the planting density. Our results indicate that the reservation price strategy leads to longer expected harvest age when planting density is high. The reservation price strategy does not lead to increases in water production and carbon sequestration with low planting density. With high planting density, the reservation price strategy leads to increases in the amount of in situ carbon sequestered by 14.4–24.7 Mg·ha–1. Our findings suggest that managing longleaf pine forests in good- or poor-quality sites is a profitable alternative and enables water production and carbon sequestration.

Publisher

Canadian Science Publishing

Subject

Ecology,Forestry,Global and Planetary Change

Reference43 articles.

1. Handbook of Forest Resource Economics

2. Brantley, A.T., Vose, J.M., Wear, D.N., and Band, L. 2018. Planning for an uncertain future: restoration to mitigate water scarcity and sustain carbon sequestration. In Ecological restoration and management of longleaf pine forests. Edited by K.L. Kirkman and S.B. Jack. CRC Press, Boca Raton, Fla. pp. 291–310.

3. Timber Harvesting with Fluctuating Prices

4. The tree-cutting problem in a stochastic environment

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