Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
90609 | Forest Ecology and Management | 2006 | 8 Pages |
Timber harvesting is often regulated by seral stage constraints that limit the amount of area available for harvest, and, concomitantly, the state of the residual forest. Typically, crisp seral-class boundaries are used in forest planning, but they fail to recognize that stands develop slowly into and out of seral classes, and that stands near a seral-class boundary have characteristics of adjacent seral classes. This can cause difficulties for managers when abrupt changes in the amount of a seral class occur as stands pass through a crisp seral boundary. As an alternative, we defined seral stages using fuzzy set theory that assigns stands partial membership in seral stages, thus providing a mechanism for incorporating natural stand dynamics within seral classes. We then simulated a series of scenarios with a harvest scheduling model that was constrained by the crisp and fuzzy set seral definitions and compared harvest levels and the amount of seral classes present over a 250-year planning horizon. The fuzzy seral definition better mimicked stand development and produced a smoother accumulation of older seral stands, resulting in a higher and more uniform level of harvest.