Changing forest disturbance regimes pose a major challenge for current day forestry. Yet our understanding of the economic impacts of disturbances remains incomplete. Existing valuations of losses from natural disturbances commonly exclude extreme events and neglect impacts on standing timber. Here ...
Author(s)
Knoke, T.; Gosling, E.; Thom, D.; Chreptun, C.; Rammig, A.; Seidl, R.
Publisher
Elsevier Ltd, Oxford, UK
Citation
Ecological Economics, 2021, 185,
We study the management regimes of size-structured boreal Norway spruce (Picea abies (L.) Karst.) and Scots pine (Pinus sylvestric L.) stands. Our aim is to compare the economic profitability of continuous cover and rotation forestry and to study the hypothesis that continuous cover forestry is...
Author(s)
Parkatti, V. P.; Assmuth, A.; Rämö, J.; Tahvonen, O.
Publisher
Elsevier B.V., Amsterdam, Netherlands
Citation
Forest Policy and Economics, 2019, 100, pp 55-67
We study the economics of carbon storage using a model that includes forest size structure and determines the choice between rotation forestry and continuous cover forestry. Optimal harvests may rely solely on thinning, implying infinite rotation and continuous cover forestry, or both thinning and...
Author(s)
Assmuth, A.; Rämö, J.; Tahvonen, O.
Publisher
NRC Research Press, Ottawa, Canada
Citation
Canadian Journal of Forest Research, 2018, 48, 1, pp 11-22
Forests play a vital role in mitigating climate change, as they sequester and store large quantities of carbon. This dissertation examines how carbon storage may be increased by changing forest management at the stand level. To extend the economics of forest carbon storage beyond single-species...
Publisher
Finnish Society of Forest Science, Helsinki, Finland
Citation
Dissertationes Forestales, 2020, 304, pp 43 pp.
The increased removal of forest-derived biomass with whole-tree harvesting (WTH) has raised concerns about the long-term productivity and sustainability of forest ecosystems. If true, this effect needs to be factored in the assessment of long-term feasibility to implement such a drastic forest...
Author(s)
Desaine, I.; Kārkliņa, A.; Matisons, R.; Pastare, A.; Adamovičs, A.; Lībiete, Z.; Jansons, Ā.
Publisher
MDPI AG, Basel, Switzerland
Citation
Forests, 2021, 12, 7,
We extend the study of economically optimal carbon storage to a previously unexplored forest type, mixed-species size-structured stands. The ecological model applied in the study is a transition matrix model with growth functions for boreal Norway spruce (Picea abies (L.) Karst.), birch (Betula...
Author(s)
Assmuth, A.; Rämö, J.; Tahvonen, O.
Publisher
Springer, Dordrecht, Netherlands
Citation
Environmental and Resource Economics, 2021, 79, 2, pp 249-275
The integration of the Nordic timber markets has been analysed to provide market information to various decision-makers, e.g., climate and industrial policies and investment decisions. This study addresses the interlinkage between Nordic (Sweden, Norway and Finland) roundwood markets (Scots pine (...
Author(s)
Eriksson, V.; Lundmark, R.
Publisher
MDPI AG, Basel, Switzerland
Citation
Forests, 2020, 11, 9,
Pinus sylvestris has a long history of basic and applied research that is relevant for both forestry and evolutionary studies. Its patterns of adaptive variation and role in forest economic and ecological systems have been studied extensively for nearly 275 years, detailed demography for a 100...
Author(s)
Pyhäjärvi, T.; Kujala, S. T.; Savolainen, O.
Publisher
Wiley, Oxford, UK
Citation
Evolutionary Applications, 2020, 13, 1, pp 11-30
European temperate and boreal forests sequester up to 12% of Europe's annual carbon emissions. Forest carbon density can be manipulated through management to maximize its climate mitigation potential, and fast-growing tree species may contribute the most to Climate Smart Forestry (CSF) compared to...
Author(s)
Yousefpour, R.; Augustynczik, A. L. D.; Reyer, C. P. O.; Lasch-Born, P.; Suckow, F.; Hanewinkel, M.
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group, London, UK
Citation
Scientific Reports, 2018, 8, 1, pp 345
The aim of the work was to determine whether actions to curb the abundance of spruce bark beetles can contribute to a reduction in mortality rates among spruce trees. The study was carried out in Poland's Białowieża Forest, by reference to two interpretation units, i.e. production forest stands...
Author(s)
Miścicki, S.; Grodzki, W.
Publisher
Polskie Towarzystwo Leśne, Warsaw, Poland
Citation
Sylwan, 2021, 165, 11, pp 749-762