Social versus biophysical availability of wood in the northern United States.

B. Butler, Zhao Ma, D. Kittredge, P. Catanzaro
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引用次数: 52

Abstract

The availability of wood, be it harvested for sawlogs, pulpwood, biomass, or other products, is constrained by social and biophysical factors. Knowing the difference between social and biophysical availability is important for understanding what can realistically be extracted. This study focuses on the wood located in family forests across the northern United States. Family forest owners control 54% of the 7,685 million dry tons of wood in the region. To estimate availability, we begin with the total resource and then apply constraints related to slope, drainage, site productivity, tree size, size of forest holdings, distance to roads, harvesting restrictions, population pressures, and ownership attitudes. These constraints reduce wood availability significantly, by nearly two-thirds according to our calculations. The vast majority of this reduction is due to social factors, in particular owner attitudes. The greatest state-level reductions in wood availability are in Connecticut, Delaware, Maryland, New Jersey, and Rhode Island, all of which have estimated reductions of more than 75%.
美国北部木材的社会可利用性与生物物理可利用性。
木材的可用性,无论是作为锯木、纸浆、生物质还是其他产品而采伐的木材,都受到社会和生物物理因素的限制。了解社会可用性和生物物理可用性之间的差异对于理解实际可以提取的内容非常重要。这项研究的重点是位于美国北部家庭森林的木材。家庭森林所有者控制着该地区7685万吨干木中的54%。为了估计可用性,我们从总资源开始,然后应用与坡度、排水、场地生产力、树木大小、森林持有量、道路距离、采伐限制、人口压力和所有权态度相关的约束。根据我们的计算,这些限制大大减少了木材的可用性,减少了近三分之二。这种减少绝大部分是由于社会因素,特别是业主的态度。康涅狄格州、特拉华州、马里兰州、新泽西州和罗德岛州的木材可用量减少幅度最大,据估计,这些州的木材可用量减少幅度均超过75%。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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