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Policy interventions and competing management paradigms shape the long-term distribution of forest harvesting across the landscape

Industrial economic models of natural resource management often incentivize the sequential harvesting of resources based on profitability, disproportionately targeting the higher-value elements of the environment. In fisheries, this issue is framed as a problem of “fishing down the food chain” when...

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Autores principales: Benner, Jordan, Lertzman, Ken
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: National Academy of Sciences 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9564940/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36191184
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2208360119
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author Benner, Jordan
Lertzman, Ken
author_facet Benner, Jordan
Lertzman, Ken
author_sort Benner, Jordan
collection PubMed
description Industrial economic models of natural resource management often incentivize the sequential harvesting of resources based on profitability, disproportionately targeting the higher-value elements of the environment. In fisheries, this issue is framed as a problem of “fishing down the food chain” when these elements represent different trophic levels or sequential depletion more generally. Harvesting that focuses on high grading the most profitable, productive, and accessible components of environmental gradients is also thought to occur in the forestry sector. Such a paradigm is inconsistent with a stewardship ethic, entrenched in the forestry literature, that seeks to maintain or enhance forest condition over time. We ask 1) how these conflicting paradigms have influenced patterns of forest harvesting over time and 2) whether more recent conservation-oriented policies influenced these historical harvesting patterns. We use detailed harvest data over a 47-y period and aggregated time series data that span over a century on the central coast of British Columbia, Canada to assess temporal changes in how logging is distributed among various classes of site productivity and terrain accessibility, corresponding to timber value. Most of this record shows a distinct trend of harvesting shifting over time to less productive stands, with some evidence of harvesting occurring in increasingly less accessible forests. However, stewardship-oriented policy changes enacted in the mid-1990s appear to have strongly affected these trends. This illustrates both a profit-maximizing tendency to log down the value chain when choices are unconstrained and the potential of policy choices to impose a greater stewardship ethic on harvesting behavior.
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spelling pubmed-95649402023-04-03 Policy interventions and competing management paradigms shape the long-term distribution of forest harvesting across the landscape Benner, Jordan Lertzman, Ken Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A Biological Sciences Industrial economic models of natural resource management often incentivize the sequential harvesting of resources based on profitability, disproportionately targeting the higher-value elements of the environment. In fisheries, this issue is framed as a problem of “fishing down the food chain” when these elements represent different trophic levels or sequential depletion more generally. Harvesting that focuses on high grading the most profitable, productive, and accessible components of environmental gradients is also thought to occur in the forestry sector. Such a paradigm is inconsistent with a stewardship ethic, entrenched in the forestry literature, that seeks to maintain or enhance forest condition over time. We ask 1) how these conflicting paradigms have influenced patterns of forest harvesting over time and 2) whether more recent conservation-oriented policies influenced these historical harvesting patterns. We use detailed harvest data over a 47-y period and aggregated time series data that span over a century on the central coast of British Columbia, Canada to assess temporal changes in how logging is distributed among various classes of site productivity and terrain accessibility, corresponding to timber value. Most of this record shows a distinct trend of harvesting shifting over time to less productive stands, with some evidence of harvesting occurring in increasingly less accessible forests. However, stewardship-oriented policy changes enacted in the mid-1990s appear to have strongly affected these trends. This illustrates both a profit-maximizing tendency to log down the value chain when choices are unconstrained and the potential of policy choices to impose a greater stewardship ethic on harvesting behavior. National Academy of Sciences 2022-10-03 2022-10-11 /pmc/articles/PMC9564940/ /pubmed/36191184 http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2208360119 Text en Copyright © 2022 the Author(s). Published by PNAS. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This article is distributed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives License 4.0 (CC BY-NC-ND) (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Biological Sciences
Benner, Jordan
Lertzman, Ken
Policy interventions and competing management paradigms shape the long-term distribution of forest harvesting across the landscape
title Policy interventions and competing management paradigms shape the long-term distribution of forest harvesting across the landscape
title_full Policy interventions and competing management paradigms shape the long-term distribution of forest harvesting across the landscape
title_fullStr Policy interventions and competing management paradigms shape the long-term distribution of forest harvesting across the landscape
title_full_unstemmed Policy interventions and competing management paradigms shape the long-term distribution of forest harvesting across the landscape
title_short Policy interventions and competing management paradigms shape the long-term distribution of forest harvesting across the landscape
title_sort policy interventions and competing management paradigms shape the long-term distribution of forest harvesting across the landscape
topic Biological Sciences
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9564940/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36191184
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2208360119
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