Aspen Bibliography
A model for recognizing forestwide risk in timber management scheduling.
Document Type
Article
Journal/Book Title/Conference
Forest Science
Volume
33
Issue
2
First Page
268
Last Page
282
Publication Date
1987
Abstract
This paper presents one method of recognizing risk in formulating and solving timber management scheduling problems. Emphasis is given to developing a schedule for the short run that will perform well over a range of plausible future conditions. The method merges linear programming formulations for specific scenarios describing the future. Separate schedules are determined for each scenario with the added requirement that all of the schedules are identical for the short run. This formulation is shown to be a simplified form of the multistage recourse problem as described by Dantzig (1963). The solution technique developed by Hoganson and Rose (1984) is proposed as a possible solution technique. This technique decomposes the problem into subproblems of manageable size. The subproblems are simply decision-tree problems describing options for individual stand types, with specific branches of the trees representing stochastic elements of the problem. The key to the solution process is the interpretation and predictability of the key dual variables of the formulation. A large-scale example is given, and results are examined to consider how methods might be refined to better deal with uncertainty. For. Sci. 33(2):268-282.
Recommended Citation
Hogason, H. M. and Rose, D. M. 1987. A model for recognizing forestwide risk in timber management scheduling. Forest Science. 33 (2): 268-282.