K. Ohman et Lo. Eriksson, THE CORE AREA CONCEPT IN FORMING CONTIGUOUS AREAS FOR LONG-TERM FOREST PLANNING, Canadian journal of forest research (Print), 28(7), 1998, pp. 1032-1039
The core area concept is proposed as a criterion promoting the formati
on of contiguous areas of old growth over time in the landscape. Core
area is defined as the area of old forest, free of edge effects, where
the edge effect is a function of the state of the surrounding habitat
. The core area measure is evaluated by solving a long-range planning
problem for a landscape consisting of 200 stands, where the net presen
t value of forest management is maximized under the constraint of a ce
rtain amount of core area in the landscape over a time horizon of 100
years. Simulated annealing is used as the solution technique. The resu
lts indicate that the degree to which stands are clustered depends on
the amount of core area demanded and the extent of the edge width. The
amount of new core area that is allocated adjacent to existing core a
rea, indicating a continuity of core area formation, is increased with
core area demand, the minimum age of old forest, and the existence of
a U-shaped initial age structure. The cost of attaining the spatial p
atterns appears to be low compared with the cost of retaining the old
forest.