New reports on productivity of motor-manual forest fuel reduction treatments

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Forest fuel reduction treatments are conducted at a stand level in the wildland–urban interface to reduce the potential for catastrophic loss caused by wildfire.

FPI 27mai22 2Given the considerable expense of conducting these fuel treatments, fuels managers want to better understand the productivity and cost of commonly applied fuel treatments in order to prescribe cost-effective treatment techniques. Due to the limited data available and the myriad combinations of fuel treatment options and equipment types used in a diverse range of ecosystems, cost projections for fuel treatments are difficult to forecast reliably.

Two new reports have recently been published on the topic. The first, Motor-Manual Forest Fuel Reduction Treatment and Silviculture Operations: A Summary of Productivity Studies, discusses fundamental principles of productivity studies, and provides a summary of motor-manual productivity studies that have been conducted in timber silviculture operations, forest fuel reduction treatments, and other manual forestry operations.

The second report, Productivity of Motor-Manual Forest Fuel Reduction Treatment Operations: Developing a User-Friendly Data Collection Protocol, presents a simplified data collection protocol for collecting data across a broader range of ecosites. The streamlined and simplified process presented includes a user-friendly format for in-field data collection by field crew supervisors.

Both reports are available for viewing or downloading from FPInnovations’ online research library.

For more information on the topic, contact the reports’ author, This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it., Senior Researcher in FPInnovations’ Wildfire Operations group.


Source: FPInnovations