Difference between revisions of "United States-Boise-Payette-Sawtooth National Forest Plan"

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|Has working group theme=Models & techniques
 
|Has working group theme=Models & techniques
 
|Has website=http://www.fs.usda.gov/main/sawtooth/landmanagement/planning
 
|Has website=http://www.fs.usda.gov/main/sawtooth/landmanagement/planning
 +
|Has description=National forests are required to update their management plans every 10–15 years. The adjacent Boise, Payette, and Sawtooth National Forests in southern Idaho and northern Utah decided to update their plans together in order to better understand larger landscape issues and to address their many common concerns more efficiently. National forest plans do not make specific decisions about timber harvesting or other activities, but rather have been described as more akin to land use zoning in determining overall rules and activities appropriate for certain areas. As part of planning, forests are required to calculate an “Allowable Sale Quantity” (ASQ) of timber, which led the forest to use Spectrum, a linear optimization DSS developed by the Forest Service. The Forests soon realized that the basic forest growth and harvesting model could be expanded to help evaluate other effects of the different possible management alternatives. The model was expanded to include 120 vegetation classes (combinations of vegetation types, successional stages, and canopy closures) that were distributed across seven land allocation zones over 50 years for each of seven broad management alternatives. To get a more detailed view of the feasibility of these alternatives, the RELM DSS was used to take these Spectrum outputs and distribute them further down to 6th field watersheds (about 200 per forest). Because fire is an important influence in the region that was not explicitly modeled by Spectrum and because there was some suspicion of inherent biases in optimization modeling, a parallel modeling exercise using the VDDT DSS was also undertaken near the end of the planning process. (VDDT is a state-transition simulation model that had also been used to model the unforested parts of the planning area).
 
}}
 
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Revision as of 09:48, 14 July 2013

Case

Has flag green
Has full name Boise-Payette-Sawtooth National Forest Plan
Has country United States
Has location Idaho
Has responsible organisation USDA Forest Service
Has type of owner organization national administration
Has related DSS VDDT-Path
Has start date 1997
Has end date 2003
Has DSS development stage use
Has decision stage design, choice
Has temporal scale Long term (strategic), Medium term (tactical)
Has spatial context Spatial with neighbourhood interrelations, Spatial with no neighbourhood interrelations
Has spatial scale Forest level, Regional/national level
Has decision making dimension More than one decision maker/stakeholder
Has objectives dimension Multiple objectives
Has goods and services dimension Market wood products, Non-market services
Has working group theme Models & techniques
Has website http://www.fs.usda.gov/main/sawtooth/landmanagement/planning
Has description National forests are required to update their management plans every 10–15 years. The adjacent Boise, Payette, and Sawtooth National Forests in southern Idaho and northern Utah decided to update their plans together in order to better understand larger landscape issues and to address their many common concerns more efficiently. National forest plans do not make specific decisions about timber harvesting or other activities, but rather have been described as more akin to land use zoning in determining overall rules and activities appropriate for certain areas. As part of planning, forests are required to calculate an “Allowable Sale Quantity” (ASQ) of timber, which led the forest to use Spectrum, a linear optimization DSS developed by the Forest Service. The Forests soon realized that the basic forest growth and harvesting model could be expanded to help evaluate other effects of the different possible management alternatives. The model was expanded to include 120 vegetation classes (combinations of vegetation types, successional stages, and canopy closures) that were distributed across seven land allocation zones over 50 years for each of seven broad management alternatives. To get a more detailed view of the feasibility of these alternatives, the RELM DSS was used to take these Spectrum outputs and distribute them further down to 6th field watersheds (about 200 per forest). Because fire is an important influence in the region that was not explicitly modeled by Spectrum and because there was some suspicion of inherent biases in optimization modeling, a parallel modeling exercise using the VDDT DSS was also undertaken near the end of the planning process. (VDDT is a state-transition simulation model that had also been used to model the unforested parts of the planning area).
Has reference
Has wiki contact person
Has wiki contact e-mail
Has DSS development
Has decision support techniques
Has knowledge management processes
Has support for social participation