Mountain forests provide not only wood as a raw material but also numerous ecosystem services, such as protection against natural hazards, recreation and carbon sequestration, and they are important hosts for biodiversity. To manage these forests efficiently and in a target-oriented manner, both forest management planning and efficient harvesting operations are required. However, in most cases these two aspects are handled independently from each other.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEfficient forest operations are required for the provision of biodiversity and numerous ecosystem services, such as wood production, carbon sequestration, protection against natural hazards and recreation. In numerous countries, under difficult terrain conditions, the costs of forest management and harvesting are not covered by timber revenue. One possible option to increase the cost-effectiveness of the forestry sector is the application of state-of-the-art harvesting and extraction techniques, so-called best suitable harvesting methods.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCable-based technologies are the backbone for logistics of timber or construction material on impassable terrain. In Central Europe, the use of standing skylines with pre-stressed, both-sided fixed-anchor cables and multi-span configurations with internal intermediate supports is common. To ensure a safe and cost-effective set-up for cable road operations, it is essential to identify and compute the properties of the skyline (e.
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