Planning cost-effective operational forest inventories
Karppinen, S., Ene, L., Engberg Sundström, L., & Karvanen, J. (2024). Planning cost-effective operational forest inventories. Biometrics, 80(3), Article ujae104. https://doi.org/10.1093/biomtc/ujae104
Published in
BiometricsDate
2024Copyright
© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The International Biometric Society
We address a Bayesian two-stage decision problem in operational forestry where the inner stage considers scheduling the harvesting to fulfill demand targets and the outer stage considers selecting the accuracy of pre-harvest inventories that are used to estimate the timber volumes of the forest tracts. The higher accuracy of the inventory enables better scheduling decisions but also implies higher costs. We focus on the outer stage, which we formulate as a maximization of the posterior value of the inventory decision under a budget constraint. The posterior value depends on the solution to the inner stage problem and its computation is analytically intractable, featuring an NP-hard binary optimization problem within a high-dimensional integral. In particular, the binary optimization problem is a special case of a generalized quadratic assignment problem. We present a practical method that solves the outer stage problem with an approximation which combines Monte Carlo sampling with a greedy, randomized method for the binary optimization problem. We derive inventory decisions for a dataset of 100 Swedish forest tracts across a range of inventory budgets and estimate the value of the information to be obtained.
...
Publisher
Oxford University PressISSN Search the Publication Forum
0006-341XKeywords
Publication in research information system
https://converis.jyu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/243227549
Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
Related funder(s)
Peter Wallenberg FoundationFunding program(s)
OthersAdditional information about funding
The work has been funded by Peter Wallenberg Foundation (grant number 2022.0008). The research is related to the thematic research area DEMO (Decision Analytics utilizing Causal Models and Multiobjective Optimization) of the University of Jyväskylä.License
Related items
Showing items with similar title or keywords.
-
Value of information in multiple criteria decision making : an application to forest conservation
Eyvindson, Kyle; Hakanen, Jussi; Mönkkönen, Mikko; Juutinen, Artti; Karvanen, Juha (Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2019)Developing environmental conservation plans involves assessing trade-offs between the benefits and costs of conservation. The benefits of conservation can be established with ecological inventories or estimated based on ... -
Flexible data driven inventory management with interactive multiobjective lot size optimization
Heikkinen, Risto; Sipilä, Juha; Ojalehto, Vesa; Miettinen, Kaisa (Inderscience Publishers, 2023)We study data-driven decision support and formalise a path from data to decision making. We focus on lot sizing in inventory management with stochastic demand and propose an interactive multi-objective optimisation approach. ... -
The effectiveness of forest certifications in protecting biodiversity
Järvinen, Essi (2024)Luonnon monimuotoisuus sisältää koko maapallon elämän monimuotoisuuden geneettiseltä tasolta ekosysteemeihin ja maisemiin. Luonnon monimuotoisuus vähenee, ja suurin syy sille on ilmastonmuutoksen ohella elinympäristöjen ... -
Traits mediate niches and co‐occurrences of forest beetles in ways that differ among bioclimatic regions
Burner, Ryan C.; Stephan, Jörg G.; Drag, Lukas; Birkemoe, Tone; Muller, Jörg; Snäll, Tord; Ovaskainen, Otso; Potterf, Mária; Siitonen, Juha; Skarpaas, Olav; Doerfler, Inken; Gossner, Martin M.; Schall, Peter; Weisser, Wolfgang W.; Sverdrup‐Thygeson, Anne (Wiley-Blackwell, 2021)Aim The aim of this study was to investigate the role of traits in beetle community assembly and test for consistency in these effects among several bioclimatic regions. We asked (1) whether traits predicted species’ ... -
Movement of forest‐dependent dung beetles through riparian buffers in Bornean oil palm plantations
Gray, Ross E., J.; Rodriguez, Luisa, F.; Lewis, Owen, T.; Chung, Arthur Y., C.; Ovaskainen, Otso; Slade, Eleanor, M. (Wiley, 2022)1. Fragmentation of tropical forests is increasing globally, with negative impacts for biodiversity. In Southeast Asia, expansion of oil palm agriculture has caused widespread deforestation, forest degradation, and ...