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Regional multiresource models in a national framework
Authors:Linda A. Joyce  Thomas W. Hoekstra  Ralph J. Alig
Affiliation:(1) Rocky Mountain Forest and Range Experiment Station, 240 West Prospect Street, 80526 Fort Collins, Colorado, USA;(2) Forestry Sciences Lab, Southeastern Forest Experiment Station, 3041 Cornwallis Road, 27709 Research Triangle Park, North Carolina, USA
Abstract:The design and integration of models projecting the effects of management on environmental systems is one step in the environmental planning process. Interactions between resources produced on the same unit of land under current and future management can be examined only when assumptions and processes of these dynamic environmental systems are quantified. Multiresource interaction models have generally been large and cumbersome while also suffering from an inadequate amount of detail. This article presents a conceptual framework for integrating individual resource models to project multiresource interactions at a regional scale. Land management impact projections require common definitions of the total land base and common definitions of management activities applied to the same land unit. A case example focusing on the resources of timber, forage, wildlife, fish, and water for the southern United States is presented.
Keywords:Multiresource  Models  National assessments  Timber  Forage  Range  Wildlife  Fish  Water  Southern United States
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