Litcius/Paper detail

Towards effective reforestation: growth and commercial value of four commonly planted tropical timber species on infertile soils in Panama

Katherine Sinacore, E. García, Theodore E. Howard, Michiel van Breugel, Omar R. López, Alex Finkral, Jefferson S. Hall

2022New Forests17 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Finding suitable tree species that not only grow well on nutrient poor soils but are also safe financial investments is one of the major obstacles to successful reforestation efforts in the tropics. Our study compared the financial viability and growth of valuable timber species in monocultures and mixtures on infertile soils. Our work shows the extraordinary growth in volume and value of Dalbergia retusa and Terminalia amazonia while underscoring the poor financial viability of Tectona grandis and Pachira quinata , all commonly planted timber species in Panama and much of Central and South America. Using Bayesian statistics, our predictions show that T. amazonia monocultures could reach nearly 200 m 3 ha −1 of merchantable volume after 30 years compared to the ~ 40 m 3 ha −1 that T. grandis could accumulate in the same time frame. While D. retusa monocultures did not have the highest predicted merchantable volumes of all the species, it did have the highest predicted net present value (NPV), with a predicted mean NPV of > US$97,000 ha −1 , quadrupling the species with the next highest monoculture’s NPV, T. amazonia monocultures (~ US$20,000 ha −1 ). Our work emphasizes that reforestation can be financially viable on low nutrient soils, even in the absence of fertilization or other silvicultural manipulations, if species selection and site are carefully considered and matched.

Topics & Concepts

MonocultureReforestationTectonaBiologyAfforestationAgroforestryTropicsPanamaForestryAgronomyEcologyBotanyGeographyConservation, Biodiversity, and Resource ManagementForest ecology and managementEcology and Vegetation Dynamics Studies