4.7 Article

Case Studies of the Financial Performance of Silvopastoral Systems in Southern Queensland, Australia

Journal

FORESTS
Volume 13, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/f13020186

Keywords

livestock; agroforestry; timber production; forest management; silvicultural treatment; pasture

Categories

Funding

  1. Forest and Wood Products Australia (FWPA)
  2. Queensland Department of Agriculture and Fisheries (DAF)

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There is uncertainty regarding the future availability of hardwood timber from state-owned native forests in southern Queensland. The timber industry is increasingly relying on private native forests, which have historically been harvested or cleared without proper management. This study compares traditional forest management practices with silvopastoral systems and finds that investing in silvopastoral systems can be financially attractive. However, long payback periods and sovereign risk hinder the adoption of these systems in southern Queensland.
There is considerable uncertainty surrounding the future availability of hardwood timber from state-owned native forests in southern Queensland. The timber industry is becoming increasingly reliant on private native forests, where much is on properties primarily managed for beef cattle grazing. Historically, these forests have been periodically high-grade harvested without silvicultural treatment or cleared to increase pasture production where landholders have the right to do so. This study compares these traditional forest management practices at four case study properties against silvopastoral system alternatives. Merchantable timber, pasture and cattle production was estimated for each management scenario with a native forest silvicultural treatment response model. The net present value of each scenario was estimated over a 20-year management period. For all case study properties, the worst-performing forest management scenario was to clear forest for grazing. Investment in silvopastoral systems in southern Queensland was found to be financially attractive, particularly when silvicultural treatments were implemented in year zero to increase timber production. Silvicultural treatments increased the mean annual increment of merchantable timber over 20 years by an average of 1.3 m(3)/ha/year relative to the scenario where no management was performed in year zero. Forest management scenarios with silvicultural treatments had better financial performance than scenarios without silvicultural treatment. However, long payback periods and sovereign risk are serious impediments to silvopastoral system adoption in southern Queensland. If these concerns can be overcome, private native forests have the potential to be sustainably managed to improve the financial performance of farms, improve regional employment and income generation, supply Queensland's future hardwood timber needs, and increase carbon sequestration and biodiversity conservation on private land.

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