Estimated Impacts of Emerald Ash Borer on Ash Timber Supply in Texas, USA

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Curtis L VanderSchaaf ◽  
T Eric McConnell ◽  
Shaun M Tanger

Abstract We estimated annual timber growth, removals, and mortalities under various scenarios of the spread of emerald ash borer (Agrilus planipennis Fairmaire; EAB) within Texas. Future annual ash EAB-induced mortalities were simulated to follow either a normal or beta distribution over 25, 50, or 75 years, with five percent of the original inventory remaining at the conclusion of each projection. Discounted present values of future ash growth, harvests, mortalities, salvage, and beginning and ending annual inventories were calculated, and economic impacts to timber receipts were determined from average real prices. The present net effects of timber product output, mortalities, and salvage resulted in benefits ranging from lows of (delivered/stumpage) $37.6/$12.8 million over 25 years when assuming a normal distribution to highs of $247.8/$97.2 million over 75 years under a beta distribution. Salvage intensity exceeded mortality accumulation by a factor of at least 2.00. Regardless of length chosen, mortality that skewed toward later years led to lower discounted volumes and less value lost to EAB. Results were sensitive to discount rate selection (constant, increasing, distributional) with the constant and increasing rates having the most similar results. Longer time horizons led to far smaller losses of overall economic returns allowing more typical harvest management despite EAB.

2019 ◽  
Vol 112 (6) ◽  
pp. 2751-2760 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas Eric McConnell ◽  
Curtis L VanderSchaaf ◽  
Shaun M Tanger

Abstract The emerald ash borer (EAB) Agrilus planipennis (Fairmaire, Coleoptera: Buprestidae) will have untold impacts on the contributions hardwood timber products provide Louisiana’s economy. We modeled a scenario where ash mortality was assumed to follow a PERT-Beta distribution to kill essentially all Louisiana ash within 25 yr. Future ash mortality volumes were discounted to the present and valued using market prices to estimate a present effect on timber receipts. Assuming the dead timber would have otherwise been typical trees of average quality, stumpage was presently valued at US$1.57 million, with deliveries totaling US$3.48 million. A salvage arrangement using the double declining balance method coupled with a second PERT-Beta distribution centered upon Louisiana’s current 2.84% harvest-to-inventory proportion depreciated the timber’s value monthly over 1 yr. Following salvage, average stumpage revenue declined −US$1.54 million, mill deliveries fell −US$3.41 million, whereas state timber severance tax collections declined by −US$46,800. The value added and employment direct effects to Louisiana’s economy averaged −US$882,400 and −41.6 jobs, respectively. The multiplier effects of these losses emanating from the timber industry resulted in additional declines averaging −US$2.56 million in value added and −45.6 jobs across the state economy on the drop in output of −US$4.51 million. The total economic effects summed to −US$3.44 million in value added and −87.1 jobs on output declines of −US$9.46 million.


1988 ◽  
Author(s):  
James E. Blyth ◽  
Anthony K. Weatherspoon ◽  
W. Brad Smith

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