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1 April 2014 Productivity of Acacia and Eucalypt Plantations in Southeast Asia. 2. Trends and Variations
C.E. Harwood, E.K.S. Nambiar
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Abstract

Productivity of commercial acacia and eucalypts plantations in Southeast Asia was analysed using company inventory data to assess growth rates and their variation and trends. Growth rates of Acacia mangium in Sumatra, Indonesia ranged between 22 and 35 m3/ha/yr before impacted by fungal disease, which reduced growth to 15 m3/ha/yr or lower. The first rotation of Eucalyptus pellita, which replaced A. mangium in Sumatra, produced 16–18 m3/ha/yr. In south Vietnam, growth of acacia hybrid in the second rotation averaged 23 m3/ha/yr and generally exceeded that of acacia plantations in the first rotation. Growth of acacia hybrid in north Vietnam was slower, at 18 m3/ha/yr. Eucalypts in China grew at between 15 to 28 m3 ha/yr. Growth rates were highly variable spatially within estates managed by individual companies for both eucalypts and acacias. Understanding this variation spatially and in time is critical for developing holistic management and better targeting of research efforts.

C.E. Harwood and E.K.S. Nambiar "Productivity of Acacia and Eucalypt Plantations in Southeast Asia. 2. Trends and Variations," International Forestry Review 16(2), 249-260, (1 April 2014). https://doi.org/10.1505/146554814811724766
Published: 1 April 2014
KEYWORDS
Acacia
Eucalyptus
plantation productivity
Southeast Asia
sustainability
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