DOI: 10.3390/f17060718 ISSN: 1999-4907

Harvester Productivity and Economic Feasibility in Small-Scale Mediterranean Conifer Stands

Antonio Zumbo, Andrea R. Proto, Salvatore F. Papandrea

In Mediterranean small-scale forestry, the adoption of highly mechanized CTL systems remains limited by fragmented forest lots, variable stand conditions, and high machine costs. This case study evaluated the operational productivity and economic feasibility of harvester-based felling and processing in two Mediterranean conifer stands in Southern Italy. A harvester was monitored in Calabrian pine and silver fir stands using a time-motion approach. Processing represented the dominant productive phase, while moving accounted for about one-third of productive machine time. Under the observed site conditions, the Calabrian pine showed higher gross productivity and lower unit time consumption than silver fir. The economic analysis indicated that feasibility was strongly dependent on gross productivity, benchmark motor-manual costs, and harvested lot volume, with more favourable break-even conditions in Calabrian pine.

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