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The advancement of mechanization in forestry has increased productivity in the forestry sector, bringing positive and negative impacts that require a deeper understanding for sustainable forest management. This study aimed to apply a simplified instrument for assessing damage and environmental impacts in forest harvesting of commercial eucalyptus p...
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... interaction networks created are presented in the Supplementary Materials ( Figures S1-S4), cited at the end of this article. Figure 2 shows an example of one of the interaction networks developed in the study: ...
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... of these primary impacts is also related to secondary and tertiary impacts, demonstrating that this activity presents a greater complexity of variables to be monitored within the forest harvesting process. All interaction networks created are presented in the supplementary material ( Figure S1, Figure S2, Figure S3 and Figure S4), cited at the end of this article. Figure 2 shows an example of one of the interaction networks developed in the study: The largest share of impacts on the physical environment was in the network of interactions designed for road opening and maintenance. ...
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... interaction networks created are presented in the supplementary material ( Figure S1, Figure S2, Figure S3 and Figure S4), cited at the end of this article. Figure 2 shows an example of one of the interaction networks developed in the study: The largest share of impacts on the physical environment was in the network of interactions designed for road opening and maintenance. The timber loading network had the highest percentage of impacts on the biotic environment, and the timber storage and drying network had the highest percentage of impacts on the anthropic environment (Figures 3-5). ...
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... the harvesting phases are mechanized, manpower is used to control machines such as harvesters and forwarders, as well as trucks and tractors, as well as OHS teams and harvesting supervisors present in the forestry module (Figure 2). ...
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... environmental impacts are present in more than one interaction network, but what differentiates them is the scale, intensity and magnitude of occurrence for each operation, as well as the level of change they will cause in the physical, biotic or anthropic environment. machines such as harvesters and forwarders, as well as trucks and tractors, as well as OHS teams and harvesting supervisors present in the forestry module (Figure 2). ...
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... hiring of labor is lower compared to semi-mechanized or manual harvesting, and this characteristic is reflected in the impact assessment matrices when scoring the scale and magnitude of the beneficial impact. Figures 3-5 show the distribution of impacts in each environment according to each of the five networks developed: machines such as harvesters and forwarders, as well as trucks and tractors, as well as OHS teams and harvesting supervisors present in the forestry module (Figure 2). ...