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Productivity, efficiency and costs of manual saw and electric shear pruning operations in Pinus elliottii stands of Mpumalanga, South Africa

Timber pruning mechanization has received little attention in South Africa. The objective of this study was to compare the productivity, efficiency and the costs of using manual saws and electric shears in low pruning operations. The study was conducted in Pinus elliottii forest stands in Mpumalanga...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:International journal of forest engineering 2017-09, Vol.28 (3), p.169-175
Main Authors: Shekwa, Anton, Chirwa, Paxie, Ngulube, Elisha, Ghebremariam, Tsedal
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Timber pruning mechanization has received little attention in South Africa. The objective of this study was to compare the productivity, efficiency and the costs of using manual saws and electric shears in low pruning operations. The study was conducted in Pinus elliottii forest stands in Mpumalanga, South Africa. Manual saw and electric shear pruning treatments were used in 2 m pruning lifts. A work study approach using a factorial experiment in an unbalanced randomized block design environment was used in this study. A total of 656 pruning cycles were observed for manual saw and 852 for electric shear pruning. Stepwise and subsets regression analyses were applied to enable best subsets selection using the R 2 adj. and Mallow's Cp criteria. Multiple regression analyses were used to determine pruning time and productivity. Mean manual saw pruning productivity (426 trees day −1 ) was a function of number of branches and branch thickness while mean electric shear pruning productivity (447 trees day −1 ) was estimated by the number of branches, branch thickness, tree height, and ground slope. Generally, the observed mean values were higher than predicted ones for both treatments and productivity of manual saws was 4.7% lesser than that of electric shears. Equipment performance was not significantly (t = 0.57; p > 0.05) different between treatments. The cost tree −1 for shears was US$.01 higher than that for manual saws. In essence, manual saws were equally cost effective with plausible pruning quality gains. Future studies should focus more on the economics of pruning mechanization in timber plantations.
ISSN:1494-2119
1913-2220
DOI:10.1080/14942119.2017.1337462