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Adrian, John L., Jr.; Duffy, Patricia A.; Lloyd, Michael. |
The competitive position of three warm-season turf species commonly grown in the South (bermudagrass, centipedegrass, and zoysiagrass) is evaluated for a farm with 100 acres available to allocate to turfgrass-sod production. A multiperiod linear programming model is used to determine optimal mixes of grasses and resulting net returns for a seven-year planning horizon. Within current observable price ranges, variation in the prices of the different grasses has little impact on the profit-maximizing combination of grasses. Bermudagrass, with the shorter production cycle and positive influence on cash flow, dominates the higher-valued, longer-production-cycle alternative grasses. Availability of initial money capital from internal sources does not alter the... |
Tipo: Journal Article |
Palavras-chave: Competitive position; Turfgrass; Multiperiod modeling; Profitability; Net returns; Agribusiness; Production Economics. |
Ano: 1995 |
URL: http://purl.umn.edu/90363 |
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