333 results
Search Results
2. Mechanisms and predictors of ecological change in managed forests: A selection of papers from the second international conference on biodiversity in forest ecosystems and landscapes.
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Oxbrough, Anne, Irwin, Sandra, Wilson, Mark, and O’Halloran, John
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ECOLOGICAL forecasting ,BIODIVERSITY ,FOREST ecology ,FOREST policy ,FOREST management ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy - Abstract
Abstract: Maintaining biodiversity is a key goal of global forest policy which promotes ecosystem health and resilience in the face of changing land use and climate. Sustainable management of forest ecosystems is essential to the social and economic services that forests provide, is an important component of the environmental policies of national governments, and is a specific focus of the Conventional on Biological Diversity. Sustainable forest management supports the maintenance and enhancement of biodiversity, and relies on evidence based research to underpin associated policies and practices. Studies that take a focussed approach are particularly helpful in this regard where they identify mechanisms of ecological change in forest habitats, and predictors appropriate to determining the impact of management practices. Observational research can suggest likely mechanisms for ecological change, which can be tested and confirmed through experimental research. Predictors based on long-term research, on the mechanisms underlying ecological relationships, or on modelling approaches can be used to infer information about existing forests and to forecast future trends. This special issue presents a selection of papers which were first presented at the second international IUFRO conference on biodiversity in forest ecosystems and landscapes at University College Cork, Ireland in August 2012. The aim of this conference series is to ‘share knowledge, discuss new trends, reflect on future directions in biodiversity management for sustainable forestry, and provide a stronger scientific basis for biodiversity management in forest landscapes in the light of climate change’. The selected papers exemplify the use of observational and experimental approaches to identify mechanisms of ecological change in forests, and the use of indicators to predict current and future patterns of biodiversity. Trends in forest biodiversity were examined and discussed, drawing on what we know about forests to reconstruct ancient forested landscapes and to identify strategies for the management of forests into the future. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2014
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3. Application of Conservation Biology Research to Management
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Flaspohler, David J., Bub, Brian R., and Kaplin, Beth A.
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- 2000
4. Amazon, P&G Fall Short on Environmental Paper Goals, Group Says.
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Sirtori-Cortina, Daniela
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FOREST management ,FOREST protection ,SUSTAINABILITY ,FOREST surveys ,BIODIVERSITY conservation - Abstract
P&G, which received a D, released a bamboo toilet paper product this year, which the advocacy group said is a "step in the right direction." (Bloomberg) -- Companies from Procter & Gamble Co. to Walmart Inc. are lagging in efforts to mitigate environmental impact from the paper products they make and sell, according to a new report from an advocacy group. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2022
5. Forest Management and Biodiversity Conservation: Introduction to the Special Issue.
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Dinca, Lucian and Zhiyanski, Miglena
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FOREST management ,BIODIVERSITY conservation ,FOREST biodiversity ,URBAN forestry ,ECOSYSTEM services ,GENOTYPE-environment interaction ,MOUNTAIN ecology ,GREEN infrastructure - Abstract
These research articles are highly varied and can be classified into eight sub-domains that are representative of the chosen domain: natural and human disturbances, genetics, site conditions, tropical forest, peri-urban forest, forest soils, forest reserves, and mountain ecosystems (Figure 2). The sustainable and regular supply of ecosystem services by forests requires excellent knowledge of the functional and biological diversity in these complex ecosystems [[7], [9]]. In this study, natural forests were the most positively rated type of forest, while the managed ones were the least positively rated, revealing an important trend among the participants, and human intervention was not the foremost landscape-related factor affecting this perception. Forest ecosystems contribute to human wellbeing and the economy through the complex ecosystem services they provide [[1], [3], [5]]. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2023
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6. When xylarium and herbarium meet: linking Tervuren xylarium wood samples with their herbarium specimens at Meise Botanic Garden
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Henry Engledow, Tom De Mil, Cecile De Troyer, Piet Stoffelen, Wannes Hubau, Hans Beeckman, Victor Deklerck, Samuel Vanden Abeele, and Steven B. Janssens
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0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,Tervuren ,QH301-705.5 ,Forest management ,Biodiversity & Conservation ,wood specimens ,Context (language use) ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,03 medical and health sciences ,Royal Museum for Central Africa ,Systematics ,Forest ecology ,Biology (General) ,Plantae ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,herbarium ,Science & Technology ,Central Africa ,Ecology ,Tervuren Wood Collection ,databasing ,Central africa ,xylarium ,Data Paper (Biosciences) ,Archaeology ,Metadata ,Reference data ,030104 developmental biology ,Herbarium ,Geography ,Earth and Environmental Sciences ,Africa ,Wood Collection ,Meise Botan ,Biodiversity Conservation ,Meise Botanic Garden ,Identification (biology) ,Catalogues and Checklists ,Life Sciences & Biomedicine - Abstract
BACKGROUND: The current data paper aims to interlink the African plant collections of the Meise Botanic Garden Herbarium (BR) and the Royal Museum for Central Africa Xylarium (Tw). Complementing both collections strengthens the reference value of each institutional collection, as more complete metadata are made available and it enables increased quality control for the identification of wood specimens. Furthermore, the renewed connection enables the linking of available wood trait data with data on phenology, leaf morphology or even molecular information for many tree species, allowing assessments of performance of individual trees. In addition to studies at the interspecific level, comparisons at the intraspecific level become possible, which could lead to important new insights into resilience to and impact of global change, as well as biodiversity conservation or forest management of Central African forest ecosystems. NEW INFORMATION: By interlinking the Tervuren Xylarium Wood database with the recently digitised herbarium of Meise Botanic Garden, we were able to establish a link between 6,621 xylarium and 9,641 herbarium records for 6,953 plant specimens. Both institutional databases were complemented with reliable specimen metadata. The Tervuren xylarium now profits from taxonomic revisions made by botanists at Meise Botanic Garden and a list of phenotypical features for woody African species can be extended with wood anatomical descriptors. New metadata from the Tw xylarium records were used to add the country of collection to 50 linked BR herbarium specimens for which this information was missing. Furthermore, metadata available from the labels on digitised BR herbarium specimens was used to update Tw xylarium records with the date of collection (817 records), collection locality (698 records), coordinates (482 records) and altitude (817 records). In conclusion, we created a reference database with reliable botanic identities which can be used in a range of studies, such as modelling analyses, community assessments or trait analyses, all framed in a spatiotemporal context. Furthermore, the linked collections hold historical reference data and specimens that can be studied in the context of global changes. ispartof: BIODIVERSITY DATA JOURNAL vol:9 ispartof: location:Bulgaria status: published
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- 2021
7. Prototype Biodiversity Digital Twin: Forest Biodiversity Dynamics.
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Afsar, Bekir, Eyvindson, Kyle, Rossi, Tuomas, Versluijs, Martijn, and Ovaskainen, Otso
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FOREST biodiversity ,BIODIVERSITY ,DIGITAL twins ,VIRTUAL design ,FOREST management - Abstract
Forests are crucial in supporting biodiversity and providing ecosystem services. Understanding forest biodiversity dynamics under different management strategies and climate change scenarios is essential for effective conservation and management. This paper introduces the Forest Biodiversity Dynamics Prototype Digital Twin (pDT), integrating forest and biodiversity models to predict the effects of management options on forest ecosystems. The primary objective is to identify optimal management strategies that promote biodiversity, focusing on conservation and adaptation to different climate conditions. We start with the case of Finnish forests and bird species and plan to expand to include more European countries and a variety of species as the pDT is further developed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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8. Environmental problems and biodiversity conservation through silviculture in Sri Lanka: Current state, struggles and cooperation with Czech foresters - A review.
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SURAWEERA, CHANNA, GALLO, JOSEF, VACEK, STANISLAV, and BALÁŠ, MARTIN
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TROPICAL ecosystems ,FOREST management ,BIODIVERSITY conservation ,FORESTS & forestry ,INTERNATIONAL cooperation - Abstract
Sri Lanka, as a developing tropical country, faces serious environmental challenges. Forests, as important ecosystems of Sri Lanka, are under pressure from intensive human activities and climate change. Invasive species represent a great hazard to autochthonous plant species and ecosystems, which are, at the same time, hosts to extraordinarily high biodiversity, of which a high percentage is endemic. In this paper, we reviewed the most challenging environmental problems of Sri Lanka and suggested the improvement of a number of them through silvicultural measures and cooperation with international experts, namely Czech foresters. We also reviewed the main forest biomes and addressed the specific problems and management of different forest types. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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9. Forest environmental frontiers around the globe: Old patterns and new trends in forest governance.
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Winkel, Georg, Sotirov, Metodi, and Moseley, Cassandra
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FOREST biodiversity ,CLIMATE change mitigation ,ENVIRONMENTAL justice ,FOREST conservation ,BIODIVERSITY conservation ,FOREST management ,CONTINENTS - Abstract
Forests are subject to a huge variety of often competing socio-economic demands and environmental change. This paper assesses the related conflicts that occur along what we label to be a "Global Forest Environmental Frontier". Assessing 11 contributions to a special issue on the same topic, it summarizes the main contents of these papers and concludes with an assessment of major trends. The contributions to the special issue take both a regional and topic-related approach, assessing forest environmental conflicts on all five forested continents and investigating issues such as forest biodiversity conservation, climate change adaptation and mitigation, environmental justice and equity, development, and forest management and conservation discourses. Taken together, they provide an overview on the multiple facets of the Global Forest Environmental Frontier, but also identify some shared patterns and trajectories, which are outlined at the end of this paper. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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10. Reconnecting humans with nature: a nature‐based participatory approach for the enhancement of biodiversity knowledge in urban area of West Bengal, India.
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Ghosal, Somnath, Majumdar, Aloke, and Ruj, Chhanda
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URBAN biodiversity ,NON-timber forest products ,CITIES & towns ,FOREST conservation ,BIODIVERSITY ,FOREST management - Abstract
As it is known that "reconnecting to nature" is essential for sustainability, there are few studies on why reconnecting humans to nature is essential and how it can be accomplished. This study is aimed at finding innovative, yet sustainable ways to reconnect people with nature. The objective of the paper is to enhance the biodiversity knowledge of local residents through conservation of non-timber forest products (NTFPs). In the study, urban respondents' knowledge about biodiversity with particular reference to non-timber forest products (NTFPs) was analysed for the first time. To achieve the objective of this study, participatory appraisal, one-on-one interviews, dual moderator focus groups, ethnographic field research, and semi-structured questionnaire were used. Plant name boards with local names and their NTFP values for the selected species were also installed. Results suggest that NTFP-producing species played a vital role in making people interested in biodiversity. It can be considered as one of the innovative ways to improve surrounding biodiversity, for further enhancing biodiversity knowledge, based on archival study and local community's knowledge about NTFP producing species, NTFPs plantation also done across the study area like parks, roadside, open space. This paper also explored how this study could contribute to the formulation of policies in terms of creating various urban green covers in Indian cities, following the strategies of joint forest management, social forestry, and agroforestry. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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11. Agroforestry landscapes and global change: landscape ecology tools for management and conservation.
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Pastur, Guillermo, Andrieu, Emilie, Iverson, Louis, and Peri, Pablo
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AGROFORESTRY ,LANDSCAPE ecology ,AGROFORESTRY systems ,LANDSCAPES ,FOREST management ,BIODIVERSITY conservation - Abstract
Forest ecosystems are impacted by multiple uses under the influence of global drivers, and where landscape ecology tools may substantially facilitate the management and conservation of the agroforestry ecosystems. The use of landscape ecology tools was described in the eight papers of the present special issue, including changes in forested landscapes due to agricultural and forestry activities, landscape changes due to recent intensification of agriculture, and the impacts of agroforestry as compared to natural forest ecosystems. Landscape ecology can improve the economic, environmental and social values of agroforestry, and this knowledge should help to develop new management alternatives for agroforestry. We believe that these papers will inform management at the landscape level, especially in agroforestry landscapes, offering new tools for management and conservation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2012
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12. BIODIVERSITY IN THE SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT GOALS.
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DINCULESCU, CORINA
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BIODIVERSITY conservation ,ECONOMIC development ,PROTECTED areas ,FOREST management ,ENVIRONMENTAL protection - Abstract
Biodiversity is influenced by the process of economic development, between the two there is a causal relationship - when development does not respect the environment, biodiversity experiences negative transformations. The EU Biodiversity Strategy 2030, which derives from the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, calls for member states to step up their conservation efforts to protect 30% of Europe's land and marine area by 2030 (of which 10% will have to be strictly protected). Although Europe already has more protected areas than any other continent (mainly through the Natura 2000 Network) and among the highest proportions of its area covered by protected areas, the current network of protected sites is not large enough to protect biodiversity. This paper proposes an analysis of the significant aspects of biodiversity in Romania, based on statistical data, in the context of the sustainable development goals. Evaluating public data sources, national concerns in the field of environmental protection, respectively biodiversity, are highlighted, through the analysis of specific indicators, through which the progress made in achieving the goals of the 2030 Agenda is evaluated: protected areas, conservation and protection of wetlands, mountain ecosystems, sustainable forest management, transition to circular economy, relation with agriculture - influences and consequences, all in a statistical approach, at national level (without neglecting, however, the European context). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
13. Economic Contribution of Forestry Sector to National Economy in Nepal.
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Bhatt, Bharat Prashad, Chhetri, Sagar Godar, Silwal, Thakur, and Poudel, Megharaj
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NON-timber forest products ,FORESTS & forestry ,ECONOMIC forecasting ,FOREST management ,FOREST products ,BIODIVERSITY conservation ,RANDOM forest algorithms - Abstract
Forests are major sources of energy, timber and non-timber forest products, medicinal and aromatic plants, hydrological functions, biodiversity conservation, and also fundamental sources of revenue collection to the nation. Studies indicate that forests could significantly enhance economic growth and create employment opportunities for local communities under intensive management. This paper aims to predict the contribution of the forest sector to the national economy. The economic facets of forestry considered in this paper are revenue generated from timber, non-timber forest products (NTFPs) and medicinal and aromatic plants (MAPs), and protected areas. The ARIMA model was used to forecast the economic contribution of the forestry sector. The study found that the total revenue generated from the selling of timber and fuelwood (USD 50.19 million) was higher than the total revenue collected from protected areas (USD 37.58 million) and NTFPs/MAPs (USD 6.9 million) in the past 15 years. The model projected that the mean revenue for the timber and fuelwood sale will USD 3.5 million for the next ten years. Similarly, the mean revenue will be generated about USD 0.5 million and USD 6.2 million from NTFPs/MAPs and protected areas, respectively, for the next ten years. The study limits to take account the in-kind use of forest products such as timber, fodder, fuelwood, etc., as used by community people within a forest users' groups. Thus, practicing sustainable forest management, enabling policy documents, establishing forest-based industries, establishing forestry nurseries, conducting agroforestry practices, and tenure security could enhance the forestry sector's economic aspects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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14. Hierarchical Analysis of Factors Determining the Impact of Forest Certification in Mexico.
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García-Montiel, Emily, Cubbage, Frederick, Rojo-Alboreca, Alberto, Morones-Esquivel, Miriam Mirelle, Lujan-Álvarez, Concepción, Montiel-Antuna, Eusebio, López-Serrano, Pablito Marcelo, Pérez-Rodríguez, Fernando, and Corral-Rivas, José Javier
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FACTOR analysis ,FOREST protection ,BIODIVERSITY conservation ,FOREST management ,FOREST productivity ,MEDICAL drainage ,BIODIVERSITY - Abstract
Forest certification is a private, voluntary and market-driven instrument designed to promote responsible forest management. This paper focused on the FSC and the NOM NMX-AA-143-SCFI-2008 schemes used in Mexico for the certification of sustainable forest management. In this paper we used the analytical hierarchical process (AHP) to study the factors that determine the main impacts of forest certification in México. A panel of 30 experts was selected as decision-makers to find which principles, criteria and indicators are considered as the most relevant while implementing forest certification. For decision-makers, the environmental principle occupied the first place with 40.26% of importance in the implementation of forest certification, followed by the social principle, and the economic principle with 32.15% and 27.59% of importance, respectively. Regarding the criteria, forest management and production, biodiversity, and forest protection were considered to be the most relevant. Regarding the indicators, the results indicated that forest certification in Mexico can have a positive impact on the existence of educational institutions, community services such as water, energy, medical services and drainage, the quality of the forest management plans, investment in forest management, machinery and equipment, environmental services, recreation, tourism, research, development and community education, planning for the conservation of biological diversity, and planning for biodiversity conservation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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15. Moving beyond land use intensity types: assessing biodiversity impacts using fuzzy thinking.
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Lindner, Jan Paul, Eberle, Ulrike, Knuepffer, Eva, and Coelho, Carla R. V.
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BIODIVERSITY ,ZONING ,LAND use ,LAND management ,FOREST management ,BIODIVERSITY conservation - Abstract
Purpose: The impact of land use on biodiversity is a topic that has received considerable attention in life cycle assessment (LCA). The methodology to assess biodiversity in LCA has been improved in the past decades. This paper contributes to this progress by building on the concept of conditions for maintained biodiversity. It describes the theory for the development of mathematical functions representing the impact of land uses and management practices on biodiversity. Methods: The method proposed here describes the impact of land use on biodiversity as a decrease in biodiversity potential, capturing the impact of management practices. The method can be applied with weighting between regions, such as ecoregions. The biodiversity potential is calculated through functions that describe not only parameters which are relevant to biodiversity, for example, deadwood in a forest, but also the relationships between those parameters. For example, maximum biodiversity would hypothetically occur when the nutrient balance is ideal and no pesticide is applied. As these relationships may not be readily quantified, we propose the use of fuzzy thinking for biodiversity assessment, using AND/OR operators. The method allows the inclusion of context parameters that represent neither the management nor the land use practice being investigated, but are nevertheless relevant to biodiversity. The parameters and relationships can be defined by either literature or expert interviews. We give recommendations on how to create the biodiversity potential functions by providing the reader with a set of questions that can help build the functions and find the relationship between parameters. Results and discussion: We present a simplified case study of paper production in the Scandinavian and Russian Taiga to demonstrate the applicability of the method. We apply the method to two scenarios, one representing an intensive forestry practice, and another representing lower intensity forestry management. The results communicate the differences between the two scenarios quantitatively, but more importantly, are able to provide guidance on improved management. We discuss the advantages of this condition-based approach compared to pre-defined intensity classes. The potential drawbacks of defining potential functions from industry-derived studies are pointed out. This method also provides a less strict approach to a reference situation, consequently allowing the adequate assessment of cases in which the most beneficial biodiversity state is achieved through management practices. Conclusions: The originality of using fuzzy thinking is that it enables land use management practices to be accounted for in LCA without requiring sub-categories for different intensities to be explicitly established, thus moving beyond the classification of land use practices. The proposed method is another LCIA step toward closing the gap between land use management practices and biodiversity conservation goals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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16. Long-term ecological monitoring and observation: a review in the context of Indian Himalaya.
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Negi, Vikram S., Rana, Suresh K., Dangwal, Bhawana, Thakur, Shinny, Sekar, K. Chandra, and Bhatt, I. D.
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- *
ENVIRONMENTAL monitoring , *CLIMATE change , *MOUNTAIN ecology , *ECOLOGICAL disturbances , *FOREST management - Abstract
Long-term experiments are essential in understanding the ecological consequences of global land use and climate change. Further, it is well established that longterm data sets are prerequisites for effective management of forest resources and biodiversity conservation. In view of this, the present study attempts to contribute to major global long-term ecological monitoring (LTEM) networks and the status of LTEM studies in India with a special focus on Indian Himalayan Region. Over the last 40 years, around 103 countries from the America, Europe, Africa, Asia and Australia have been engaged in LTEM studies on various aspects of biodiversity, monitoring and predicting climate change impacts in a range of ecosystems, including the mountains. The temporal distribution of past studies on the subject shows a gradual increasing pattern (3 papers in 1992) with a peak during 2021 (105 papers). The established LTEM networks across the globe provide a significant empirical basis for understanding ecosystem structure and dynamics. Literature indicates plenty of permanent monitoring plots from India, mostly from southern India, and their significant contribution to ecosystem understanding. Himalayan regions are important sites for monitoring biological and socio-ecological responses to environmental perturbations, including climate change. LTEM studies are lacking in the IHR; only a few sites have been established, mostly in alpine ecosystems. This review identifies research gaps, opportunities with respect to LTEM studies, and the possibilities for strengthening long-term research and observation in India in general and the Himalaya in particular. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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17. Current trends in forestry research of Latin-America: an editorial overview of the Special Issue.
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Martínez Pastur, Guillermo J. and Roig, Fidel A.
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FOREST management ,FORESTS & forestry ,BIODIVERSITY conservation ,FOREST conservation ,ENVIRONMENTAL degradation ,TEMPERATE forests - Abstract
Mendoza city (Argentina) hosted the VIII Latin American Forestry Congress (CONFLAT) and the V Forestry Congress of Argentina (CFA) in 2023, where relevant issues were addressed, such as climate change, degradation, reforestation, management and forest industry, monitoring, environmental services, social issues, and governance, among others. The objective of this Special Issue was to present the main advances in Forestry Science for Latin-America in the context of changing governance and forest livelihoods for people. The fifteen articles emphasize the interdisciplinary nature of the forest management and conservation, and that multiple variables must be considered to achieve sustainability. The articles come from studies across Southern South-America (Argentina, Brazil, Chile, and Uruguay), and the collaboration of researchers of other countries (México, Canada, and Spain). Articles include research in tropical, Mediterranean and temperate Sub-Antarctic forests. Together, these articles provide a snapshot of new forestry research carried out locally and internationally to bring about beneficial ecological and environmental outcomes in a world facing the challenges of sustainable management and conservation amongst the threats and uncertainty of climate change and environmental degradation responsible for extensive loss of biodiversity and environmental services. We believe that this Special Issue will encourage more inter-disciplinary research focusing on management and conservation of forests. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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18. Wild Animal Conservation Efforts of the International Institutions in the World's Largest Mangrove Forest in Bangladesh.
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Islam, Md. Ziaul, Wang, Shuwei, and Jiang, Yibo
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WILDLIFE conservation ,MANGROVE forests ,FOREST management ,MANGROVE ecology ,FOREST policy ,BIODIVERSITY conservation ,INTERNATIONAL agencies - Abstract
Situating in the lap of the Bay of Bengal, the world's largest mangrove forest, the Sundarbans, plays a significant role in the livelihood of more than three million people and provides shelter to an undetermined number of species. Unfortunately, this United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) declared world heritage site faces various threats to wildlife and biodiversity due to human interventions in the forest and animal habitats. The present study finds that despite having 150 forest policies to conserve the forest, the forest size is gradually shrinking across the country, particularly in the Sundarbans. However, National Forestry Policy 1979 (amended 2016) aims to protect forests and forest resources, and Wildlife (Conservation and Security) Act, 2012 (hereafter the Wildlife Act 2012) protects against wildlife crimes. Although National Forestry Policy 2016 endeavours to engage the local communities in the conservation process, no significant improvement was seen in the life of local communities and forest management. This paper assesses the role of international institutions that often support and cooperate with other countries for sustainable forest management and biodiversity conservation, like the Sundarbans of Bangladesh. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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19. Trends, patterns and determinants of biodiversity conservation outcomes in Buxa Tiger Reserve, West Bengal, India.
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Das, Uttam and Behera, Bhagirath
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FOREST management ,NATURAL resources ,KEYSTONE species ,FOREST degradation ,COMMUNITY forests ,ANIMAL populations ,BIODIVERSITY conservation ,SUSTAINABILITY ,FOREST declines - Abstract
This paper analyses the trends, patterns and determinants of biodiversity conservation in the Buxa Tiger Reserve (BTR), India. Temporal remote sensing data from 1990 to 2020 shows a loss of 27.69 km2. The results show that the total forest area has seen a significant decline from 1990 to 2020, whereas non-forest and degraded forest areas have been on the rise. The decline of forest area is observed more in fringe and lower altitude areas where accessibility is easy for humans to extract forest resources. The secondary data shows a decline in the wildlife population including the flagship species, the Bengal tiger. The decline in natural resources due to human activities in the BTR is likely to continue unless a participatory biodiversity conservation programme is established. The establishment of the Joint Forest Management Committee (JFMC), a formal local institution where local communities and forest departments (FDs) jointly share the rights and responsibility towards the use and management of the forest, seems to be effective in reducing negative forest activities. The sustainability of the BTR is possible if the local people abandon the 'tragedy of the commons' activities and work together, with government guidance for the promotion of livelihoods and biodiversity conservation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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20. Coppice reintroduction in the Czech Republic: extent, motivation and obstacles.
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Kozdasová, Anežka, Galčanová Batista, Lucie, Hédl, Radim, and Szabó, Péter
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WILDLIFE reintroduction , *COPPICE forests , *FOREST management , *BIODIVERSITY conservation , *NATURE conservation , *FOREST policy , *RENEWABLE energy sources - Abstract
Coppicing is a form of forest management in European broadleaved forests. While it is still practised in south-eastern Europe, in central and western Europe it was almost completely replaced by high forest management. Currently, there are increasing efforts to reintroduce coppice management into former coppice woods. However, little comprehensive knowledge is available about the extent and management of coppice reintroduction and the processes governing it. In this paper, we present an overview of localities in the Czech Republic where coppice reintroduction was taking place in 2020. We identified 8 localities and conducted 10 semi-structured interviews with experts involved in their management in order to understand what motivated them to restart coppicing and what obstacles they have had to face. The main motivation of site managers is nature conservation, while the most important obstacles are operational issues, such as bureaucracy, complicated land ownership and legal responsibilities or lack of workforce. Other motivating factors identified in other European countries (production of a renewable energy source and potential for rural employment) have so far played a minor role in the Czech Republic. We conclude that a major challenge for future forest policies will be to utilise the economic experiences of regions with active coppicing to foster the spread of coppice woods in order to combine renewable energy production with biodiversity conservation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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21. Integrating Social Forestry and Biodiversity Conservation in Indonesia.
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Gunawan, Hendra, Yeny, Irma, Karlina, Endang, Suharti, Sri, Murniati, Subarudi, Mulyanto, Budi, Ekawati, Sulistya, Garsetiasih, Raden, Pratiwi, Sumirat, Bugi Kabul, Sawitri, Reny, Heriyanto, Nur M., Takandjandji, Mariana, Widarti, Asmanah, Surati, Desmiwati, Kalima, Titi, Effendi, Rachman, and Martin, Edwin
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BIODIVERSITY conservation ,FORESTS & forestry ,HABITATS ,FOREST management ,FOREST conservation ,FOREST biodiversity - Abstract
Social forestry (SF) has long been implemented in production and protected forests in Indonesia. SF is considered to be a win–win solution for occupied and cultivated forest areas. The aim of this paper was to review the implementation of social forestry in Indonesia and its strengths and challenges. The secondary purpose was to synthesize the lessons learned and recommendations for the government about designing SF that can integrate the objective of forest biodiversity conservation and the social welfare of the surrounding communities. The study used a systematic literature review (SLR) of international and national peer-reviewed articles. The results of the study indicate that SF is intended to achieve benefits in three main areas: social, economic, and ecological. However, the review found that the ecological aspects of biodiversity conservation often receive less attention compared to the social and economic goals. A strong point of SF implementation is increasing community access to forest land use, while a challenge that must be resolved is that including communities in forest management can result in fragmentation and changes to animal habitats; thus, there is the potential for population decline and extinction. This study advises policymakers to pay more attention to ecological functions to ensure forest sustainability in SF development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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22. What evidence exists for the use of urban forest management in nature-based carbon solutions and bird conservation. A systematic map protocol.
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Hutt-Taylor, Kayleigh, Ziter, Carly D., and Frei, Barbara
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BIRD conservation ,URBAN forestry ,URBAN biodiversity ,WILDLIFE conservation ,BIBLIOGRAPHIC databases ,BIODIVERSITY conservation ,FOREST management ,ECOSYSTEMS - Abstract
Background: There is global interest in finding innovative solutions that address current climate and societal challenges in an urban context. Cities are often on the front lines of environmental change, meaning urban greening strategies have high potential to provide benefits across human communities, while protecting global biodiversity. There is growing consensus that nature-based solutions can provide multiple benefits to people and nature while also mitigating the effects of climate change. Urban forest management is well-suited to a nature-based solutions framework due to the wide variety of services trees provide our communities. Effective approaches to urban forest management also have the potential to promote other forms of urban biodiversity, particularly birds and species at risk. However, studies that integrate strategies for both climate and biodiversity conservation are rare. The goal of this systematic map is to gather and describe information on two desired outcomes of urban forest management: (1) conserving avian diversity and species at risk (2) carbon storage and sequestration (i.e., nature-based climate solutions). Methods: We will identify relevant articles from two separate searches for inclusion in our systematic map that address (1) urban forestry and avian and species at risk conservation and, (2) urban forestry and carbon storage and sequestration. We will search two bibliographic databases, consult 20 relevant organizational websites, and solicit grey literature through an open call for evidence. Eligibility screening will be conducted at two stages: (1) title and abstract and (2) full text. Relevant information from included papers will be extracted and entered in a searchable, coded database. Synthesis of evidence will describe the key characteristics of each study (e.g., geographic locations, interventions, outcomes, species studied) and identify knowledge gaps and clusters of evidence. Our systematic map will guide further research on opportunities for multiple benefits using nature-based solutions, particularly as they relate to urban forest management. Furthermore, our evidence base will support both management and funding decisions to ensure the effective use of resources for maximum benefits across people and ecosystems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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23. Creating Strategic Reserves to Protect Forest Carbon and Reduce Biodiversity Losses in the United States.
- Author
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Law, Beverly E., Moomaw, William R., Hudiburg, Tara W., Schlesinger, William H., Sterman, John D., and Woodwell, George M.
- Subjects
BIODIVERSITY conservation ,ENVIRONMENTAL degradation ,FOREST reserves ,CLIMATE change mitigation ,FOREST management ,BIOLOGICAL extinction - Abstract
This paper provides a review and comparison of strategies to increase forest carbon, and reduce species losses for climate change mitigation and adaptation in the United States. It compares forest management strategies and actions that are taking place or being proposed to reduce wildfire risk and to increase carbon storage with recent research findings. International agreements state that safeguarding biodiversity and ecosystems is fundamental to climate resilience with respect to climate change impacts on them, and their roles in adaptation and mitigation. The recent Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change report on impacts, mitigation, and adaptation found, and member countries agreed, that maintaining the resilience of biodiversity and ecosystem services at a global scale is "fundamental" for climate mitigation and adaptation, and requires "effective and equitable conservation of approximately 30 to 50% of Earth's land, freshwater and ocean areas, including current near-natural ecosystems." Our key message is that many of the current and proposed forest management actions in the United States are not consistent with climate goals, and that preserving 30 to 50% of lands for their carbon, biodiversity and water is feasible, effective, and necessary for achieving them. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Increasing loss of mature boreal forests around protected areas with red-listed forest species.
- Author
-
Määttänen, Aino-Maija, Virkkala, Raimo, Leikola, Niko, and Heikkinen, Risto K.
- Subjects
FOREST biodiversity ,TAIGAS ,PROTECTED areas ,FOREST management ,BIODIVERSITY conservation ,ENVIRONMENTAL degradation - Abstract
Background: Protected areas (PA) are central to biodiversity, but their efficiency is challenged by human-induced habitat loss and fragmentation. In the Fennoscandian boreal region, forestry with clearcutting is a threat to biodiversity causing the loss of mature forest elements and deterioration of ecological processes in forest landscapes, ultimately affecting PAs via declined structural connectivity. This paper aims to (1) determine PAs with high, red-listed species concentrations; (2) estimate the change in forest habitat around these PAs on different spatial scales; and (3) determine if forest management intensity is higher around biologically most valuable PAs. Occurrences of red-listed forest-dwelling species in Finland were used to identify PAs harbouring these species and to produce site-specific importance indices. CORINE landcover data was used as a baseline for the distribution of forests to assess the cover of clear-cuttings from 2001 to 2019 with the Global Forest Change (GFC) data set in three buffer areas around the PAs with occurrences of red-listed species. Results: The largest proportion of clear-cuts occurred in 1 km and 10 km buffers around the PAs in the southern and middle boreal zones, being ca. 20%. This indicates that the forest habitat is degrading fast at regional and landscape levels. On the positive side, the change in forest cover was lower around the biologically most important PAs compared to other PAs with red-listed species. Conclusions: Open and free satellite-data based assessments of the cover and change of forests provide reliable estimates about the rates at which mature and old-growth forests are being converted into young managed ones in Finland mainly via clear-cuts on different scales around PAs. The rate of clear-cuts was lowest in adjacent buffer areas next to the most species-rich PAs, which provides opportunities for biodiversity conservation efforts to be targeted to the remaining mature and old-growth forests found in the vicinity of these areas. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Corporate reporting and conservation realities: Understanding differences in what businesses say and do regarding biodiversity.
- Author
-
Smith, Thomas, Paavola, Jouni, and Holmes, George
- Subjects
SOCIAL responsibility of business ,BIODIVERSITY ,BIODIVERSITY conservation ,SUSTAINABLE development ,ENVIRONMENTAL protection ,FORESTS & forestry ,FOREST management - Abstract
Businesses are increasingly called on to participate in tackling biodiversity loss, but the extent of corporate commitments to act is unclear. We have a limited understanding of differences in perceptions and actions regarding biodiversity across business sectors. Doubts also remain concerning the reliability of corporate reporting as a window into business involvement in biodiversity. This paper tackles these uncertainties by using formal corporate reporting and interviews with managers and stakeholders about actions regarding biodiversity as the evidence base. Taking the cases of forestry and salmon farming in Chile, it finds sectoral differences are influenced by distinct regulatory settings and forms of stakeholder engagement. Whilst reporting serves as a partial window into each sector, manager interviews and stakeholder accounts indicate firms in both sectors perceive biodiversity primarily as a reputational risk rather than a core responsibility. In both cases, businesses have used formal corporate reporting to mask negative impacts, and it has failed to leverage fundamental reform. The findings indicate that formal reporting can only ever play a partial role in understanding and motivating business action on biodiversity. Stakeholder views and the particularities of local contexts must be more clearly articulated to ensure businesses undertake substantive rather than symbolic action on their impacts. The paper concludes by reflecting on implications for Natural Capital reporting and identifies limitations and avenues for future research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Modelling the Choice Between Multiple-Use vs. Specialised Forest Management and its Impact on Forest Management Costs.
- Author
-
Garcia, Serge, Petucco, Claudio, Thorsen, Bo Jellesmark, and Vedel, Suzanne Elizabeth
- Subjects
FOREST management ,COST control ,FORESTS & forestry ,FOREST landowners ,BIODIVERSITY conservation ,FOREST biodiversity - Abstract
Forests provide ecosystem services, including timber production. In some cases, private forest owners perform management actions in order to enhance the provision of such services, or they may be encouraged by public policies and payments. This paper focuses specifically on the decision to set forest land aside for biodiversity conservation, as part of the more general question of the efficiency of multiple-use vs. specialised management of forest lands. We propose an econometric analysis to identify factors in the set-aside choice and measure the impact of this decision on forest management costs. The results show that the set-aside choice depends on the landowners' income and motivations related to forest amenities. The choice of specialised management, as reflected in the set-aside decision, has a significant and positive impact on the intensity of management in the remainder of the forest and on management costs. From a policy implications point of view, these results suggest that instruments such as forest certification, subsidies and reverse auctions for conservation will be most likely to attract the interest of those forest owners with personal motivations and forest properties that offer both benefit and cost advantages in opting for such specialised management strategies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Multi‐criteria decision analysis for nature conservation: A review of 20 years of applications.
- Author
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Adem Esmail, Blal and Geneletti, Davide
- Subjects
NATURE conservation ,DECISION making ,FOREST management ,FOREST restoration ,AGGREGATION (Statistics) ,SENSITIVITY analysis - Abstract
Abstract: Multi‐criteria decision analysis (MCDA) is a method to support decision‐making, by exploring the balance between the pros and cons of different alternatives to accomplish a specific goal. It assists in framing decision problems, illustrating the performance of alternatives across criteria, exploring trade‐offs, formulating a decision and testing its robustness. This paper provides a structured review of empirical applications of MCDA to nature conservation published in the scientific literature over the last 20 years. The paper aims at taking stock of past experiences, and comparing them with best practices and common pitfalls identified in the literature, to provide recommendations for better MCDA application to conservation. The review follows the structure of a generalized MCDA process consisting of three key stages: (1) decision context and problem structuring, (2) analysis and (3) decision. The search identified 86 papers that describe MCDA applications to a range of topics, including conservation prioritization and planning; protected areas management and zoning; forest management and restoration; and mapping of biodiversity, naturalness and wilder. The results show that, concerning problem structuring, a small percentage of the reviewed MCDA engaged stakeholders other than the authors in identifying alternatives and formulating criteria (15% and 35% respectively). Concerning the analysis, criteria assessment was adequately justified by the authors (47%), at times also by involving other stakeholders (22%). Weighting was performed in almost all applications, whereas criteria aggregation was mostly based on the weighted linear combination (63%). Sensitivity analysis was largely overlooked (57%). Concerning decision, 45% of the articles provided only an overall ranking or suitability of alternatives, while 22% included additional rankings according to specific criterion, and 8% further analyses and clustering of stakeholders’ preferences. The paper concludes by suggesting key elements of successful MCDA applications, including clear construction of the decision context; collaborative identification of alternatives and criteria that reflect the values at stake; adequate justification and communication of the methods for criteria assessment and weighting; reasoned choice of the criteria aggregation method, and comprehensive sensitivity analysis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Biodiversity and conservation of mangroves in Malaysia - An appraisal.
- Author
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LATIFF, A.
- Subjects
FOREST management ,MANGROVE forests ,MANGROVE swamps ,BIODIVERSITY conservation ,MANGROVE plants ,FUELWOOD ,FOREST reserves ,PHANEROGAMS - Abstract
In Malaysia, unlike other types of forests which are more widespread throughout, the mangrove swamp forests are restricted to the sheltered coasts, islands, estuaries and lower reaches of rivers. It is an important habitat for various terrestrial and aquatic wildlife, including fishes, birds and shells and specialised plant forms including algae, mosses, ferns and seed plants. The mangrove swamp forest of the Langkawi Archipelago alone is home for more than 41 exclusive, 65 non-exclusive and 13 mangrove associates species. As the forests have been degraded, many of them which are endemic, rare, vulnerable, threatened or otherwise are in great perils. It is also of great socio-economic importance as a hydrological regulator, playing a role in flood mitigation, buffering against saline intrusion and even large waves. It is also important for fuel wood, timber resources, and provide a variety of produces used by local inhabitants. Despite these values, mangrove swamp forests are rapidly being cleared for other land-uses, especially agriculture and aquaculture. In view of the recognized values, it is urgent that more suitable mangrove swamp areas are protected for biodiversity conservation purposes. A working plan for the Matang mangrove forest reserve, Perak (Sixth revision) provides a comprehensive overview towards the management and conservation of mangrove ecosystem in Malaysia. In the long term, systematic holistic planning represents the best means of achieving sustainable forest management in mangrove ecosystem incorporating physical and biodiversity conservation and forestry objectives. There are many publications (books and papers in journals) on Malaysian mangroves and currently there is a need for the establishment of Malaysia Mangrove Research Centre, a one-stop centre to house the biodiversity reference collections and also literatures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
29. Changing forest conservation and management paradigms: traditional ecological knowledge systems and sustainable forestry: Perspectives from Chile and India.
- Author
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Herrmann, Thora Martina and Torri, Maria-Costanza
- Subjects
FOREST management ,NATURE conservation ,BIODIVERSITY conservation ,CONSERVATION of natural resources ,TREES - Abstract
This paper first explores the shift now occurring in the science that provides the theoretical basis for forest conservation and management. The paper then presents the concepts of traditional ecological knowledge and traditional management systems and practise to provide background for two case studies that examine traditional knowledge and forest management practices of tribal communities in the Sariska region (Rajasthan, India) and of the indigenous Mapuche Pewenhce communities in the Andean mountains of southern Patagonia in Chile, underlining the special relationship these tribal and indigenous communities maintain with the forest and their usefulness in community-based native forest conservation. These examples of traditional ecological knowledge and traditional management systems suggest that it is important to focus on managing ecological processes, instead of products, and to use integrated ecosystem management. Recommendations to move forest management paradigms beyond the current view of 'timber' or 'reserves' and toward one of truly integrated use that adapt conservation approaches to local cultural representations of the environment are made. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. The Political Forest in the Era of Green Neoliberalism.
- Author
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Devine, Jennifer A. and Baca, Jenny A.
- Subjects
POLITICAL ecology ,NEOLIBERALISM ,FORESTS & forestry -- Political aspects ,FOREST management ,BIODIVERSITY conservation ,CARBON sequestration - Abstract
Nancy Peluso and Peter Vandergeest first used the term "political forest" to denaturalise forests, refiguring them as political‐ecological entities. Across three moments of colonialism, post‐colonial independence, and counter‐insurgency struggles, they analyse how states in Southeast Asia (re)made forests as a means of territorialising power. More recently, they identify a fourth, contemporary moment characterised by the entry of diverse non‐state actors into the making of forests, and a shift in the rationalities and technologies of forest management. We label this fourth moment "green neoliberalism" to identify an era of global environmental governance characterised by market‐based solutions to socio‐ecological problems, biodiversity conservation and carbon sequestration priorities, and new moral and scientific claims to forests spanning a variety of sites and scales. The papers in this symposium transport the analytic of the political forest to Colombia, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Guatemala, Indonesia, Madagascar, Singapore, and Thailand to examine how green neoliberalism's discourses and practices have created new sites and expressions of territorialisation, governance, knowledge production, and subject formation. In doing so, they illuminate the multiplicity of actors (re)making political forests at a moment when forests' virtues as carbon sinks and biodiversity hotspots draw massive flows of capital and justify remaking socio‐ecological relations across the globe. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. The insect fauna of Tenompok Forest Reserve in Sabah, Malaysia.
- Author
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Chung, Arthur Y. C., Paul, Viviannye, and Bosuang, Steven
- Subjects
FOREST animals ,FOREST conservation ,FOREST surveys ,INSECTS ,SPECIES diversity ,FOREST reserves ,FOREST management - Abstract
The insect fauna in Tenompok Forest Reserve, adjacent to Mount Kinabalu in Sabah was surveyed. Nocturnal insect diversity was moderately high, compared to other forest reserves surveyed earlier. Species richness, however, was moderate, with an average of 73 species from 84 individuals recorded from a 1m2 area of the light-trapping cloth. At least 20 Bornean endemic insect species were recorded from this rapid biodiversity assessment, which include 19 moth species and one beetle species. The endemics and other insects of conservation interest recorded during the survey provide salient information to enhance the conservation effort of this forest which connects Kinabalu Park and the Crocker Range Park. Such information provides inputs towards recommendations on high conservation value (HCV) of the area that would be incorporated in the formulation of the forest management plan. Issues affecting the insect fauna and recommendations on insect diversity enhancement and conservation are highlighted in this paper. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Competing discourses of the forest shape forest owners' ideas about nature and biodiversity conservation.
- Author
-
Takala, Tuomo, Hujala, Teppo, Tanskanen, Minna, and Tikkanen, Jukka
- Subjects
NATURE conservation ,BIODIVERSITY conservation ,FOREST landowners ,CRITICAL discourse analysis ,FOREST management ,FOREST policy ,DISCOURSE - Abstract
Competing discourses of the forest guide forest-owners' ideas about the proper forest use and about the need to conserve biodiversity. In this paper, we examine how five predefined forest discourses (re)produced by Finnish forest owners treat nature and biodiversity conservation. Our critical discourse analysis combines qualitative content analysis with quantitative multivariate methods (NMDS). The data consists of in-depth interviews with 24 Finnish forest-owners. The five forest discourses formed a gradient from an absence of nature issues to a profound ecological pondering with deep affection and responsibility for nature. The discourses in between these two ends of the gradient contained narration on personal experiences but lacked the moral responsibility and deep theorizing typical of the nature-oriented discourse. The nature-oriented discourse proposed forest uses where the needs of nature were raised to a determining role whereas the other four discourses adhered to the standard economy-driven forest management paradigm. Both nature and the forest-owners with a strong relationship with nature appeared marginalised in the prevailing order of the forest discourses. The discoursal conditions that we evidenced did not favour biodiversity conservation among forest-owners. The results thus call for active forest policy that aims to transform the prevailing order of the discourses, but also tries to overcome the discoursal hinders for biodiversity conservation within the prevailing order. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. A priory allocation of ecosystem services to forest stands in a forest management context considering scientific suitability, stakeholder engagement and sustainability concept with multi-criteria decision analysis (MCDA) technique: A case study in Turkey.
- Author
-
Başkent, Emin Zeki and Balci, Hüseyin
- Subjects
- *
ANALYTIC hierarchy process , *FOREST management , *MULTIPLE criteria decision making , *BIODIVERSITY conservation , *DELPHI method - Abstract
Various research endeavours are designed to identify ecosystem services, assess their spatial distribution, and prioritize them in a given forest landscape. The Turkish State Forest Organization has introduced an ecosystem-based multiple-use forest management philosophy since 2008, which emphasizes the need for identifying and allocating ecosystem services to each forest planning unit. This paper aims to investigate the use of Multiple Criteria Decision Analysis (MCDA) techniques and explores their effectiveness and suitability in identifying and allocating ecosystem services to forest units, considering scientific suitability, stakeholder engagement and the sustainability concept in the context of ecosystem-based forest management decision-making processes in a case study area of Turkey. We propose a framework that entails an iterative process comprising various stages, starting from identifying ecosystem services (ES) to allocating them to forest stands with a participatory approach. We employed the Analytical Hierarchy Process (AHP) and the Delphi method to determine stakeholder preferences and allocate ecosystem services to forest stands. This was achieved through an equation newly developed using scientific suitability, stakeholder preferences, and the sustainability concept. The landscape percentage allocated primarily to ES was as follows: water regulation (55.44%), soil protection (16.47%), biodiversity conservation (14.03%), wood production (13.08%), and aesthetic-recreation (0.84%). Notably, no allocations were made for national defence and climate regulation services. In conclusion, the stratification of Posof forests into zones was efficiently achieved a priori , considering both scientific-technical and socio-cultural criteria through MCDA techniques based on stakeholder preferences. This study streamlines the decision-making process involved in spatially allocating ecosystem services and provides crucial information instrumental in determining management objectives and optimal forest activities. • Enhanced accuracy in determining forest management objectives through ecosystem service weight and priority provision. • Effective translation of qualitative to quantitative data using MCDA and participatory methods. • Ecosystem service weights derived from scientific, technical, and traditional knowledge via AHP. • Creation of alternative ecosystem service stratification maps for informed forest management decisions. • Significance of participatory ecosystem service stratification in enhancing key data for multi-use forest management planning. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Designing multifunctional forest systems in Northern Patagonia, Argentina.
- Author
-
Garibaldi, Lucas A., Zermoglio, Paula F., Agüero, Juan I., Nacif, Marcos E., Goldenberg, Matías G., Fioroni, Facundo, Amoroso, Mariano M., Aparicio, Alejandro G., Dimarco, Romina D., Fernandez, Margarita, Fernandez, Natalia, Gambino, Micaela, Naón, Santiago, Nuñez, Martín A., Oddi, Facundo J., Pastorino, Mario J., and Puntieri, Javier G.
- Subjects
FOREST management ,NATIVE species ,BIODIVERSITY conservation ,CATTLE breeding ,AGRICULTURE - Abstract
Multifunctional productive systems based on native species management, a new paradigm that counters colonial worldviews, offer sustainable sources of food and materials while preserving biodiversity. Despite extensive discussions in herbaceous and agricultural systems, applying this concept to native forests in Northern Patagonia remains unclear. Multifunctional system implementation can be approached from a fractal perspective, with evaluations at the stand level being essential for understanding ecological processes across scales. Here, we exemplify research and management for multiple native species, integrating results from 10 years of field experiments on the impacts of biomass harvesting intensity (HI) on nine Nature's Contributions to People (NCPs), including habitat creation, pollination, soil formation, hazard regulation, prevention of invasions, and provision of energy, food, materials, and options. Our findings reveal that some regulating NCPs peak with null HI, while certain material and regulating NCPs maximize at the highest HI. Low to intermediate HI (30-50%) show a more balanced provision of all NCPs. Our results suggest that some biomass extraction is necessary to enhance most NCPs, emphasizing the importance of balancing material provisioning and biodiversity conservation in management schemes. We propose future directions for designing multifunctional forest systems, advocating for low-density plantation of native tree species with high wood quality within the natural forest matrix. This approach may yield higher NCPs levels over time compared to the current cattle breeding and wood extraction system, with implications beyond Patagonia, considering historical associations of such practices with colonial worldviews globally. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Subsidies for Forest Environment and Climate: A Viable Solution for Forest Conservation in Romania?
- Author
-
Bratu, Iulian A., Câmpu, Vasile R., Budău, Ruben, Stanciu, Mirela A., and Enescu, Cristian M.
- Subjects
FOREST management ,FOREST landowners ,PAYMENTS for ecosystem services ,CLIMATE change ,LITERATURE reviews ,FOREST conservation ,BIODIVERSITY conservation - Abstract
The conservation of biodiversity and forest ecosystems from the perspective of increasingly pronounced climate changes represents a priority objective for present and future society. In recent decades, alongside traditional conservation methods, innovative tools such as PES (Payment for Ecosystem Services) have been introduced to support biodiversity conservation. The aim of this study is to analyze the impact of financial mechanisms for forest ecosystem conservation from the perspective of voluntary adoption by forest owners of additional conservation measures beyond those required by national environmental legislation. Through the conceptual literature review, 6069 articles were analyzed, which described the general context of the application of PES, the aims and objectives related to climate and environmental issues, the beneficiaries, as well as the legislative conditions, and the research direction in the last 7 years. The study aims to provide relevant information regarding the viability and potential impact of PES on achieving the goal of forest ecosystem conservation in Romania, during the period 2017–2023. We identified 904 cases involving 887 entities that have committed to the program for the voluntary adoption of additional measures. It has been stated that a PES approach can lead to increased efficiency in conservation actions. Following the temporal analysis of the number of applications, it was observed that in the first sessions there was a low number of applications, which means very high reluctance of the potential beneficiaries of PES, but once the first program was implemented, their interest increased. The study found a strong correlation between payments and the areas and number of plots under commitment, while there was a less strong correlation with the geographical region. Based on the data obtained, the potential impact of PES in Romania was evaluated at the social level, quantified in the number of applications submitted, and at the economic level, with the amount of money paid to applicants. The environmental impact was measured by analyzing the areas included in the subsidy mechanism and identifying the minimum 20% of the eligible areas, totally exempt from forestry interventions, which produce effects on forests, soil, water and environment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Traditional taboos: informal and invisible protection of remaining patches of forest in Vhembe District in Limpopo, South Africa.
- Author
-
Sinthumule, Ndidzulafhi Innocent
- Subjects
TABOO ,TRADITIONAL ecological knowledge ,CLIMATE change mitigation ,FOREST management ,FOREST declines ,CARBON cycle ,BIODIVERSITY conservation - Abstract
Introduction: Since 1990, there has been a global decline in forest areas. Between 2010 and 2020, the greatest annual net loss of forests was on the African continent. Despite South African indigenous forests and trees being protected under the National Forests Act of 1998 (Act No. 84 of 1998), the country has also shown an increased annual net loss of forests. Although the Vhembe District Municipality in South Africa has lost forest owing to humaninduced deforestation and other land use activities, sacred forests have not been affected. According to traditional beliefs, exploitation of such indigenous patches of sacred forests is taboo. This study aims to explore the role of taboos in the protection of the remaining patches of sacred forest. Methods: The study relies on data collected between December 2022 and December 2023. Semi-structured interviewswere conductedwith key informants (n = 61) and local communities in Tshidzivhe and Duthuni villages (n = 60). Observations were used as a further data collection tool. The interview questions were prepared to assess the role of taboos in the protection and management of sacred forests. Data collected through interviews were analysed using thematic content analysis, while field observations helped to corroborate the results from the interviews. Results and discussion: The study identified two main taboos - one that restricts entry into the sacred forests (i.e. preventing entry into the sacred forests, and harvesting, hunting and hiking in these areas), and another that prohibits noise or activities that disrespect sacred forests. The study found that believers and nonbelievers alike, for fear of retribution by the spirits, still obey these taboos and their relatedmyths. This has allowed these areas to develop dense stands of closed-canopy evergreen forest that support more diverse flora and fauna than found in surrounding areas. Although sacred forests are not meant for biodiversity conservation, they offer opportunities to be integrated into global conservation targets of "30x30" and "Half-Earth" by 2030. They also offer the opportunity of serving as carbon sinks which is key to climate change mitigation. Recommendations for protecting sacred forests and associated taboos are drawn up based on these results. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. How forests may support psychological restoration: Modelling forest characteristics based on perceptions of forestry experts and the general public.
- Author
-
Probst, Birgit M., Toraño Caicoya, Astor, Hilmers, Torben, Ramisch, Kilian, Snäll, Tord, Stoltz, Jonathan, Grahn, Patrik, and Suda, Michael
- Subjects
FOREST management ,NATURE conservation ,FOREST biodiversity ,BIODIVERSITY conservation ,MIXED forests - Abstract
Spending time in forests benefits human well‐being, but the importance of forest characteristics on well‐being is unclear. This knowledge could help guide forest management decisions to improve outcomes for both people and nature.The overall aim of this study was to investigate how psychological restoration, defined as psychological recovery processes in nature, may be supported by forest characteristics. We (1) investigated how perceptions of restoration (perceived restorativeness) were linked to specific forest characteristics. More specifically, we selected attributes included in nature protection legislation in Germany (beauty, diversity and uniqueness) as the basis to evaluate how forest characteristics were related to perceived restorativeness. Additionally, we (2) tested differences in the assessments of these attributes between forestry experts and people from the general public. Based on the results of the first two objectives (1, 2), we (3) predicted how forest management that affects forest characteristics may impact psychological restoration today and in the future.We developed a perceived restorativeness model based on attributes stated in the German Nature Conservation Act and specific forest structure variables. Drawing from the literature, we included perceived naturalness as an additional key predictor for restoration. Forestry experts and participants from the general public were then asked to rate computer‐generated forest stand pictures on these attributes and restorativeness.We found that all attributes were positively associated with perceived restorativeness, but perceived beauty was most important. Perceived uniqueness was statistically significant, but the strength of the relationship was weak. Mixed forests were rated as most beautiful, while coniferous forest stands were rated as least beautiful. The general public gave higher ratings than forestry experts on all attributes, but the pattern was similar. Based on participant ratings, forests left without management (Set‐aside), followed by forests with management aiming for resilience to climate change (Adaptation forestry), both supporting biodiversity conservation, showed the highest perceived restorativeness over the course of 100 years.Based on our results, it could be recommendable to increase forest diversity, especially in areas with many visitors. However, more nuanced knowledge involving diverse stakeholders is needed to inform forest management decisions on landscape level. Read the free Plain Language Summary for this article on the Journal blog. Read the free Plain Language Summary for this article on the Journal blog. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Biodiversity conservation and wood production in a Natura 2000 Mediterranean forest. A trade-off evaluation focused on the occurrence of microhabitats.
- Author
-
Santopuoli, Giovanni, di Cristofaro, Marco, Kraus, Daniel, Schuck, Andreas, Lasserre, Bruno, and Marchetti, Marco
- Subjects
BIODIVERSITY conservation ,BIOMASS ,TIMBER ,FOREST management ,FORESTS & forestry - Abstract
The most significant European forest-related strategies highlight the importance of multifunctional forests for human wellbeing, due to the provision of a wide range of goods and services. However, managing competing aims, such as timber production, economic drivers and biodiversity conservation is often difficult for practitioners. In order to assess the loss and gain of ecosystem services caused by forestry, trade-off evaluation has been increasingly used to aid decision-making. In this study, four silvicultural scenarios are simulated using the Marteloscope approach to evaluate the trade-offs between biodiversity conservation and timber production. Tree-related Microhabitats (TreMs) are used as a proxy to evaluate forest habitat value, while timber production is assessed by the number of harvested trees, biomass removal and economic income. This study takes an innovative approach by investigating TreMs using the Marteloscope in mixed Mediterranean forest. The main findings from this paper confirm that tree-related microhabitats can be considered ecological indicators effective in identifying important habitat trees, to assess forest habitat value and support tree marking for thinning operations and management. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Managing tree plantations as novel socioecological systems: Australian and North American perspectives.
- Author
-
Lindenmayer, David, Messier, Christian, Paquette, Alain, and Hobbs, Richard J.
- Subjects
FOREST management ,PLANTATIONS ,BIOMES ,PLANT species ,CLIMATE change - Abstract
Copyright of Canadian Journal of Forest Research is the property of Canadian Science Publishing and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Flawed Meta-Analysis of Biodiversity Effects of Forest Management.
- Author
-
HALME, PANU, TOIVANEN, TERO, HONKANEN, MERJA, KOTIAHO, JANNE S., MÖNKKÖNEN, MIKKO, and TIMONEN, JONNA
- Subjects
FOREST management ,BIODIVERSITY conservation ,META-analysis ,SPECIES diversity ,SPECIES specificity ,RESEARCH bias ,RESEARCH -- Needs assessment ,FOREST biodiversity - Abstract
The article focuses on the meta-analysis concerning the effect of forest management on biodiversity based from the paper written by Y. Paillet and colleagues. It discusses four major shortcomings of the study that contradicts the result of their analysis such as observational independence, bias on the taxonomic distribution, and exaggerated generalizations of the taxonomic data. It mentions that data based from the studies on saproxylic beetles were used by Paillet and colleagues for the analysis. It also concludes that the use of species richness as biodiversity value can be misleading and that Paillet and colleagues' analysis did not contribute to the understanding of the effect of forest management on biodiversity.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Prototype Biodiversity Digital Twin: Forest Biodiversity Dynamics
- Author
-
Bekir Afsar, Kyle Eyvindson, Tuomas Rossi, Martijn Versluijs, and Otso Ovaskainen
- Subjects
forest management ,biodiversity conservation ,LAND ,Science - Abstract
Forests are crucial in supporting biodiversity and providing ecosystem services. Understanding forest biodiversity dynamics under different management strategies and climate change scenarios is essential for effective conservation and management. This paper introduces the Forest Biodiversity Dynamics Prototype Digital Twin (pDT), integrating forest and biodiversity models to predict the effects of management options on forest ecosystems. The primary objective is to identify optimal management strategies that promote biodiversity, focusing on conservation and adaptation to different climate conditions. We start with the case of Finnish forests and bird species and plan to expand to include more European countries and a variety of species as the pDT is further developed.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. A review of the intact forest landscape concept in the Canadian boreal forest: its history, value, and measurement.
- Author
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Venier, L.A., Walton, R., Thompson, I.D., Arsenault, A., and Titus, B.D.
- Subjects
FOREST management ,BIODIVERSITY conservation ,FOREST restoration ,FRAGMENTED landscapes ,TAIGA ecology - Abstract
Copyright of Environmental Reviews is the property of Canadian Science Publishing and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Buy or lease land? Cost-effective conservation of an oligotrophic lake in a Natura 2000 area.
- Author
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Schöttker, Oliver and Wätzold, Frank
- Subjects
BIODIVERSITY conservation ,CONSERVATION & restoration ,NATURE conservation ,ENVIRONMENTAL protection ,FOREST management - Abstract
Cost-effective implementation of measures to conserve biodiversity is often a major target of conservation organisations, and choosing the correct mode of governance can be important in this context. Nature conservation organisations can, in principle, choose between two distinct modes of governance to implement conservation activities: they can (1) buy desired areas of interest and implement conservation measures themselves (
buy option ), or (2) offer payments to landowners to incentivize them to voluntarily preserve or create habitat on their land (compensation option ). In this paper we analyse the cost-effectiveness of these two modes of governance in a case study on a conservation project in a Natura 2000 area in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany. The actual costs of thebuy option are compared with the potential costs of implementing thecompensation option . We developed a costing framework to compare the costs of both options over time, given they generate the same ecological results on an identical project area. We find that the cost-effective solution depends, among other things, on the conservation timeframe considered and on cost components such as transaction costs, leasehold rent and land prices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Bibliometric and literature synthesis on assisted natural regeneration: an evidence base for forest and landscape restoration in the tropics.
- Author
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Oluwajuwon, Tomiwa V., Chazdon, Robin L., Ota, Liz, Gregorio, Nestor, and Herbohn, John
- Subjects
FOREST restoration ,FOREST management ,BIODIVERSITY conservation ,PUBLICATIONS - Abstract
Assisted Natural Regeneration (ANR) is a set of restoration strategies and interventions primarily based on natural regeneration, aimed at accelerating succession and providing multiple benefits in degraded ecosystems and landscapes. These strategies have the potential to significantly contribute to global Forest and Landscape Restoration efforts. However, ANR faces challenges due to limited recognition, support, and formal integration into relevant sectors and restoration policies, particularly in tropical regions. The dearth of evidencebased syntheses further compounds these challenges. To address this gap, a bibliometric analysis of selected scientific publications on ANR (n = 208) from 1987 to 2023 was conducted, using Web of Science and Google Scholar databases. A systematic review was undertaken, using a subset of original research articles (n = 44), to synthesize published data on interventions, contexts, costs, and benefits of ANR and to identify major knowledge gaps. Analysis of bibliometric metadata revealed an increasing annual output of ANR publications in over 80 journals, encompassing various document types and authors from over 40 countries. Despite ANR's formal emergence in the Philippines, Brazil has taken the lead in both its research and implementation, and international collaboration in ANR research has grown. While ANR research focused mostly on ecosystem services and ecological outcomes, social aspects have been poorly studied. Diverse ANR interventions align not only with ecological restoration but also with integrated land management, biodiversity conservation, forest and landscape restoration, and forest management. The cost-effectiveness of ANR implementation, especially in restoration for carbon storage, exhibited considerable variability when compared to active tree planting, and varied with intervention types, time, land use history, and long-term costs. This synthesis provides critical insights and evidence to enhance the effective integration of ANR into restoration and reforestation programs and policies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Feasibility and effectiveness of global intact forest landscape protection through forest certification: the conservation burden of intact forest landscapes.
- Author
-
Zwerts, Joeri A., van der Linde, Chaia M., Praamstra, Gijsbert J., Schipper, Joep, Trolliet, Franck, Waeber, Patrick O., and Garcia, Claude A.
- Subjects
FOREST protection ,FOREST conservation ,CLIMATE change ,BIODIVERSITY ,STAKEHOLDERS - Abstract
Intact Forest Landscapes (IFLs) are defined as forested areas of at least 500 km2 that show no signs of remotely sensed human activity. They are considered to be of high conservation value due to their role in maintaining biodiversity and mitigating climate change. In 2014, the members of the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC), one of the major global certification schemes for responsible forest management, took a conservation stand by restricting logging in FSC-certified IFLs. However, this move raised concerns about the economic viability of FSC-certified logging in these areas. To address these challenges, in 2022, FSC proposed an integrated landscape approach, considering local conditions and stakeholders' needs to balance IFL protection, economic sustainability, and community interests. Here, we leverage publicly available management unit (MU) data, to provide a global quantitative overview of IFLs designated for timber production. We use the concept of 'conservation burden' for the extent that MUs overlap with IFLs, representing the impact that IFL protection has on forest management operations if logging is disallowed. Our data indicates that currently FSC-certified MUs affect 0.6% of global IFLs. Too restrictive policies for logging in IFLs may discourage FSC-certification in global IFLs. Considering the environmental and social benefits of FSC certification, it warrants careful examination whether the benefits of protecting a limited subset of FSC-certified IFLs outweighs the cost of potentially reduced growth of the total FSC-certified area. Our data can provide a basis to facilitate stakeholder engagement for landscape-level IFL management. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Monitoring Changes in Composition and Diversity of Forest Vegetation Layers after the Cessation of Management for Renaturalization.
- Author
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Ma, Yuhua, Wei, Jingya, Wang, Wenjing, Huang, Cheng, Feng, Chun, Xu, Duanyang, Haider, Fasih Ullah, and Li, Xu
- Subjects
FOREST plants ,STRUCTURAL equation modeling ,FOREST management ,RESTORATION ecology ,UNDERSTORY plants ,FOREST biodiversity - Abstract
Overstory and understory vegetation play a vital role in forest ecosystem functionality. However, it is necessary to enhance the knowledge of their diversity and compositional dynamics following cessation of disturbance, which is required to inform restoration approaches and the mechanisms required for maintaining disturbance cessation. We conducted a chronosequence spanning 0–1, 5–6, 11–12, 20–24, and 28–34 years since disturbance cessation, and old-growth forests to investigate the dynamic changes in overstory and understory vegetation diversity and composition, as well as maintenance mechanisms following the cessation of anthropogenic disturbances in subtropical regions of Eastern China. The current study results indicated a decrease in understory cover and periodic fluctuations in the diversity of overstorey and understory vegetation following disturbance cessation efforts. Specifically, the shrub layer exhibited the highest richness in 28–34 years, while the herb layer showed the lowest evenness. Multivariate analysis using multiple-response permutation procedures indicated that the species composition and interspecific quantity ratio of understory plants in the forest at 28–34 years significantly differ from those in the early closure stage. An indicator species analysis revealed that more support was given to sun-loving plants after 0–1 years of the enclosure, while species with shade tolerance and low nutrient requirements were supported after 28–34 years. The structural equation model results show that 38.8% of the impact on herb evenness was related to light and substrate diversity. The ecological restoration time mainly indirectly affects understory vegetation by influencing the upper vegetation, light availability, and substrate heterogeneity. Overall, this study revealed that cessation of anthropogenic disturbance can maintain and care for understorey plant diversity and contribute to the sustainable management of forests. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Identification of main variables in forest management for recovery of endemic species habitat in burned areas of southern Chile.
- Author
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Moreno, Roberto, Zamora, Ricardo, Moreno-García, Norman, Esse, Carlos, Galán, Carmen, and Molina, Juan Ramón
- Subjects
FOREST management ,ENDEMIC species ,BIOINDICATORS ,FOREST biodiversity ,IDENTIFICATION ,TEMPERATE forest ecology ,FOREST regeneration ,TEMPERATE forests - Abstract
Wildfires are among the most serious disturbances that affect forest biodiversity, damaging both flora and fauna. In some burned areas, vegetation recovery is a long and complex process that requires the support of restorative actions. This study evaluated changes in forest structural features after a fire that affect habitat suitability for Rhinocryptids, an endemic group of bird species that are indicators of biodiversity in the temperate forests of South America. The study area was the Malleco National Reserve, Chile, where the main ecosystems are temperate forests. Four species from the Rhinocryptidae family of birds were used as bioindicator species. This group of species is endemic to temperate forests in South America. After fires occurred in 2002 and 2015, affecting temperate forests dominated by several Nothofagus species, two field inventories were carried out in 2016 and 2018. These inventories recorded the presence of Rhinocryptids and some forests structural features. Differences between the two stages of forest regeneration were assessed using statistical tests (T-test and Wilcoxon–Mann–Whitney test) and a classification model was proposed to determine the presence of Rhinocryptidae species. The statistical analysis of forest structural features showed that the variables more relevant in the habitat recuperation are vertical stratification (p-value < 0.001) and understory cover (p-value = 0.053). The trained decision tree to predict the presence of Rhinocryptidae species had an accuracy of 65.22%. This model showed that the coexistence of more than one Rhinocryptidae species occurs when vertical stratification is not mono-stratified and the density is lower than 335 trees ha−1. Our results can help forest managers to consider forest structure as a suitable habitat for certain major wildlife species when implementing post-fire recovery plans. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Plantation forests and biodiversity: oxymoron or opportunity?
- Author
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Brockerhoff, Eckehard G., Jactel, Hervé, Parrotta, John A., Quine, Christopher P., and Sayer, Jeffrey
- Subjects
ARBORICULTURE ,AFFORESTATION ,ENDANGERED species ,BIODIVERSITY ,FORESTS & forestry ,WILDLIFE conservation ,AGRICULTURE ,NATURAL resources ,NATURAL resources management - Abstract
Losses of natural and semi-natural forests, mostly to agriculture, are a significant concern for biodiversity. Against this trend, the area of intensively managed plantation forests increases, and there is much debate about the implications for biodiversity. We provide a comprehensive review of the function of plantation forests as habitat compared with other land cover, examine the effects on biodiversity at the landscape scale, and synthesise context-specific effects of plantation forestry on biodiversity. Natural forests are usually more suitable as habitat for a wider range of native forest species than plantation forests but there is abundant evidence that plantation forests can provide valuable habitat, even for some threatened and endangered species, and may contribute to the conservation of biodiversity by various mechanisms. In landscapes where forest is the natural land cover, plantation forests may represent a low-contrast matrix, and aforestation of agricultural land can assist conservation by providing complementary forest habitat, buffering edge eVects, and increasing connectivity. In contrast, conversion of natural forests and aforestation of natural non-forest land is detrimental. However, regional deforestation pressure for agricultural development may render plantation forestry a 'lesser evil' if forest managers protect indigenous vegetation remnants. We provide numerous context-specific examples and case studies to assist impact assessments of plantation forestry, and we offer a range of management recommendations. This paper also serves as an introduction and background paper to this special issue on the eVects of plantation forests on biodiversity [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. A Vision for World Forests: Results from the Council on Foreign Relations Study.
- Author
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Victor, David G.
- Subjects
FOREST restoration ,FOREST conservation ,INTERNATIONAL cooperation on environmental protection ,CONSERVATION of natural resources ,RESTORATION ecology ,FOREST management ,SUSTAINABLE forestry ,CONTROL of deforestation ,FOREST protection ,FORESTS & forestry ,BIODIVERSITY conservation - Abstract
The thesis of this paper centers on the premise that the twentieth century witnessed the start of a ‘Great Restoration’ of the world's forests. Efficient farmers and foresters are learning to spare forestland by growing more food and fiber in ever-smaller areas. Meanwhile; increased use of metals, plastics, and electricity has eased the need for timber. The conventional wisdom, the ‘Skinhead Earthé scenario, holds that as much as 200 million hectares of forest will be lost ill the next decades as agriculture extends to feed larger and richer populations. Current trends, however, suggest not balding but regrowth. Of course, industry has already taken big steps along the restoration path by sowing intensively managed ’plantation’ forests that act as wood farms. With economics already favoring intensive production, foresters should be able to lift the average world yield in lumbered forests to 5 cubic meters per hectare by 2050. The problem is the absence of a clear and widely shared goal to guide policy. A bottom-up process is needed because no single set of policy instruments is appropriate to all settings. For the Great Restoration to succeed, farmers, foresters, and environmentalists must recognize their common interest in high-yield production. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Natural Resource Policy and the Paradox of Public Involvement Bringing Scientists and Citizens Together.
- Author
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Walker, Gregg B. and Daniels, Steven E.
- Subjects
ECOSYSTEM management ,BIOTIC communities ,BIODIVERSITY conservation ,NATURE conservation ,NATURAL resources management ,SCIENTISTS ,LAND management ,FOREST management ,RANGE management - Abstract
Immersed in natural resource policy approaches such as ecosystem management is the expectation that the best available science will be applied so that the best policy management decision will result. Citizens, like scientists and land managers, want natural resource management decisions based on good science rather than special interest group politics. Yet citizens also want to be involved in the decision process and are skeptical about the very science they claim must be the basis for policy actions. Herein lies an apparent paradox. Citizens' want the best science to guide natural resource management decisions, but not to the exclusion of their input. Similarly, there seems to be a paradox in the sentiments expressed by natural resource management agency administrators and specialists. Agency personnel know they need meaningful citizen involvement in their management decisions, but they also want citizens to trust their scientific expertise. This paper is about that paradox and innovative ways to work through it. We first discuss the nature of natural resource conflict, then address the paradox in some depth. A discussion of traditional public participation precedes innovative methods for working through the paradox. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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