648 results on '"national forest inventory"'
Search Results
2. Regional estimates of gross primary production applying the Process-Based Model 3D-CMCC-FEM vs. Remote-Sensing multiple datasets.
- Author
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Dalmonech, D., Vangi, E., Chiesi, M., Chirici, G., Fibbi, L., Giannetti, F., Marano, G., Massari, C., Nolè, A., Xiao, J., and Collalti, A.
- Subjects
FOREST surveys ,ECOLOGICAL heterogeneity ,FOREST mapping ,FOREST reserves ,REMOTE sensing - Abstract
Process-based Forest Models (PBFMs) offer the possibility to capture important spatial and temporal patterns of carbon fluxes and stocks in forests. Yet, their predictive capacity should be demonstrated not only at the stand-level but also in the context of broad spatial and temporal heterogeneity. We apply a stand scale PBFM (3D-CMCC-FEM) in a spatially explicit manner at 1 km resolution in southern Italy. We developed a methodology to initialize the model that includes information derived from the integration of Remote Sensing (RS) and the National Forest Inventory (NFI) data and regional forest maps to characterize structural features of the main forest species. Gross primary production (GPP) is simulated over 2005–2019 period and the model predictive capability of the model in simulating GPP is evaluated both aggregated as at species-level through multiple independent data sources based on different nature RS-based products. We show that the model is able to reproduce most of the spatial (~2800 km
2 ) and temporal (32 years in total) patterns of the observed GPP at both seasonal, annual and interannual time scales, even at the species-level. These promising results open the possibility of confindently applying the 3D-CMCC-FEM to investigate the forests' behaviour under climate and environmental variability over large areas across highly variable ecological and bio-geographical heterogeneity of the Mediterranean region. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Forest Areas in China Are Recovering Since the 21st Century.
- Author
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Wei, Xuexin, Liu, Ronggao, Liu, Yang, He, Jiaying, Chen, Jilong, Qi, Lin, Zhou, Yanlian, Qin, Yuanwei, Wu, Chaoyang, Dong, Jinwei, Xiao, Xiangming, Chen, Jingming, and Ge, Quansheng
- Subjects
- *
CLIMATE change mitigation , *FOREST surveys , *FOREST management , *CARBON offsetting ,PARIS Agreement (2016) - Abstract
China is reported as the leading country in the Earth's greening. However, it is a challenge to capture the gradual recovery in forest cover and distinguish the contribution of trees from herbaceous vegetation using remote sensing data. We developed a new fractional tree cover product (GLOBMAP FTC China) from MODIS time series data to investigate change patterns of China's forests during 2000–2022. This annual product showed high consistency with China's National Forest Inventory. We found a significant increase (∼4 Mha/year) in the annual forest area in China from ∼154.47 Mha in 2000 to ∼236.01 Mha in 2015. This rate then slowed by 50% in 2015–2022 (∼2 Mha/year). The forest recovery primarily started in 2000–2004, and reached saturation in 2015. It was primarily contributed by the tree cover gain (92%) from forest conservation and restoration programs. Our findings can support forest management and carbon neutrality achievement for the country. Plain Language Summary: As the largest carbon reservoir in terrestrial ecosystems, forests are an indispensable part of China's carbon sink. Explicitly monitoring when, where, and how the forest recovery happening in China is crucial. In this work, a fractional tree cover product (named GLOBMAP FTC China) is generated, providing the coverage of trees within pixels. Compared to other remote sensing products, this product is proved to have the best consistency with China's National Forest Inventory (NFI). Applying the product for analysis, we found that China's forests have been recovering since 2000, and the increasing rate then slowed by 50% after 2015. Forest area in southwestern China shows the fastest increasing rate during 2000–2022, which is more than 0.2 Mha per year. The changes primarily show a stepwise transition from forests with a low fractional tree cover to forests with a higher fractional tree cover, which mainly thanks to the forest conservation and restoration programs. This study underscores that trees' growth dominates the greening in China's forests, highlighting the importance of the new fractional tree cover product for future accurate forest change studies and implications for forest management. Our findings are crucial for climate change mitigation as proposed by the Paris Agreement. Key Points: This work generates a fractional tree cover product GLOBMAP to separate the mixed effect of herbaceous vegetation from woody coverUsing GLOBMAP, we can obtain detailed and nuanced forest recovery in China, which is consistent with China's National Forest InventoryDuring 2000–2022, China's forests primarily presented as a stepwise transition from low tree cover forests to higher ones [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Incorporating Forest Mapping-Related Uncertainty into the Error Propagation of Wall-to-Wall Biomass Maps: A General Approach for Large and Small Areas.
- Author
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David, Hassan C., Vibrans, Alexander C., Martins-Neto, Rorai P., Dalla Corte, Ana Paula, and Péllico Netto, Sylvio
- Subjects
- *
FOREST mapping , *FOREST surveys , *FOREST reserves , *DATABASES , *SPATIAL resolution - Abstract
The sources of uncertainty in wall-to-wall AGB maps propagate from the tree to pixel, but uncertainty due to forest cover mapping is rarely incorporated into the error propagation process. This study aimed to (1) elaborate an analytical procedure to incorporate forest-mapping-related uncertainty into the error propagation from plot and pixel predictions; (2) develop a stratified estimator with a model-assisted estimator for small and large areas; and (3) estimate the effect of ignoring the mapping uncertainty on the confidence intervals (CIs) for totals. Data consist of a subset of the Brazilian national forest inventory (NFI) database, comprising 75 counties that, once aggregated, served as strata for the stratified estimator. On-ground data were gathered from 152 clusters (plots) and remotely sensed data from Landsat-8 scenes. Four major contributions are highlighted. First, we describe how to incorporate forest-mapping-related uncertainty into the CIs of any forest attribute and spatial resolution. Second, stratified estimators perform better than non-stratified estimators for forest area estimation when the response variable is forest/non-forest. Comparing our stratified estimators, this study indicated greater precision for the stratified estimator than for the regression estimator. Third, using the ratio estimator, we found evidence that the simple field plot information provided by the NFI clusters is sufficient to estimate the proportion forest for large regions as accurately as remote-sensing-based methods, albeit with less precision. Fourth, ignoring forest-mapping-related uncertainty erroneously narrows the CI width as the estimate of proportion forest area decreases. At the small-area level, forest-mapping-related uncertainty led to CIs for total AGB as much as 63% wider in extreme cases. At the large-area level, the CI was 5–7% wider. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Historic Land Use Modifies Impacts of Climate and Isolation in Rear Edge European Beech (Fagus sylvatica L.) Populations.
- Author
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Rhoades, Jazz, Vilà‐Cabrera, Albert, Ruiz‐Benito, Paloma, Bullock, James M., Jump, Alistair S., and Chapman, Daniel
- Subjects
- *
CLIMATE change , *CLIMATE & biogeography , *FORESTS & forestry , *EUROPEAN beech , *FOREST surveys - Abstract
Legacies of human land use have the potential to impact demographic responses to climate. However, few studies have investigated the interactive effects of land use legacies and climate change on tree demography. The demographic performance of rear edge populations in particular is an important determinant of a species' long‐term persistence. In this study, we investigated whether human land use legacies affect demographic responses to climate and population isolation in rear edge European beech populations (Fagus sylvatica L.) at the temperate‐Mediterranean transition zone in the NE Iberian Peninsula. We utilised data from the Spanish Forest Inventory and generalised linear mixed models to compare the potential interactions across four different demographic rates (tree growth, survival probability, new adult recruitment and sapling recruitment). We found that the demographic rates were affected by the combination of land use legacies, climate and population isolation in different ways, which could potentially lead to complex shifts in future population dynamics under climate change. We identified that intense historic management either magnified negative relationships between tree demography and climate or population isolation, or reduced demographic performance in favourable climates to levels observed in unfavourable climates. Through either form of interaction, we found that intense historic forest management had a negative impact on tree demography, which has the potential to compromise future carbon stocks and long‐term population viability. Overall, we show that disentangling human and environmental factors can enable us to better understand heterogeneous demographic performance across the rear edge of species distributions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Enhancing the Precision of Forest Growing Stock Volume in the Estonian National Forest Inventory with Different Predictive Techniques and Remote Sensing Data.
- Author
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Omoniyi, Temitope Olaoluwa and Sims, Allan
- Subjects
- *
FOREST management , *MACHINE learning , *FOREST surveys , *SYNTHETIC aperture radar , *AIRBORNE lasers - Abstract
Estimating forest growing stock volume (GSV) is crucial for forest growth and resource management, as it reflects forest productivity. National measurements are laborious and costly; however, integrating satellite data such as optical, Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR), and airborne laser scanning (ALS) with National Forest Inventory (NFI) data and machine learning (ML) methods has transformed forest management. In this study, random forest (RF), support vector regression (SVR), and Extreme Gradient Boosting (XGBoost) were used to predict GSV using Estonian NFI data, Sentinel-2 imagery, and ALS point cloud data. Four variable combinations were tested: CO1 (vegetation indices and LiDAR), CO2 (vegetation indices and individual band reflectance), CO3 (LiDAR and individual band reflectance), and CO4 (a combination of vegetation indices, individual band reflectance, and LiDAR). Across Estonia's geographical regions, RF consistently delivered the best performance. In the northwest (NW), the RF model achieved the best performance with the CO3 combination, having an R2 of 0.63 and an RMSE of 125.39 m3/plot. In the southwest (SW), the RF model also performed exceptionally well, achieving an R2 of 0.73 and an RMSE of 128.86 m3/plot with the CO4 variable combination. In the northeast (NE), the RF model outperformed other ML models, achieving an R2 of 0.64 and an RMSE of 133.77 m3/plot under the CO4 combination. Finally, in the southeast (SE) region, the best performance was achieved with the CO4 combination, yielding an R2 of 0.70 and an RMSE of 21,120.72 m3/plot. These results underscore RF's precision in predicting GSV across diverse environments, though refining variable selection and improving tree species data could further enhance accuracy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Biomass Equations and Carbon Stock Estimates for the Southeastern Brazilian Atlantic Forest.
- Author
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Gaui, Tatiana Dias, Cysneiros, Vinicius Costa, de Souza, Fernanda Coelho, de Souza, Hallefy Junio, Silveira Filho, Telmo Borges, Carvalho, Daniel Costa de, Pace, José Henrique Camargo, Vidaurre, Graziela Baptista, and Miguel, Eder Pereira
- Subjects
CARBON sequestration in forests ,ALLOMETRIC equations ,FOREST surveys ,WOOD density ,CLIMATE change ,TROPICAL forests ,FOREST biomass - Abstract
Tropical forests play an important role in mitigating global climate change, emphasizing the need for reliable estimates of forest carbon stocks at regional and global scales. This is essential for effective carbon management, which involves strategies like emission reduction and enhanced carbon sequestration through forest restoration and conservation. However, reliable sample-based estimations of forest carbon stocks require accurate allometric equations, which are lacking for the rainforests of the Atlantic Forest Domain (AFD). In this study, we fitted biomass equations for the three main AFD forest types and accurately estimated the amount of carbon stored in their above-ground biomass (AGB) in Rio de Janeiro state, Brazil. Using non-destructive methods, we measured the total wood volume and wood density of 172 trees from the most abundant species in the main remnants of rainforest, semideciduous forest, and restinga forest in the state. The biomass and carbon stocks were estimated with tree-level data from 185 plots obtained in the National Forest Inventory conducted in Rio de Janeiro. Our locally developed allometric equations estimated the state's biomass stocks at 70.8 ± 5.4 Mg ha
−1 and carbon stocks at 35.4 ± 2.7 Mg ha−1 . Notably, our estimates were more accurate than those obtained using a widely applied pantropical allometric equation from the literature, which tended to overestimate biomass and carbon stocks. These findings can be used for establishing a baseline for monitoring carbon stocks in the Atlantic Forest, especially in the context of the growing voluntary carbon market, which demands more consistent and accurate carbon stock estimations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Regional estimates of gross primary production applying the Process-Based Model 3D-CMCC-FEM vs. Remote-Sensing multiple datasets
- Author
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D. Dalmonech, E. Vangi, M. Chiesi, G. Chirici, L. Fibbi, F. Giannetti, G. Marano, C. Massari, A. Nolè, J. Xiao, and A. Collalti
- Subjects
Process-based forest model ,wall-to-wall map ,gross primary production ,national forest inventory ,Mediterranean region ,Oceanography ,GC1-1581 ,Geology ,QE1-996.5 - Abstract
Process-based Forest Models (PBFMs) offer the possibility to capture important spatial and temporal patterns of carbon fluxes and stocks in forests. Yet, their predictive capacity should be demonstrated not only at the stand-level but also in the context of broad spatial and temporal heterogeneity. We apply a stand scale PBFM (3D-CMCC-FEM) in a spatially explicit manner at 1 km resolution in southern Italy. We developed a methodology to initialize the model that includes information derived from the integration of Remote Sensing (RS) and the National Forest Inventory (NFI) data and regional forest maps to characterize structural features of the main forest species. Gross primary production (GPP) is simulated over 2005–2019 period and the model predictive capability of the model in simulating GPP is evaluated both aggregated as at species-level through multiple independent data sources based on different nature RS-based products. We show that the model is able to reproduce most of the spatial (~2800 km2) and temporal (32 years in total) patterns of the observed GPP at both seasonal, annual and interannual time scales, even at the species-level. These promising results open the possibility of confindently applying the 3D-CMCC-FEM to investigate the forests’ behaviour under climate and environmental variability over large areas across highly variable ecological and bio-geographical heterogeneity of the Mediterranean region.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Assessing ensemble models for carbon sequestration and storage estimation in forests using remote sensing data
- Author
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Mehdi Fasihi, Beatrice Portelli, Luca Cadez, Antonio Tomao, Alex Falcon, Giorgio Alberti, and Giuseppe Serra
- Subjects
Carbon storage estimation ,Carbon sequestration estimation ,Ensemble models ,Remote sensing ,Canopy height model ,National Forest inventory ,Information technology ,T58.5-58.64 ,Ecology ,QH540-549.5 - Abstract
Forests play a crucial role in storing much of the world's carbon (C). Accurately estimating C sequestration is essential for addressing and mitigating the impacts of global warming. While many studies have used machine learning models to estimate carbon storage (CS) in forests based on remote sensing data, this research further examines C sequestration (i.e., the annual carbon uptake by trees; CSE). The objectives of this study are two-fold: firstly, to identify the best models for estimating CSE and CS by testing various methods, and secondly, to examine the effect of climatic data and the canopy height model (CHM) on the estimation of CSE. To achieve the first objective, we will compare the performance of fourteen models, including twelve machine learning models, one deep learning model, and an ensemble model that combines the top four independent models. For the second objective, we study the effect of four input configurations: the first is a baseline configuration based solely on attributes extracted from satellite images (Sentinel-2) and geomorphology; the second combines satellite features with climatic data; the third uses a CHM derived from LiDAR instead of climatic data; and the fourth combines all available features: satellite images, climatic data, and CHM. The results show that adding climatic data does not improve the estimation of CSE and CS. However, adding CHM features significantly improves the models' performance for both targets. The implemented ensemble model demonstrated the best performance across all configurations.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Forests of Finland 2019–2023 and their development 1921–2023
- Author
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Kari T. Korhonen, Minna Räty, Helena Haakana, Juha Heikkinen, Juha-Pekka Hotanen, Mikko Kuronen, and Juho Pitkänen
- Subjects
forest management ,national forest inventory ,growing stock ,forest resources ,forest damage ,increment ,monitoring indicators of biodiversity ,Forestry ,SD1-669.5 - Abstract
In 2019–2023 the 13th Finnish National Forest Inventory (NFI) was implemented by measuring a total of 62 266 sample plots across the country. The methodology of the sampling and measurements was similar as in the previous inventory, but the proportion and number of remeasured permanent plots was increased to improve the monitoring of annual increment and other changes in the forests. Only 6.2 M ha (14%) of Finland’s total land area (30.4 M ha) is other land than forestry land. Productive and poorly productive forests cover 22.9 M ha (75%) of the total land area. The forest area has remained stable in recent decades but the forest area available for wood supply (FAWS) has decreased due to increased forest protection – 23% of the forestry land and 10% of the productive forest are not available for wood supply. Compared to the previous inventory, forest resources have continued to increase but the average annual increment has declined from 107.8 M m3 to 103.0 M m3. The quality of forests from the timber production point of view has remained relatively good or improved slightly. The area of observed forest damage on FAWS is 8.4 M ha (46% of FAWS area), half of these minor damages with no impact on stand quality. Although the area of forest damage has not increased, the amount of mortality has continued to increase, and is now 8.8 M m3 year–1. The amount of dead wood has continued to increase in South Finland, while in North Finland the declining trend has turned into a slight increase. Since the 1920s, the area of forestry land has remained stable, but the area of productive forest has increased due to the drainage of poorly productive or treeless peatlands. The total volume of growing stock has increased by 84% and annual increment has more than doubled.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Discriminating woody species assemblages from National Forest Inventory data based on phylogeny in Georgia.
- Author
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Wellenbeck, Alexander, Fehrmann, Lutz, Feilhauer, Hannes, Schmidtlein, Sebastian, Misof, Bernhard, and Hein, Nils
- Subjects
- *
FOREST management , *FOREST surveys , *FOREST monitoring , *FOREST biodiversity , *GENETIC variation - Abstract
Classifications of forest vegetation types and characterization of related species assemblages are important analytical tools for mapping and diversity monitoring of forest communities. The discrimination of forest communities is often based on β‐diversity, which can be quantified via numerous indices to derive compositional dissimilarity between samples. This study aims to evaluate the applicability of unsupervised classification for National Forest Inventory data from Georgia by comparing two cluster hierarchies. We calculated the mean basal area per hectare for each woody species across 1059 plot observations and quantified interspecies distances for all 87 species. Following an unspuervised cluster analysis, we compared the results derived from the species‐neutral dissimilarity (Bray‐Curtis) with those based on the Discriminating Avalanche dissimilarity, which incorporates interspecies phylogenetic variation. Incorporating genetic variation in the dissimilarity quantification resulted in a more nuanced discrimination of woody species assemblages and increased cluster coherence. Favorable statistics include the total number of clusters (23 vs. 20), mean distance within clusters (0.773 vs. 0.343), and within sum of squares (344.13 vs. 112.92). Clusters derived from dissimilarities that account for genetic variation showed a more robust alignment with biogeographical units, such as elevation and known habitats. We demonstrate that the applicability of unsupervised classification of species assemblages to large‐scale forest inventory data strongly depends on the underlying quantification of dissimilarity. Our results indicate that by incorporating phylogenetic variation, a more precise classification aligned with biogeographic units is attained. This supports the concept that the genetic signal of species assemblages reflects biogeographical patterns and facilitates more precise analyses for mapping, monitoring, and management of forest diversity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Soil and climate‐dependent ingrowth inference: broadleaves on their slow way to conquer Swiss forests.
- Author
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Flury, Roman, Portier, Jeanne, Rohner, Brigitte, Baltensweiler, Andri, Di Bella Meusburger, Katrin, Scherrer, Daniel, Thürig, Esther, and Stadelmann, Golo
- Subjects
- *
GLOBAL warming , *FOREST resilience , *FOREST surveys , *HAZARD mitigation , *FOREST regeneration - Abstract
Forests provide essential ecosystem services that range from the production of timber to the mitigation of natural hazards. Rapid environmental changes, such as climate warming or the intensification of disturbance regimes, threaten forests and endanger forest ecosystem services. In light of these challenges, it is essential to understand forests' demographic processes of regeneration, growth, and mortality and their relationship with environmental conditions. Specifically, understanding the regeneration process in present‐day forests is crucial since it lays the foundation for the structure of future forests and their tree species composition. We used Swiss National Forest Inventory (NFI) data covering vast bio‐geographic gradients over four decades to achieve this understanding. Trees that reached a diameter at breast height of 12 cm between two consecutive NFI campaigns were used to determine regeneration and were referred to as ingrowth. Employing three independent statistical models, we investigated the number, species, and diameter of these ingrowth trees. The models were subsequently implemented into a forest simulator to project the development of Swiss forests until the mid‐21st century. The simulation results showed an ingrowth decrease and a shift in its species composition, marked by a significant reduction in Norway spruce Picea abies and concurrent increases in broadleaves. Nevertheless, the pace of this change towards climatically better adapted species composition is relatively slow and is likely to slow down even further as ingrowth declines in the future, in contrast to the fast‐changing climatic conditions. Hence, support through adaptive planting strategies should be tested in case ingrowth does not ensure the resilience of forests in the future. We conclude that since the regeneration of forests is becoming increasingly challenging, the current level at which ecosystem services are provided might not be ensured in the coming decades. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Range-Wide Assessment of Recent Longleaf Pine (Pinus palustris Mill.) Area and Regeneration Trends.
- Author
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Potter, Kevin M., Oswalt, Christopher M., and Guldin, James M.
- Subjects
LONGLEAF pine ,FORESTS & forestry ,FOREST declines ,FOREST restoration ,FOREST conversion - Abstract
Longleaf pine (Pinus palustris Mill.) is a conifer historically associated with an open forest ecosystem that extended across much of the coastal plain of the Southeastern United States. It now exists mainly in isolated fragments following the conversion of forests and the long-term disruption of the low-intensity fire regime upon which the species depends. Recent decades have seen efforts to restore longleaf pine forests by government and private landowners. This was reflected in analyses of national forest inventory data during two time periods, ca. 2009–2015 and 2016–2021, that showed increases in the estimated number of longleaf pine trees, the area of the longleaf pine forest type, and the number and area of planted longleaf pine, along with growth in mean plot-level longleaf pine carbon and importance value. At the same time, we found a decrease in the overall forest area containing longleaf pine, manifested across a variety of other forest types. These results point to a dynamic through which forests dominated by longleaf pine are becoming more widespread via restoration, while forests in which the species is a less important component are transitioning to other forest types or land uses. We also detected a decrease over time in the estimated number of longleaf seedlings across most states and forest types and a decline in naturally regenerated longleaf pine. To further assess regeneration trends in longleaf pine, we calculated the estimated proportion of small trees (seedlings and saplings) for the entire species and for seed zone sub-populations. We found a species-wide decrease in the proportion of small trees, from 82.1 percent to 75.1 percent. This reduction was most pronounced along the edges of the species distribution and could indicate less sustainable levels of regeneration in some areas. These results underscore the challenges of facilitating natural regeneration in this important species. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Diversity of forest structures important for biodiversity is determined by the combined effects of productivity, stand age, and management.
- Author
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Hämäläinen, Aino, Runnel, Kadri, Ranius, Thomas, and Strengbom, Joachim
- Subjects
- *
FOREST productivity , *FOREST biodiversity , *FOREST conservation , *FOREST management , *BIODIVERSITY conservation , *BIODIVERSITY , *DECIDUOUS forests - Abstract
In forests, the amount and diversity of structural features with high value for biodiversity, such as large trees and dead wood, are affected by productivity, stand age, and forest management. For efficient conservation of forest biodiversity, it is essential to understand the combined effects of these drivers. We used data from the Swedish National Forest Inventory to study the combined effects of productivity, stand age, and management for wood production on structures with high value for biodiversity: tree species richness, large living trees, dead wood volume, and specific dead wood types. Forest management changed the relationship between productivity and amount or diversity of some of the structures. Most structures increased with productivity and stand age, but decreased due to management. The negative effect of management was greatest for structures occurring mainly in high-productivity forests, such as deciduous dead wood. Thus, biodiversity conservation should target high-productivity forests to preserve these structures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. An investigation into the age structure of Norway spruce and Scots pine stands in Norway
- Author
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Aaron Smith, Aksel Granhus, and Rasmus Astrup
- Subjects
Forest history ,National forest inventory ,Old trees ,Stand age ,Ecology ,QH540-549.5 - Abstract
Forest age structure is one of the most important ecological indicators of forest sustainability in terms of biodiversity, forest history, harvesting potentials, carbon storage, and recreational values. The available information on the forest age is most often stand age from forest management plans or national forest inventories. Depending on the definition, stand age is often not a good indicator for the biological age of the dominant trees in a stand. Here, we used 6,998 increment cores from dominant Norway spruce (Picea abies L.) and Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris L.) sampled on National Forest Inventory (NFI) plots throughout Norway to gain a better understanding of the age structure of Norway spruce and Scots pine stands in Norway, and on the relationship between the recorded stand age and the biological age of dominant trees on the NFI plots. In forest with stand ages indicating that the stand was established after the abandonment of selective harvesting in favor of even-aged management dominated by clear-cutting methods (ca.1940 C.E.), we found no systematic difference between the biological age of the sampled trees and the stand age assessed by the NFI. In older stands, there was a large difference between the stand age and the age of the overstory trees with the sampled age trees occasionally being hundreds of years older than the stand age. Our study also reveals that the area of forest with old Norway spruce and Scots pine trees ≥ 160 years old is considerably higher than the corresponding area estimate based on information derived from the stand age only. These results are important as the stand age is often used to characterize status with respect to forest naturalness, biodiversity, guide protection efforts, and describe the appropriate and allowed management activities.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Incorporating Forest Mapping-Related Uncertainty into the Error Propagation of Wall-to-Wall Biomass Maps: A General Approach for Large and Small Areas
- Author
-
Hassan C. David, Alexander C. Vibrans, Rorai P. Martins-Neto, Ana Paula Dalla Corte, and Sylvio Péllico Netto
- Subjects
national forest inventory ,proportion forest ,forest cover map ,model-assisted estimation ,uncertainty analysis ,Science - Abstract
The sources of uncertainty in wall-to-wall AGB maps propagate from the tree to pixel, but uncertainty due to forest cover mapping is rarely incorporated into the error propagation process. This study aimed to (1) elaborate an analytical procedure to incorporate forest-mapping-related uncertainty into the error propagation from plot and pixel predictions; (2) develop a stratified estimator with a model-assisted estimator for small and large areas; and (3) estimate the effect of ignoring the mapping uncertainty on the confidence intervals (CIs) for totals. Data consist of a subset of the Brazilian national forest inventory (NFI) database, comprising 75 counties that, once aggregated, served as strata for the stratified estimator. On-ground data were gathered from 152 clusters (plots) and remotely sensed data from Landsat-8 scenes. Four major contributions are highlighted. First, we describe how to incorporate forest-mapping-related uncertainty into the CIs of any forest attribute and spatial resolution. Second, stratified estimators perform better than non-stratified estimators for forest area estimation when the response variable is forest/non-forest. Comparing our stratified estimators, this study indicated greater precision for the stratified estimator than for the regression estimator. Third, using the ratio estimator, we found evidence that the simple field plot information provided by the NFI clusters is sufficient to estimate the proportion forest for large regions as accurately as remote-sensing-based methods, albeit with less precision. Fourth, ignoring forest-mapping-related uncertainty erroneously narrows the CI width as the estimate of proportion forest area decreases. At the small-area level, forest-mapping-related uncertainty led to CIs for total AGB as much as 63% wider in extreme cases. At the large-area level, the CI was 5–7% wider.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Impact of Forest Operations in Four Biogeographical Regions in Europe: Finding the Key Drivers for Future Development
- Author
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Engler, Benjamin, Hartmann, Gwendolin, Mederski, Piotr S., Bont, Leo G., Picchi, Gianni, Alcoverro, Gerard, Purfürst, Thomas, and Schweier, Janine
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Carbon concentration of living tree biomass of Pinus sylvestris, Picea abies, Betula pendula and Betula pubescens in Sweden.
- Author
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Mensah, Alex Appiah and Petersson, Hans
- Subjects
- *
EUROPEAN white birch , *SILVER fir , *FORESTS & forestry , *BIOMASS , *SCOTS pine , *NORWAY spruce , *FOREST surveys - Abstract
This study examined the carbon (C) concentration of the major tree species (Scots pine, Norway spruce, and Birch) in Sweden based on destructively sampled biomass data. The examination was made using single trees and comprised three components: branches with needles, stemwood with bark, and stump with roots. We developed a weighted C concentration estimator accounting for fresh weights of tree components to infer the C concentration at the population level. Significant differences in C concentration (%) were found among species, with the highest in pine (50.671 ± 0.211), followed by spruce (49.518 ± 0.164) and the lowest in birch (49.347 ± 0.241). Additionally, the C concentration varied among tree components, regardless of tree size, growth rate, and site conditions. At the national level, we applied the estimated species- and component-specific C concentration constants to the measured total biomass of the major tree species from the National Forest Inventory. This extrapolation revealed that the average C concentration of major trees across all forestlands in Sweden was approximately 50.012%. These findings have significant implications for accurate C sequestration reporting in the LULUCF sector. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Effect of labour costs on wood harvesting costs and timber provision.
- Author
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Bont, Leo G., Schweier, Janine, and Temperli, Christian
- Subjects
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LOGGING , *WOOD , *SCIENTIFIC literature , *WOOD products , *FOREST surveys , *SWITCHING costs - Abstract
Efficient forest operations are essential for forest enterprises, who provide wood and numerous ecosystem services for the society. Important factors influencing the efficiency of forest operations, and thus the harvesting costs, are the level of mechanization, the harvesting method applied, the forest road network, and the training of the labourers. The cost of labour, i.e. salaries, is another important driver of harvesting costs. However, its effect on and relative importance for overall harvesting costs is poorly described in the scientific literature. Thus, this study aims to analyse the influence of labour costs in more detail, especially on the country-wide wood harvesting potentials. In addition, we aimed to cross-compare the effect of labour costs with the effect of switching to a more efficient harvesting method. For this purpose, we calculated timber harvesting costs with varying salaries for all sample plots of the Swiss National Forest Inventory (NFI) for both, the currently applied harvesting method recorded in the NFI, and the potential best suitable harvesting method. A 1% change in labour costs affects harvesting costs by 0.33–0.77%, depending on the harvesting method applied. The influence is larger for systems that involve a large share of motor-manual work and for cable-based methods. Changing labour costs by ± 30% affects the number of plots for which timber harvesting is economically feasible, by 5 to 15 percent points. The effect of switching from the current to the best suitable harvesting method is comparable to that of reducing labour costs by 15–30%. These results indicate that the efficiency of wood harvesting can be increased with further mechanization and does not require cutting salaries of forestry personnel. In that, our results may inform forestry planning and policy making at regional to national level. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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20. Validation of ESA-CCI Forest Biomass Products over India: Methodological and Data Challenges and Results.
- Author
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Bhat, Y., Kripa, M. K., and Dadhwal, V. K.
- Abstract
Forest aboveground biomass (AGB), an essential climate variable, is a major priority for the delivery of usable products from multi-sensor remote sensing data. Recent AGB global products such as ESA-CCI and GlobBiomass could provide critical inputs for carbon sequestration, emission and climate change studies. While these have been developed and tested with global field datasets, very little use of Indian field measurements and validation with Indian observations has been reported. In this study, a database of field measurements was created, of 1 ha (135 plots), clustered plots of 0.1 ha (101 plots) and 582 plot AGB of 0.1–0.04 ha from the published literature and used for validating ESA-CCI 2018 & 2010 and Santoro-2010 (Santoro et al., Earth System Science Data 13:3927–3950, 2021) datasets. Validation of mean AGB for larger areas such as regional and national estimates was carried out with field-based national forest inventory results of Forest Survey of India (FSI), which indicated an RMSE of 13.47 Mg/ha at zone level and a bias of 48.82 Mg/ha for AGB density and 983.96 Mt in AGB pool at national level. The plot-level comparison at 1 ha plots had RMSE of 215 Mg/ha. However, data from smaller plots did not show any correlation with the AGB product. In general, all products exhibited saturation and were unable to capture AGB of plots above 250 Mg/ha. The large area mean AGB was underestimated when compared with national forest inventory results. Expanding the Indian datasets for use in the development and validation of AGB models, updating the global datasets with Indian observations through new data integration approaches is suggested. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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21. Discriminating woody species assemblages from National Forest Inventory data based on phylogeny in Georgia
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Alexander Wellenbeck, Lutz Fehrmann, Hannes Feilhauer, Sebastian Schmidtlein, Bernhard Misof, and Nils Hein
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beta diversity ,community discrimination ,dissimilarity ,diversity monitoring ,National Forest Inventory ,phylogeny ,Ecology ,QH540-549.5 - Abstract
Abstract Classifications of forest vegetation types and characterization of related species assemblages are important analytical tools for mapping and diversity monitoring of forest communities. The discrimination of forest communities is often based on β‐diversity, which can be quantified via numerous indices to derive compositional dissimilarity between samples. This study aims to evaluate the applicability of unsupervised classification for National Forest Inventory data from Georgia by comparing two cluster hierarchies. We calculated the mean basal area per hectare for each woody species across 1059 plot observations and quantified interspecies distances for all 87 species. Following an unspuervised cluster analysis, we compared the results derived from the species‐neutral dissimilarity (Bray‐Curtis) with those based on the Discriminating Avalanche dissimilarity, which incorporates interspecies phylogenetic variation. Incorporating genetic variation in the dissimilarity quantification resulted in a more nuanced discrimination of woody species assemblages and increased cluster coherence. Favorable statistics include the total number of clusters (23 vs. 20), mean distance within clusters (0.773 vs. 0.343), and within sum of squares (344.13 vs. 112.92). Clusters derived from dissimilarities that account for genetic variation showed a more robust alignment with biogeographical units, such as elevation and known habitats. We demonstrate that the applicability of unsupervised classification of species assemblages to large‐scale forest inventory data strongly depends on the underlying quantification of dissimilarity. Our results indicate that by incorporating phylogenetic variation, a more precise classification aligned with biogeographic units is attained. This supports the concept that the genetic signal of species assemblages reflects biogeographical patterns and facilitates more precise analyses for mapping, monitoring, and management of forest diversity.
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- 2024
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22. New Zealand's planted forests–Carbon stocks and yield in fast growing exotic tree plantations of the Southern Hemisphere
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T S H Paul and S J Wakelin
- Subjects
Exotic tree plantations ,Carbon stocks and carbon stock change ,National forest inventory ,Carbon accounting ,LULUCF ,Climate change mitigation ,Forestry ,SD1-669.5 ,Plant ecology ,QK900-989 - Abstract
Every year New Zealand measures 1/5th of the permanent sample plots of the National Planted Forest Inventory administered by the Ministry for the Environment (MFE). This means that all plots are measured once during a five-year cycle to provide the full inventory, while each measurement year in its own right provides a random nationally-representative sample of New Zealand's plantation forests.Land-use change and planted forest area are highly dynamic in New Zealand compared to forests in many northern hemisphere countries and every year new plots are added to the inventory due to new afforestation areas. Over time, old plot data representing stands that have been recently harvested will be replaced with measurements of the new forests growing on these sites or will drop out altogether due to improvements in mapping or deforestation. This means that estimates from a single year's plot measurements can give different results from the previous year due to the changes that the plantation forest estate experiences from year to year.In this paper we analyse results for the latest measurement cycle (Panels 2016 - 2020) and identify any issues or trends in carbon stocks. We use all panel data plus data from previous periodic forest inventories to generate a fully representative yield table for all plantation forests in the sub-categories of Kyoto Protocol-compliant afforestation and other planted forests (“non-Kyoto”). Furthermore, we use an imputation approach to provide a statistically accurate representation of stock changes over time. The yield tables generated are used in MFE's Land Use Carbon Analysis System (LUCAS) to generate estimates of carbon stocks and stock changes for international reporting.The estimated mean carbon sequestration rate over the typical rotation for New Zealand's dominant plantation species is higher than the default range provided by the IPCC (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change). Predicted carbon sequestration in non-Kyoto planted forests (10.5 tC ha−1 yr−1) exceeds the estimated carbon sequestration in Kyoto-compliant planted forests (9.8 tC ha−1 yr−1) with both at the upper range of estimates for temperate plantation forests (IPCC). Current mean carbon stocks are significantly larger in Kyoto-compliant plantation forests (169 tC ha−1) than in non-Kyoto planted forests (108 tC ha−1) across New Zealand, largely because they are on average five years older. Estimated Mean annual increment, m3 ha−1 yr−1 expressed as a comparable index (“300Index”) indicates that Kyoto-compliant forest land has slightly higher productivity than non-Kyoto planted forests, but because the latter are composed of younger stands, greater carbon sequestration rates but lower current stocks are estimated. Plots with slower growing tree species such as Douglas-fir, cypresses and coastal redwood are now an increasing part of the Kyoto-compliant estate, reducing the overall sequestration rates for this forest type.
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- 2024
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23. Accuracy of the Copernicus High-Resolution Layer Forest Type (HRL FTY) assessed with domestic NFI sampling plots in Poland
- Author
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Żaczek Marcin, Walęzak Mariusz, Olecka Anna, Waśniewska Sylwia, and Paczosa Anna
- Subjects
remote sensing ,copernicus land monitoring service ,broad-leaved ,coniferous ,national forest inventory ,ghg inventory ,land use ,land use change and forestry ,accuracy metrics ,uncertainty ,Environmental technology. Sanitary engineering ,TD1-1066 - Abstract
Over the past years, several remote sensing maps of land cover have been produced, but they still exhibit certain differences compared to the real land use that reduce their value for climate and carbon cycle modelling as well as for national estimates of forest carbon stocks and their change. This paper outlines a straightforward framework for evaluating map accuracy and estimating uncertainty in land cover area, specifically for forest-related land cover maps in Poland for the year 2018.
- Published
- 2023
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24. Enhancing the Precision of Forest Growing Stock Volume in the Estonian National Forest Inventory with Different Predictive Techniques and Remote Sensing Data
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Temitope Olaoluwa Omoniyi and Allan Sims
- Subjects
National Forest Inventory ,growing stock volume ,remote sensing ,Sentinel-2 ,airborne laser scanning ,machine learning ,Science - Abstract
Estimating forest growing stock volume (GSV) is crucial for forest growth and resource management, as it reflects forest productivity. National measurements are laborious and costly; however, integrating satellite data such as optical, Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR), and airborne laser scanning (ALS) with National Forest Inventory (NFI) data and machine learning (ML) methods has transformed forest management. In this study, random forest (RF), support vector regression (SVR), and Extreme Gradient Boosting (XGBoost) were used to predict GSV using Estonian NFI data, Sentinel-2 imagery, and ALS point cloud data. Four variable combinations were tested: CO1 (vegetation indices and LiDAR), CO2 (vegetation indices and individual band reflectance), CO3 (LiDAR and individual band reflectance), and CO4 (a combination of vegetation indices, individual band reflectance, and LiDAR). Across Estonia’s geographical regions, RF consistently delivered the best performance. In the northwest (NW), the RF model achieved the best performance with the CO3 combination, having an R2 of 0.63 and an RMSE of 125.39 m3/plot. In the southwest (SW), the RF model also performed exceptionally well, achieving an R2 of 0.73 and an RMSE of 128.86 m3/plot with the CO4 variable combination. In the northeast (NE), the RF model outperformed other ML models, achieving an R2 of 0.64 and an RMSE of 133.77 m3/plot under the CO4 combination. Finally, in the southeast (SE) region, the best performance was achieved with the CO4 combination, yielding an R2 of 0.70 and an RMSE of 21,120.72 m3/plot. These results underscore RF’s precision in predicting GSV across diverse environments, though refining variable selection and improving tree species data could further enhance accuracy.
- Published
- 2024
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25. Characterization of forest edge structure from airborne laser scanning data
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Moritz Bruggisser, Zuyuan Wang, Christian Ginzler, Clare Webster, and Lars T. Waser
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Vegetation structure ,National forest inventory ,Shelterbelt ,Light availability ,Ecology ,QH540-549.5 - Abstract
Forest edges represent the transition zone (ecotone) between the forest interior and the surrounding open land. Due to their great ecological importance, the value of assessing the structure of forest edges has been recognized. In Switzerland, for example, forest edge structure is assessed during field surveys of the Swiss National Forest Inventory (NFI). However, these assessments are time consuming and limited to sample plots. Publicly available countrywide airborne laser scanning (ALS) data, in contrast, offers possibilities to retrieve forest edge structure information over large spatial extents. In this study, we derived five metrics from ALS point clouds, namely the canopy height variability; ratios of the areas of the three edge components, i.e. shrub belt, shelterbelt and forest layer; the sky-view fraction; the shelterbelt slope; and the front density of the forest edge. These metrics describe the three-dimensional edge structure and therefore could enhance existing NFI edge metrics, which focus on two-dimensional structure characteristics. An expert assessment of the ALS edge metrics demonstrated the ability of the defined set of edge metrics to capture ecologically relevant and indicative characteristics of forest edges. Understanding this relationship between edge metrics and ecological functions is a prerequisite if ALS metrics are to be integrated into NFIs. We subsequently used the ALS edge metrics to group 284 forest edge into three classes with respect to their structural complexity using k-means clustering. The results indicated that the structual complexity was low for 173, medium for 46 and high for 65 forest edges, respectively. Applied to countrywide ALS data sets, our approach allows to retrieve area-wide, spatially continuous information on the forest edge conditions, and, if multitemporal ALS data is available, to monitor the development of the forest edges.
- Published
- 2024
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26. Estimating Forest Variables for Major Commercial Timber Plantations in Northern Spain Using Sentinel-2 and Ancillary Data.
- Author
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Novo-Fernández, Alís, López-Sánchez, Carlos A., Cámara-Obregón, Asunción, Barrio-Anta, Marcos, and Teijido-Murias, Iyán
- Subjects
TREE farms ,RANDOM forest algorithms ,INDEPENDENT variables ,FOREST surveys ,TIMBER ,AIRBORNE lasers - Abstract
In this study, we used Spanish National Forest Inventory (SNFI) data, Sentinel-2 imagery and ancillary data to develop models that estimate forest variables for major commercial timber plantations in northern Spain. We carried out the analysis in two stages. In the first stage, we considered plots with and without sub-meter geolocation, three pre-processing levels for the Sentinel-2 images and two machine learning algorithms. In most cases, geometrically, radiometrically, atmospherically and topographically (L2A-ATC) corrected images and the random forest algorithm provided the best results, with topographic correction producing a greater gain in model accuracy as the average slope of the plots increased. Our results did not show any clear impact of the geolocation accuracy of SNFI plots on results, suggesting that the usual geolocation accuracy of SNFI plots is adequate for developing forest models with data obtained from passive sensors. In the second stage, we used all plots together with L2A-ATC-corrected images to select five different groups of predictor variables in a cumulative process to determine the influence of each group of variables in the final RF model predictions. Yield variables produced the best fits, with R
2 ranging from 0.39 to 0.46 (RMSE% ranged from 44.6% to 61.9%). Although the Sentinel-2-based estimates obtained in this research are less precise than those previously obtained with Airborne Laser Scanning (ALS) data for the same species and region, they are unbiased (Bias% was always below 1%). Therefore, accurate estimates for one hectare are expected, as they are obtained by averaging the values of 100 pixels (model resolution of 10 m pixel−1 ) with an expected error compensation. Moreover, the use of these models will overcome the temporal resolution problem associated with the previous ALS-based models and will enable annual updates of forest timber resource estimates to be obtained. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Accuracy of the Copernicus High-Resolution Layer Forest Type (HRL FTY) assessed with domestic NFI sampling plots in Poland.
- Author
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Żaczek, Marcin, Walęzak, Mariusz, Olecka, Anna, Waśniewska, Sylwia, and Paczosa, Anna
- Subjects
NATURE conservation ,LAND cover ,FOREST surveys ,FOREST monitoring ,LAND use ,FOREST mapping ,CONIFEROUS forests ,CARBON cycle - Abstract
Over the past years, several remote sensing maps of land cover have been produced, but they still exhibit certain differences compared to the real land use that reduce their value for climate and carbon cycle modelling as well as for national estimates of forest carbon stocks and their change. This paper outlines a straightforward framework for evaluating map accuracy and estimating uncertainty in land cover area, specifically for forest-related land cover maps in Poland for the year 2018. The study compares stratified field-based data from the National Forest Inventory (NFI) with remote sensing data on forest variables, at the pixel level, in order to identify suitable methods for accuracy and area uncertainty estimation. Additionally, the paper introduces and presents a variety of accuracy metrics applicable to assess overall uncertainties in GHG inventories. The results indicate that the High-Resolution Layer Forest Type (HRL FTY) product (part of the broader Copernicus Land Monitoring Service [CLMS] portfolio), assessed using NFI field-based information, achieved an overall accuracy (OA) of 69.2%. This metric varies among particular nature protection forms, with the highest observed ones in Natura 2000 sites of 70.45%. The primary source of map errors was associated with distinguishing between broad-leaved and coniferous forest areas. Improving future maps necessitates more precise differentiation between species to better support national forest monitoring systems for the purpose of greenhouse gas (GHG) inventories where information on the spatial distribution and variability of forests sources, biodiversity assessment, threat prevention, estimation of carbon content is becoming an important part of the associated reporting system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Assessment of the Ellenberg quotient as a practical tool for vertical vegetation zonation
- Author
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Petr Dujka and Antonín Kusbach
- Subjects
european beech ,fagus sylvatica ,forest vegetation zones ,national forest inventory ,zonal concept ,Forestry ,SD1-669.5 - Abstract
The Ellenberg quotient (EQ) is a climate index defined as a ratio of the hottest month's temperature and the average annual precipitation sum. The quotient indirectly expresses the relationship between climate and vegetation, and its application is related to the ecological niche of Fagus sp. Although the quotient was curated on the grounds of field research primarily on German vegetation, the possibilities of its utilisation are not limited to the Central European region. The objective of this study is (i) to compare the EQ values calculated for the forest vegetation zones in the Czech Republic with the published data using the ecological niche of Fagus sylvatica; and (ii) to compare the new EQ-based vertical model with field empirical mapping. The study area is the Czech Republic, Central Europe. We used climate data from 1970-2000 and the data of the National Forest Inventory, 2nd cycle (2011-2015), representing an objective data design. Geospatial analytic methods, machine learning (boosting), and verification through statistical testing were performed. The results indicate higher EQ values between the two most substantial spatial frames - the Hercynicum and Carpaticum regions. By comparing empirical mapped units to their climatic potential (in the EQ), a match was found only within the Carpaticum region. The study presents a concretisation of the general climate index for a specific region, adds to the knowledge about the Fagus ecological niche in context with the Central European vegetation, and also points to the EQ's potential for evaluating the concept of vertical differentiation of forest communities, as well as a possible prediction tool for the vegetation migration in context with climate change.
- Published
- 2023
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29. Improving stem quality assessment based on national forest inventory data: an approach applied to Spanish forests
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Antonio Ruano, Iciar Alberdi, Patricia Adame, Daniel Moreno-Fernández, Alejandro Cantero Amiano, Juan Fernández-Golfín, Eva Hermoso, Laura Hernández, Esther Merlo, Vicente Sandoval, and Isabel Cañellas
- Subjects
National Forest Inventory ,Wood quality ,Harmonization ,Standing trees ,Visual characterization ,Forestry ,SD1-669.5 - Abstract
Abstract Key message This paper proposes a methodology that could be considered as a base for a harmonized protocol for stem-quality reporting in Europe while conducting National Forest Inventories, in order to cost-efficiently obtain a visual wood quality proxy. The importance of the variables selected, the limitations identified, and some improvements to the methodology are suggested. Forest areas with better wood quality, which in turn it would be useful for breeding programs, can be easily detected. Context The establishment of harmonized standards or indicators that allow us to determine the quality of the wood present in a forest prior to its exploitation has long been demanded by the European forestry sector, although agreed methodologies for the evaluation of wood quality in standing trees, which is one of the sector’s most urgent requirements, have not, as yet, been implemented. Aims To develop a protocol that visually characterizes wood quality on standing trees in a cost-effective way for the National Forest Inventory (NFI). After some improvements, it can be considered as a base for a European harmonized protocol. Methods In this article, we analyze the implementation, in the NFI, of a visual wood-quality assessment methodology in forests of Central Spain based on the different European standards as well as on research papers addressing this issue. Results The silvicultural practices employed are of the utmost importance to obtain the best wood quality, regardless of the species. Several areas with higher wood quality were identified as well as areas most affected by specific pests in the studied region. The impact of the variables measured (e.g., branchiness, crookedness, maximum branch diameter) is discussed. Conclusion It is feasible to estimate a proxy for wood quality on standing trees in the NFI. Furthermore, after studying the inventory data provided, several enhancements are proposed, not only to improve wood-quality estimates but also to optimize fieldwork costs. Harmonizing NFIs to assess and map European standing wood quality can be achieved.
- Published
- 2023
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30. Winter storm risk assessment in forests with high resolution gust speed data.
- Author
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Zeppenfeld, Thorsten, Jung, Christopher, Schindler, Dirk, Sennhenn-Reulen, Holger, Ipsen, Marie Josefin, and Schmidt, Matthias
- Subjects
- *
STORM damage , *WINTER storms , *SEVERE storms , *RISK assessment , *FOREST surveys , *FOREST management - Abstract
Winter storms pose a major threat to forest management in Central Europe. They affect forests at a large spatial scale and produce large losses in standing and merchantable timber within few hours. The assessment of winter storm vulnerability by statistical modelling serves as an important tool to tackle uncertainities about the damage risk and to inform management decision processes. This study made use of an extensive forest inventory data set from South-West Germany before and after winter storm Lothar in 1999, one of the most severe storm events in Germany over the last decades. Hierarchical logistic models were fitted to relate storm damage probability on individual tree level to features of dendrometry, site, orography, and storm-specific high resolution data of maximum gust speed. We developed two different approaches to implement gust speed as a predictor and compared them to a baseline model with a structured spatial effect function with no gust speed information. Regional and local variability which could not be described by the predictors was modelled by multi-level group effects. Generalisation performance was tested with a spatially and temporally independent data set on storm separation between explicit spatial gust speeds and unknown variability achieved with the parametric multi-level approach led to a higher degree of transparency and utilisability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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- View/download PDF
31. Mangrove biomass and carbon estimates for REDD+ from national forest inventory in two regions of Myanmar.
- Author
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ARNOLD, F. E., PIAZZA, M., WYNN, K. Z., HTUT, P., and TUN, S. S.
- Subjects
MANGROVE plants ,MANGROVE forests ,FOREST surveys ,FOREST reserves ,BIOMASS estimation ,FOREST density ,FOREST degradation - Abstract
Copyright of International Forestry Review is the property of Commonwealth Forestry Association 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
- 2023
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32. Analyzing Environmental Determinants of Tree Species Distributions and Regeneration Pattern in Western Himalaya via National Forest Inventory of India.
- Author
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Thakur, Arun Kumar, Kumar, Rajesh, Verma, Raj Kumar, and Kumar, Pankaj
- Subjects
- *
FOREST surveys , *FOREST reserves , *SPECIES distribution , *SEASONAL temperature variations , *FOREST regeneration - Abstract
Tree distribution has been considered crucial to assess the relationships between species occurrence and changing climate across the globe, and accordingly in designing the conservation action plans. Therefore, it becomes imperative to understand the most influential parameters for tree species distribution and its regeneration pattern. We used National Forest Inventory data collected in Western Himalaya (WH) and environmental parameters to reveal the aforesaid relationship and pattern. Three topographical factors (altitude, aspect, and slope), four major climatic variables (temperature, temperature seasonality, precipitation and its seasonality) and four edaphic factors (soil depth, soil humus, soil consistency and soil coarse fragments) were considered. The results indicated that the altitude and temperature were the major determining factors followed by temperature seasonality in shaping the distribution of major tree species in WH. The study also indicated an upward shift of regenerating individuals of these tree species toward higher altitude. These information about the extent of current tree distribution and their regeneration over the last one and half decade might help in systematic conservation planning and monitoring tree range dynamics under climate change scenario. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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- View/download PDF
33. Improving Detection of Changepoints in Short and Noisy Time Series with Local Correlations: Connecting the Events in Pixel Neighbourhoods.
- Author
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Rajala, Tuomas, Packalen, Petteri, Myllymäki, Mari, and Kangas, Annika
- Subjects
- *
TIME series analysis , *FOREST surveys , *PIXELS , *ENVIRONMENTAL mapping , *FOREST mapping , *NEIGHBORHOODS , *POTTS model - Abstract
Detecting changepoints in time series becomes difficult when the series are short and the observation variance is high. In the context of time series of environmental resource maps, it is often safe to assume that the abrupt events are spatially continuous, and so are the changepoints. We propose to utilise this assumption by means of hierarchical models where the changepoints are modelled using a spatial model. We demonstrate utility of the approach by constructing a Bayesian model based on the Potts model, with additional assumptions relevant to changepoint detection in national multi-source forest inventory maps. We discuss implementation issues and demonstrate the idea's performance using a simulation study. We then apply the model to forest resource maps in order to detect felling events. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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34. Quantifying carbon storage and sequestration by native and non-native forests under contrasting climate types.
- Author
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Lázaro-Lobo, Adrián, Ruiz-Benito, Paloma, Cruz-Alonso, Verónica, and Castro-Díez, Pilar
- Subjects
- *
CARBON sequestration , *FORESTS & forestry , *TREE mortality , *EUROPEAN beech , *EUCALYPTUS globulus , *EUCALYPTUS - Abstract
Non-native trees may have significant impacts on the carbon sink capacity of forested lands. However, large-scale patterns of the relative capacity of native and non-native forests to uptake and store carbon remain poorly described in the literature, and this information is urgently needed to support management decisions. In this study, we analyzed 17,065 plots from the Spanish Forest Inventory (covering c. 30 years) to quantify carbon storage and sequestration of natural forests and plantations of native and non-native trees under contrasting climate types, while controlling for the effects of environmental factors (forest structure, climate, soil, topography, and management). We found that forest origin (non-native vs. native) highly influenced carbon storage and sequestration, but such effect was dependent on climate. Carbon storage was greater in non-native than in native forests in both wet and dry climates. Non-native forests also had greater carbon sequestration than native ones in the wet climate, due to higher carbon gains by tree growth. However, in the dry climate, native forests had greater carbon gains by tree ingrowth and lower carbon loss by tree mortality than non-native ones. Furthermore, forest type (classified by the dominant species) and natural forests versus tree plantations were important determinants of carbon storage and sequestration. Native and non-native Pinus spp. forests had low carbon storage, whereas non-native Eucalyptus spp. forests and native Quercus spp., Fagus sylvatica, and Eurosiberian mixed forests (especially not planted ones) had high carbon storage. Carbon sequestration was greatest in Eucalyptus globulus, Quercus ilex, and Pinus pinaster forests. Overall, our findings suggest that the relative capacity of native and non-native forests to uptake and store carbon depends on climate, and that the superiority of non-native forests over native ones in terms of carbon sequestration declines as the abiotic filters become stronger (i.e., lower water availability and higher climate seasonality). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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35. Water‐limited environments affect the association between functional diversity and forest productivity.
- Author
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Lammerant, Roel, Rita, Angelo, Borghetti, Marco, and Muscarella, Robert
- Subjects
- *
FOREST biodiversity , *FOREST productivity , *FOREST management , *FOREST surveys , *TEMPERATE forests , *PLANT gene banks , *ECOSYSTEM management ,WOOD density - Abstract
The link between biodiversity and ecosystem function can depend on environmental conditions. This contingency can impede our ability to predict how biodiversity‐ecosystem function (BEF) relationships will respond to future environmental change, causing a clear need to explore the processes underlying shifts in BEF relationships across large spatial scales and broad environmental gradients. We compiled a dataset on five functional traits (maximum height, wood density, specific leaf area [SLA], seed size, and xylem vulnerability to embolism [P50]), covering 78%–90% of the tree species in the National Forest Inventory from Italy, to test (i) how a water limitation gradient shapes the functional composition and diversity of forests, (ii) how functional composition and diversity of trees relate to forest annual increment via mass ratio and complementarity effects, and (iii) how the relationship between functional diversity and annual increment varies between Mediterranean and temperate climate regions. Functional composition varied with water limitation; tree communities tended to have more conservative traits in sites with higher levels of water limitation. The response of functional diversity differed among traits and climatic regions but among temperate forest plots, we found a consistent increase of functional diversity with water limitation. Tree diversity was positively associated with annual increment of Italian forests through a combination of mass ratio and niche complementarity effects, but the relative importance of these effects depended on the trait and range of climate considered. Specifically, niche complementarity effects were more strongly associated with annual increment in the Mediterranean compared to temperate forests. Synthesis: Overall, our results suggest that biodiversity mediates forest annual increment under water‐limited conditions by promoting beneficial interactions between species and complementarity in resource use. Our work highlights the importance of conserving functional diversity for future forest management to maintain forest annual increment under the expected increase in intensity and frequency of drought. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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- View/download PDF
36. A Climate-Sensitive Transition Matrix Growth Model for Masson Pine (Pinus massoniana Lamb.) Natural Forests in Hunan Province, South-Central China.
- Author
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Du, Xue, Wang, Xia, and Meng, Jinghui
- Subjects
FOREST surveys ,FOREST dynamics ,FOREST reserves ,CLIMATE change ,LAMBS ,PINACEAE ,PINE - Abstract
Masson pine natural forests are ecologically and economically valuable forest ecosystems extensively distributed across China. However, they have been subject to deforestation due to human disturbance. Moreover, climate change affects the growth, mortality, and recruitment of forests, yet available forest growth models do not effectively analyze the impacts of climate. A climate-sensitive transition matrix model (CM) was developed using data from 330 sample plots collected during the 7th (2004), 8th (2009), and 9th (2014) Chinese National Forest Inventories in Hunan Province. To assess model robustness, two additional models were created using the same data: a non-climate-sensitive transition matrix model (NCM) and a fixed probability transition matrix model (FM). The models were compared using tenfold cross-validation and long-term predictive performance analysis. The cross-validation results did not show any significant differences among the three models, with the FM performing slightly better than the NCM. However, the application of the CM for long-term prediction (over a span of 100 years) under three representative concentration pathways (RCP2.6, RCP4.5, and RCP8.5) revealed distinct dynamics that demonstrated enhanced reliability. This is attributed to the consideration of climate variables that impact forest dynamics during long-term prediction periods. The CM model offers valuable guidance for the management of Masson pine natural forests within the context of changing climatic conditions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Linking structure and species richness to support forest biodiversity monitoring at large scales
- Author
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Felix Storch, Steffen Boch, Martin M. Gossner, Heike Feldhaar, Christian Ammer, Peter Schall, Andrea Polle, Franz Kroiher, Jörg Müller, and Jürgen Bauhus
- Subjects
Structural diversity ,Taxonomic/functional diversity ,Biodiversity monitoring ,National Forest Inventory ,Forestry ,SD1-669.5 - Abstract
Abstract Key message Authors have analyzed the possible correlation between measurements/indicators of forest structure and species richness of many taxonomic or functional groups over three regions of Germany. Results show the potential to use structural attributes as a surrogate for species richness of most of the analyzed taxonomic and functional groups. This information can be transferred to large-scale forest inventories to support biodiversity monitoring. Context We are currently facing a dramatic loss in biodiversity worldwide and this initiated many monitoring programs aiming at documenting further trends. However, monitoring species diversity directly is very resource demanding, in particular in highly diverse forest ecosystems. Aims We investigated whether variables applied in an index of stand structural diversity, which was developed based on forest attributes assessed in the German National Forest Inventory, can be calibrated against richness of forest-dwelling species within a wide range of taxonomic and functional groups. Methods We used information on forest structure and species richness that has been comprehensively assessed on 150 forest plots of the German biodiversity exploratories project, comprising a large range of management intensities in three regions. We tested, whether the forest structure index calculated for these forest plots well correlate with the number of species across 29 taxonomic and functional groups, assuming that the structural attributes applied in the index represent their habitat requirements. Results The strength of correlations between the structural variables applied in the index and number of species within taxonomic or functional groups was highly variable. For some groups such as Aves, Formicidae or vascular plants, structural variables had a high explanatory power for species richness across forest types. Species richness in other taxonomic and functional groups (e.g., soil and root-associated fungi) was not explained by individual structural attributes of the index. Results indicate that some taxonomic and functional groups depend on a high structural diversity, whereas others seem to be insensitive to it or even prefer structurally poor stands. Conclusion Therefore, combinations of forest stands with different degrees of structural diversity most likely optimize taxonomic diversity at the landscape level. Our results can support biodiversity monitoring through quantification of forest structure in large-scale forest inventories. Changes in structural variables over inventory periods can indicate changes in habitat quality for individual taxonomic groups and thus points towards national forest inventories being an effective tool to detect unintended effects of changes in forest management on biodiversity.
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- 2023
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38. Effects of lidar coverage and field plot data numerosity on forest growing stock volume estimation
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Giovanni D’Amico, Ronald E. McRoberts, Francesca Giannetti, Elia Vangi, Saverio Francini, and Gherardo Chirici
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Airborne laser scanning ,growing stock volume ,landsat 7 ETM+ ,National Forest Inventory ,Oceanography ,GC1-1581 ,Geology ,QE1-996.5 - Abstract
Forest parameter estimation is required to support the sustainable management of forest ecosystems. Currently, forest resource assessment is increasingly linked to auxiliary information obtained from remote sensing (RS) technologies. In forest parameter estimation, airborne laser scanning (ALS) data have been demonstrated to be an invaluable source of information. However, ALS data are often not available for the entire forest area, whereas images from multiple satellite systems offer new opportunities for large-scale forest surveys. This study aims to assess and estimate the contribution of field plot data and ALS data along with Landsat data to the precision of growing stock volume (GSV) estimates. We compared different approaches for model-assisted estimation of mean forest GSV per unit area using different proportions of field sample data, ALS cover data, and wall-to-wall Landsat data. Model-assisted estimators were used with NFI sample data in an Italian study area using 10 RS predictors, specifically the seven Landsat 7 ETM+ bands and three fine-resolution metrics based on ALS-derived canopy height. We found that relative to the standard simple expansion estimator, the model-assisted estimators produced relative efficiency of 1.16 when using only Landsat data and relative efficiencies as great as 1.33 when using increasing levels of ALS coverage.
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- 2022
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39. Which demographic processes control competitive equilibria? Bayesian calibration of a size‐structured forest population model.
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Heiland, Lukas, Kunstler, Georges, Šebeň, Vladimír, and Hülsmann, Lisa
- Subjects
- *
THERMODYNAMIC control , *FOREST canopies , *FOREST surveys , *EUROPEAN beech , *TEMPERATE forests - Abstract
In forest communities, light competition is a key process for community assembly. Species' differences in seedling and sapling tolerance to shade cast by overstory trees is thought to determine species composition at late‐successional stages. Most forests are distant from these late‐successional equilibria, impeding a formal evaluation of their potential species composition. To extrapolate competitive equilibria from short‐term data, we therefore introduce the JAB model, a parsimonious dynamic model with interacting size‐structured populations, which focuses on sapling demography including the tolerance to overstory competition. We apply the JAB model to a two‐"species" system from temperate European forests, that is, the shade‐tolerant species Fagus sylvatica L. and the group of all other competing species. Using Bayesian calibration with prior information from external Slovakian national forest inventory (NFI) data, we fit the JAB model to short time series from the German NFI. We use the posterior estimates of demographic rates to extrapolate that F. sylvatica will be the predominant species in 94% of the competitive equilibria, despite only predominating in 24% of the initial states. We further simulate counterfactual equilibria with parameters switched between species to assess the role of different demographic processes for competitive equilibria. These simulations confirm the hypothesis that the higher shade tolerance of F. sylvatica saplings is key for its long‐term predominance. Our results highlight the importance of demographic differences in early life stages for tree species assembly in forest communities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Assessment of the Ellenberg quotient as a practical tool for vertical vegetation zonation.
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DUJKA, PETR and KUSBACH, ANTONÍN
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EUROPEAN beech ,ECOLOGICAL niche ,FOREST surveys ,FOREST plants ,FOREST reserves - Abstract
The Ellenberg quotient (EQ) is a climate index defined as a ratio of the hottest month's temperature and the average annual precipitation sum. The quotient indirectly expresses the relationship between climate and vegetation, and its application is related to the ecological niche of Fagus sp. Although the quotient was curated on the grounds of field research primarily on German vegetation, the possibilities of its utilisation are not limited to the Central European region. The objective of this study is (i) to compare the EQ values calculated for the forest vegetation zones in the Czech Republic with the published data using the ecological niche of Fagus sylvatica; and (ii) to compare the new EQ-based vertical model with field empirical mapping. The study area is the Czech Republic, Central Europe. We used climate data from 1970–2000 and the data of the National Forest Inventory, 2
nd cycle (2011–2015), representing an objective data design. Geospatial analytic methods, machine learning (boosting), and verification through statistical testing were performed. The results indicate higher EQ values between the two most substantial spatial frames – the Hercynicum and Carpaticum regions. By comparing empirical mapped units to their climatic potential (in the EQ), a match was found only within the Carpaticum region. The study presents a concretisation of the general climate index for a specific region, adds to the knowledge about the Fagus ecological niche in context with the Central European vegetation, and also points to the EQ's potential for evaluating the concept of vertical differentiation of forest communi)ties, as well as a possible prediction tool for the vegetation migration in context with climate change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Functional traits and climate drive interspecific differences in disturbance-induced tree mortality.
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Barrere, Julien, Reineking, Björn, Cordonnier, Thomas, Niko Kulha, Juha Honkaniemi, Mikko Peltoniemi, Korhonen, Kari T., Ruiz-Benito, Paloma, Zavala, Miguel A., and Kunstler, Georges
- Subjects
- *
TREE mortality , *FOREST dynamics , *CLIMATE sensitivity , *FOREST surveys , *FOREST fires , *DEAD trees ,WOOD density - Abstract
With climate change, natural disturbances such as storm or fire are reshuffled, inducing pervasive shifts in forest dynamics. To predict how it will impact forest structure and composition, it is crucial to understand how tree species differ in their sensitivity to disturbances. In this study, we investigated how functional traits and species mean climate affect their sensitivity to disturbances while controlling for tree size and stand structure. With data on 130,594 trees located on 7617 plots that were disturbed by storm, fire, snow, biotic or other disturbances from the French, Spanish, and Finnish National Forest Inventory, we modeled annual mortality probability for 40 European tree species as a function of tree size, dominance status, disturbance type, and intensity. We tested the correlation of our estimated species probability of disturbance mortality with their traits and their mean climate niches. We found that different trait combinations controlled species sensitivity to disturbances. Storm-sensitive species had a high height-dbh ratio, low wood density and high maximum growth, while fire-sensitive species had low bark thickness and high P50. Species from warmer and drier climates, where fires are more frequent, were more resistant to fire. The ranking in disturbance sensitivity between species was overall consistent across disturbance types. Productive conifer species were the most disturbance sensitive, while Mediterranean oaks were the least disturbance sensitive. Our study identified key relations between species functional traits and disturbance sensitivity, that allows more reliable predictions of how changing climate and disturbance regimes will impact future forest structure and species composition at large spatial scales. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Improving stem quality assessment based on national forest inventory data: an approach applied to Spanish forests.
- Author
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Ruano, Antonio, Alberdi, Iciar, Adame, Patricia, Moreno-Fernández, Daniel, Amiano, Alejandro Cantero, Fernández-Golfín, Juan, Hermoso, Eva, Hernández, Laura, Merlo, Esther, Sandoval, Vicente, and Cañellas, Isabel
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FOREST surveys ,FOREST reserves ,WOOD quality ,FORESTS & forestry ,COST estimates ,EVALUATION methodology ,FOREST management - Abstract
Key message: This paper proposes a methodology that could be considered as a base for a harmonized protocol for stem-quality reporting in Europe while conducting National Forest Inventories, in order to cost-efficiently obtain a visual wood quality proxy. The importance of the variables selected, the limitations identified, and some improvements to the methodology are suggested. Forest areas with better wood quality, which in turn it would be useful for breeding programs, can be easily detected. Context: The establishment of harmonized standards or indicators that allow us to determine the quality of the wood present in a forest prior to its exploitation has long been demanded by the European forestry sector, although agreed methodologies for the evaluation of wood quality in standing trees, which is one of the sector's most urgent requirements, have not, as yet, been implemented. Aims: To develop a protocol that visually characterizes wood quality on standing trees in a cost-effective way for the National Forest Inventory (NFI). After some improvements, it can be considered as a base for a European harmonized protocol. Methods: In this article, we analyze the implementation, in the NFI, of a visual wood-quality assessment methodology in forests of Central Spain based on the different European standards as well as on research papers addressing this issue. Results: The silvicultural practices employed are of the utmost importance to obtain the best wood quality, regardless of the species. Several areas with higher wood quality were identified as well as areas most affected by specific pests in the studied region. The impact of the variables measured (e.g., branchiness, crookedness, maximum branch diameter) is discussed. Conclusion: It is feasible to estimate a proxy for wood quality on standing trees in the NFI. Furthermore, after studying the inventory data provided, several enhancements are proposed, not only to improve wood-quality estimates but also to optimize fieldwork costs. Harmonizing NFIs to assess and map European standing wood quality can be achieved. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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43. Water‐limited environments affect the association between functional diversity and forest productivity
- Author
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Roel Lammerant, Angelo Rita, Marco Borghetti, and Robert Muscarella
- Subjects
diversity–productivity relationship ,forest productivity ,functional diversity ,National Forest Inventory ,plant traits ,structural equation modeling ,Ecology ,QH540-549.5 - Abstract
Abstract The link between biodiversity and ecosystem function can depend on environmental conditions. This contingency can impede our ability to predict how biodiversity‐ecosystem function (BEF) relationships will respond to future environmental change, causing a clear need to explore the processes underlying shifts in BEF relationships across large spatial scales and broad environmental gradients. We compiled a dataset on five functional traits (maximum height, wood density, specific leaf area [SLA], seed size, and xylem vulnerability to embolism [P50]), covering 78%–90% of the tree species in the National Forest Inventory from Italy, to test (i) how a water limitation gradient shapes the functional composition and diversity of forests, (ii) how functional composition and diversity of trees relate to forest annual increment via mass ratio and complementarity effects, and (iii) how the relationship between functional diversity and annual increment varies between Mediterranean and temperate climate regions. Functional composition varied with water limitation; tree communities tended to have more conservative traits in sites with higher levels of water limitation. The response of functional diversity differed among traits and climatic regions but among temperate forest plots, we found a consistent increase of functional diversity with water limitation. Tree diversity was positively associated with annual increment of Italian forests through a combination of mass ratio and niche complementarity effects, but the relative importance of these effects depended on the trait and range of climate considered. Specifically, niche complementarity effects were more strongly associated with annual increment in the Mediterranean compared to temperate forests. Synthesis: Overall, our results suggest that biodiversity mediates forest annual increment under water‐limited conditions by promoting beneficial interactions between species and complementarity in resource use. Our work highlights the importance of conserving functional diversity for future forest management to maintain forest annual increment under the expected increase in intensity and frequency of drought.
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- 2023
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44. Identification and spatial extent of understory plant species requiring vegetation control to ensure tree regeneration in French forests
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Noé Dumas, Jean-Luc Dupouey, Jean-Claude Gégout, Vincent Boulanger, Jean-Daniel Bontemps, François Morneau, Marine Dalmasso, and Catherine Collet
- Subjects
National Forest Inventory ,Survey ,Plant competition ,Species cover ,Species presence ,Forestry ,SD1-669.5 - Abstract
Abstract Key message Fifteen species are most susceptible to require vegetation control during tree regeneration in the range of our study. Among these 15 species, Rubus fruticosus, Pteridium aquilinum, and Molinia caerulea cover each more than 300,000 ha of open-canopy forests. Context Vegetation control, i.e., the reduction of competitive species cover, is often required to promote tree seedling establishment during the forest regeneration stage. The necessity to control understory vegetation largely depends on the species to be controlled. In order to plan forest renewal operations, it is critical to identify which species require vegetation control during the regeneration stage and to quantify the forest area affected by these species. Aims We aimed at identifying the main species requiring vegetation control and at estimating the forest area they cover at the national level. Methods Using National Forest Inventory data, we created four indicators based on two levels of plant cover, cross-referenced with two levels of canopy opening, and compared them to the outcome of a survey of forest manager practices. Results The best indicator was the one that represented the proportion of forests with open canopy where the species was present with a large cover in the understory. In non-Mediterranean France, according to the indicator, a total of 15 species were found to frequently require vegetation control during the tree regeneration stage. Pteridium aquilinum, Molinia caerulea, and Rubus fruticosus were the main species, and each covered more than 300,000 ha of forest with open canopies, representing about 13% of the total forest area with open canopies outside of the Mediterranean area. Conclusions Forests covered by species requiring vegetation control according to forest managers represent a large share of the forest area undergoing regeneration. This study provides the first list of species that require vegetation control based on a methodological protocol that makes it possible to calculate the area associated with each species.
- Published
- 2022
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45. Tree stumps — an important but undervalued dead wood pool
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Markus Didion and Meinrad Abegg
- Subjects
Volume ,Biomass ,Carbon ,Biodiversity ,Protection forest ,National Forest Inventory ,Forestry ,SD1-669.5 - Abstract
Abstract Key message Dead wood in forests is an important resource due to its role for nutrient cycles, carbon budgets, and biodiversity, among other. While standing and downed dead wood are typically monitored in National Forest Inventories (NFI), stumps have not received comparable attention. Based on the detailed stump inventory in the current Swiss NFI, this study demonstrates the important contribution of stumps to the dead wood pool. Context Dead wood (DW) in forests is an important resource due to its role for nutrient cycles, carbon budgets, and biodiversity, among other. NFIs provide representative DW estimates focusing primarily on standing and downed DW. Little is known on stumps as a DW pool. Aims The aim of this study is to obtain an accurate assessment of the stump volume and biomass in the Swiss NFI to identify its significance for the DW pool, to evaluate the development over the last 30 years, and to examine the need for additional measurements for improving estimates compared to commonly applied assumptions for stump height such as a constant stump height or a fraction of tree height. Methods The current NFI includes a detailed stump inventory to improve accuracy and completeness of the aboveground DW pool estimate. Based on available data, stump volume estimates were derived at different accuracies to evaluate the contribution to the total DW pool over time. Results Based on the extended stump inventory in the NFI5, the contribution of stumps to the total DW pool is approximately 25%. The effect of simplifying assumptions or limited measurements to estimate stump volume can result in a significant underestimation of up to $$2/3$$ 2 / 3 of the more accurate and comprehensive assessment of this pool. Conclusion This study demonstrates that stumps can be a significant proportion of DW in forests, which should be accounted for in order to improve accuracy and completeness of NFI estimates and derived data such as C stocks for greenhouse gas reporting.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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46. Tree size variation induced by stand age mainly regulates aboveground biomass across three major stands of temperate forests in South Korea
- Author
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Yong-Ju Lee, Chang-Bae Lee, and Min-Ki Lee
- Subjects
aboveground biomass ,forest stand type ,National Forest Inventory ,stand age ,tree size variation ,piecewiseSEM ,Forestry ,SD1-669.5 ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 - Abstract
Forest biomass and biodiversity are the most important elements of forest functions and ecosystem services. In this study, we explore the possibilities and ways to enhance ecosystem functions and services related to biomass and biodiversity. Biotic drivers (i.e., species, phylogenetic and functional diversity, stand structural attributes, and community-weighted mean of trait values), abiotic drivers (i.e., topography and climate), and stand age were extracted as independent variables to explain aboveground biomass (AGB). Using South Korea’s 7th National Forest Inventory data, we analyzed 2,070 plots belonging to the natural forests consisting of 394 plots (19.0%) of coniferous stands, 829 plots (40.0%) of broadleaved stands, and 847 plots (40.9%) of mixed stands. Multimodel inference test and model-averaging approaches were conducted to determine the most significant control variables on AGB in each stand type, and piecewise structural equation modeling was conducted to quantify the relationships and directions between the variables. Abiotic drivers, including stand age and climate moisture index, control tree size variation in all stand types, but biotic drivers control AGB through different mechanisms depending on the stand type. Our results show that there were differences in the composition of variables for controlling AGB among stand types. Across all forest types and total stands, we found that increasing the tree size variation is the key driver of increasing AGB as stand age increases. Our study suggests that forest carbon accumulation by stand type can be enhanced if the key drivers of each stand type are properly managed across forest succession, and different forest management plans that consider different regulation factors among stand types are required. Moreover, it is important to adapt resource use patterns for each stand type with considering environmental conditions to maintain healthy and sustainable forests.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Which demographic processes control competitive equilibria? Bayesian calibration of a size‐structured forest population model
- Author
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Lukas Heiland, Georges Kunstler, Vladimír Šebeň, and Lisa Hülsmann
- Subjects
dynamic model ,Fagus sylvatica ,monodominance ,national forest inventory ,natural regeneration ,sapling competition ,Ecology ,QH540-549.5 - Abstract
Abstract In forest communities, light competition is a key process for community assembly. Species' differences in seedling and sapling tolerance to shade cast by overstory trees is thought to determine species composition at late‐successional stages. Most forests are distant from these late‐successional equilibria, impeding a formal evaluation of their potential species composition. To extrapolate competitive equilibria from short‐term data, we therefore introduce the JAB model, a parsimonious dynamic model with interacting size‐structured populations, which focuses on sapling demography including the tolerance to overstory competition. We apply the JAB model to a two‐“species” system from temperate European forests, that is, the shade‐tolerant species Fagus sylvatica L. and the group of all other competing species. Using Bayesian calibration with prior information from external Slovakian national forest inventory (NFI) data, we fit the JAB model to short time series from the German NFI. We use the posterior estimates of demographic rates to extrapolate that F. sylvatica will be the predominant species in 94% of the competitive equilibria, despite only predominating in 24% of the initial states. We further simulate counterfactual equilibria with parameters switched between species to assess the role of different demographic processes for competitive equilibria. These simulations confirm the hypothesis that the higher shade tolerance of F. sylvatica saplings is key for its long‐term predominance. Our results highlight the importance of demographic differences in early life stages for tree species assembly in forest communities.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Dynamics of standing deadwood in Austrian forests under varying forest management and climatic conditions.
- Author
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Oettel, Janine, Zolles, Anita, Gschwantner, Thomas, Lapin, Katharina, Kindermann, Georg, Schweinzer, Karl‐Manfred, Gossner, Martin M., and Essl, Franz
- Subjects
- *
FOREST management , *DEAD trees , *FOREST landowners , *FOREST surveys , *TEMPERATE forests , *CLIMATE change - Abstract
Standing deadwood is an important structural component of forest ecosystems. Its occurrence and dynamics influence both carbon fluxes and the availability of habitats for many species. However, deadwood is greatly reduced in managed, and even in many currently unmanaged temperate forests in Europe. To date, few studies have examined how environmental factors, forest management and changing climate affect the availability of standing deadwood and its dynamics.Data from five periods of the Austrian National Forest Inventory (1981–2009) were used to (I) analyse standing deadwood volume in relation to living volume stock, elevation, eco‐region, forest type, ownership and management intensity, (II) investigate the influence of forest ownership and management intensity on snag persistence and (III) define drivers of standing deadwood volume loss for seven tree genera (Abies, Alnus, Fagus, Larix, Picea, Pinus and Quercus) using tree‐related, site‐related and climate‐related variables, and predict volume loss under two climate change scenarios.Standing deadwood volume was mainly determined by living volume stock and elevation, resulting in different distributions between eco‐regions. While forest type and management intensity influenced standing deadwood volume only slightly, the latter exhibited a significant effect on persistence. Snag persistence was shorter in intensively managed forests than in extensively managed forests and shorter in private than in public forests.Standing deadwood volume loss was driven by a combination of diameter at breast height, elevation, as well as temperature, precipitation and relative humidity. Volume loss under climate change predictions revealed constant rates for moderate climate change (RCP2.6) by the end of the 21st century. Under severe climate change conditions (RCP8.5), volume loss increased for most tree genera, with Quercus, Alnus and Picea showing different predictions depending on the model used as the baseline scenario. We observed trends towards faster volume loss at higher temperatures and lower elevations and slower volume loss at high precipitation levels. The tree genera most susceptible to climate change were Pinus and Fagus, while Abies was least susceptible.Synthesis and applications. We recommend to protect standing dead trees from regular harvesting to ensure the full decomposition process. The consequences for decomposition‐dependent species must be taken into account to evaluate the influences of management and climate change on standing deadwood dynamics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Assessing and mitigating systematic errors in forest attribute maps utilizing harvester and airborne laser scanning data.
- Author
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Räty, Janne, Hauglin, Marius, Astrup, Rasmus, and Breidenbach, Johannes
- Subjects
- *
AIRBORNE lasers , *FOREST mapping , *FOREST surveys , *FOREST reserves , *INFORMATION modeling , *REGRESSION analysis - Abstract
Cut-to-length harvesters collect useful information for modeling relationships between forest attributes and airborne laser scanning (ALS) data. However, harvesters operate in mature forests, which may introduce selection biases that can result in systematic errors in harvester data-based forest attribute maps. We fitted regression models (harvester models) for volume (V), height (HL), stem frequency (N), above-ground biomass, basal area, and quadratic mean diameter (QMD) using harvester and ALS data. Performances of the harvester models were evaluated using national forest inventory plots in an 8.7 Mha study area. We estimated biases of large-area synthetic estimators and compared efficiencies of model-assisted (MA) estimators with field data-based direct estimators. The harvester models performed better in productive than unproductive forests, but systematic errors occurred in both. The use of MA estimators resulted in efficiency gains that were largest for HL (relative efficiency, RE = 6.0) and smallest for QMD (RE = 1.5). The bias of the synthetic estimator was largest for N (39%) and smallest for V (1%). The latter was due to an overestimation of deciduous and an underestimation of spruce forests that by chance balanced. We conclude that a probability sample of reference observations may be required to ensure the unbiasedness of estimators utilizing harvester data. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Forest Resources Projection Tools: Comparison of Available Tools and Their Adaptation to Polish Conditions.
- Author
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Wysocka-Fijorek, Emilia, Dobrowolska, Ewelina, Budniak, Piotr, Korzeniewski, Krzysztof, and Czubak, Damian
- Subjects
LAND use ,FOREST surveys ,FOREST dynamics ,FOREST reserves ,FOREST policy ,NATIONAL account systems ,FOREST management ,ACCOUNTING software ,BIOMASS conversion - Abstract
Over the years, various methods for estimating and projecting forest resources have been developed and are used by countries where the forest sector is important. Therefore, the obligation to report and account for forest resources, including changes in carbon stocks in a forest area, has gained attention. The latest regulations (Land Use, Land Use Change and Forestry—LULUCF) requires European Union (EU) members to annually report and publish national accounting plans estimating emissions and removals from managed forest areas (Regulation EU 2018/841). The major challenge is to choose and adapt a unique tool for this accounting. At the same time, they need to provide reliable estimates that are recognized by regulators and control authorities. This study focuses on comparing the adaptation of two accounting frameworks: the Operational-Scale Carbon Budget Model of the Canadian Forest Sector (CBM-CFS3) and the European Forest Dynamics Model (EFDM). Both tools are based on National Forest Inventory (NFI) data. It is assumed that the EFDM can provide similar results to the CBM-CFS3, which is already used in Poland. Implementing the EFDM and adapting it to Polish conditions could facilitate forest management decision-making and the preparation of forest policies. The main objective of this study was to compare and validate the accuracy of the results obtained with the EFDM framework. Metrics compared using both tools included growing stock volume, biomass of growing stock expressed in carbon units and age–class distribution over area. The comparison was based on the agreement of EFDM with CBM-CFS3 results. The volume of logging was taken from the EFDM and compared with the values obtained by Statistics Poland. This study also provides a guide for framework parameterization directly from the Polish National Forest Inventory data from the 2010–2015 cycle. Our main findings are that the results of the two models are reasonably comparable (the extent of deviation is acceptable). Moreover, the first implementation of the EFDM showed that it is an easy-to-use open-source program that allows forest managers to implement their own settings according to their needs. This document elucidates the concept of using both frameworks under Polish conditions and provides an impression of their performance for future modelers, students and researchers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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