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Where are we now with European forest multi-taxon biodiversity and where can we head to?

Authors :
Burrascano, Sabina
Chianucci, Francesco
Trentanovi, Giovanni
Kepfer-Rojas, Sebastian
Sitzia, Tommaso
Tinya, Flóra
Doerfler, Inken
Paillet, Yoan
Nagel, Thomas Andrew
Mitic, Bozena
Morillas, Lourdes
Munzi, Silvana
Van der Sluis, Theo
Alterio, Edoardo
Balducci, Lorenzo
de Andrade, Rafael Barreto
Bouget, Christophe
Giordani, Paolo
Lachat, Thibault
Matosevic, Dinka
Source :
Biological Conservation. Aug2023, Vol. 284, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

The European biodiversity and forest strategies rely on forest sustainable management (SFM) to conserve forest biodiversity. However, current sustainability assessments hardly account for direct biodiversity indicators. We focused on forest multi-taxon biodiversity to: i) gather and map the existing information; ii) identify knowledge and research gaps; iii) discuss its research potential. We established a research network to fit data on species, standing trees, lying deadwood and sampling unit description from 34 local datasets across 3591 sampling units. A total of 8724 species were represented, with the share of common and rare species varying across taxonomic classes: some included many species with several rare ones (e.g., Insecta); others (e.g., Bryopsida) were represented by few common species. Tree-related structural attributes were sampled in a subset of sampling units (2889; 2356; 2309 and 1388 respectively for diameter, height, deadwood and microhabitats). Overall, multi-taxon studies are biased towards mature forests and may underrepresent the species related to other developmental phases. European forest compositional categories were all represented, but beech forests were over-represented as compared to thermophilous and boreal forests. Most sampling units (94%) were referred to a habitat type of conservation concern. Existing information may support European conservation and SFM strategies in: (i) methodological harmonization and coordinated monitoring; (ii) definition and testing of SFM indicators and thresholds; (iii) data-driven assessment of the effects of environmental and management drivers on multi-taxon forest biological and functional diversity, (iv) multi-scale forest monitoring integrating in-situ and remotely sensed information. • Through a Europe-wide research network we harmonized and merged 34 datasets on forest biodiversity • Multi-taxon biodiversity information is available for studied across 3,591 sampling units • Available data unevenly cover the European forest compositional categories • Knowledge gaps are boreal, Mediterranean, thermophilous and floodplain forests • The available information has the potential to inform conservation and management strategies for European forests [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00063207
Volume :
284
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Biological Conservation
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
169814186
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biocon.2023.110176