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Sustainable forest management in a mountain region in the Central Western Carpathians,northeastern Slovakia: the role of climate change
Authors:Tomáš Hlásny  Ivan Barka  Ladislav Kulla  Tomáš Bucha  Róbert Sedmák  Jiří Trombik
Affiliation:1.Department of Forest and Landscape Ecology,National Forest Centre – Forest Research Institute Zvolen,Zvolen,Slovak Republic;2.Department of Forest Protection and Entomology, Faculty of Forestry and Wood Sciences,Czech University of Life Sciences Prague,Prague 6,Czech Republic;3.Faculty of Forestry and Wood Sciences,Technical University in Zvolen,Zvolen,Slovak Republic
Abstract:European forestry is facing many challenges, including the need to adapt to climate change and an unprecedented increase in forest damage. We investigated these challenges in a Norway spruce-dominated mountain region in Central Europe. We used the model Sibyla to explore forest biomass production to the year 2100 under climate change and under two alternative management systems: the currently applied management (CM), which strives to actively improve the forest’s adaptive capacity, and no management (NM) as a reference. Because biodiversity is thought to have mostly positive effects on the adaptive capacity of forests and on the quality of ecosystem services, we explored how climate change and management affect indicators of biodiversity. We found a differential response across the elevation-climatic gradient, including a drought-induced decrease in biomass production over large areas. With CM, the support of non-spruce species and the projected improvement of their growth increased tree species diversity. The promotion of species with higher survival rates led to a decrease in forest damage relative to both the present conditions and NM. NM preserved the high density of over-matured spruce trees, which caused forest damage to increase. An abundance of dead wood and large standing trees, which can increase biodiversity, increased with NM. Our results suggest that commercial spruce forests, which are not actively adapted to climate change, tend to preserve their monospecific composition at a cost of increased forest damage. The persisting high rates of damage along with the adverse effects of climate change make the prospects of such forests uncertain.
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