Scaling issues in forest ecosystem management and how to address them with models
Authored by Rupert Seidl, Chris S Eastaugh, Koen Kramer, Michael Maroschek, Christopher Reyer, Jaroslaw Socha, Giorgio Vacchiano, Tzvetan Zlatanov, Hubert Hasenauer
Date Published: 2013
DOI: 10.1007/s10342-013-0725-y
Sponsors:
European Union
Dutch Ministries
Austrian Federal Government
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Scaling is widely recognized as a central issue in ecology. The
associated cross-scale interactions and process transmutations make
scaling (i.e. a change in spatial or temporal grain and extent) an
important issue in understanding ecosystem structure and functioning.
Moreover, current concepts of ecosystem stewardship, such as
sustainability and resilience, are inherently scale-dependent. The
importance of scale and scaling in the context of forest management is
likely to further increase in the future because of the growing
relevance of ecosystem services beyond timber production. As a result, a
consideration of processes both below (e.g. leaf-level carbon uptake in
the context of climate change mitigation) and above (e.g. managing for
biodiversity conservation at the landscape scale) the traditional focus
on the stand level is required in forest ecosystem management.
Furthermore, climate change will affect a variety of ecosystem processes
across scales, ranging from photosynthesis (tree organs) to disturbance
regimes (landscape scale). Assessing potential climate change impacts on
ecosystem services thus requires a multi-scale perspective. However, scaling issues have received comparatively little attention in the
forest management community to date. Our objectives here are thus first, to synthesize scaling issues relevant to forest management and second, to elucidate ways of dealing with complex scaling problems by
highlighting examples of how they can be addressed with ecosystem
models. We have focused on three current management issues of particular
importance in European forestry: (1) climate change mitigation through
carbon sequestration, (2) multi-functional stand management for
biodiversity and non-timber goods and services and (3) improving the
resilience to natural disturbances. We conclude that taking into account
the full spatiotemporal heterogeneity and dynamics of forest ecosystems
in management decision-making is likely to make management more robust
to increasing environmental and societal pressures. Models can aid this
process through explicitly accounting for system dynamics and changing
conditions, operationally addressing the complexity of cross-scale
interactions and emerging properties. Our synthesis indicates that
increased attention to scaling issues can help forest managers to
integrate traditional management objectives with emerging concerns for
ecosystem services and therefore deserves more attention in forestry.
Tags
individual-based models
Landscape
global change
scales
Climate-change impacts
Adaptive capacity
Biome-bgc
Biogeochemical model
Carbon balance
Use
efficiency