4.6 Article

Transitional forestry in New Zealand: re-evaluating the design and management of forest systems through the lens of forest purpose

期刊

BIOLOGICAL REVIEWS
卷 98, 期 4, 页码 1003-1015

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/brv.12941

关键词

forest management; ecological forestry; plantation forestry; nature-based solutions; landscape management

类别

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Forestry management worldwide has achieved high timber yields from productive forests, including in New Zealand where the focus has been on improving Pinus radiata plantation forestry. However, the full range of forested landscapes in New Zealand, including native forests, are under pressure from pests, diseases, and a changing climate, posing risks to their biological, social, and economic value. To address these challenges, the concept of 'transitional forestry' is proposed, which seeks to optimize forests as nature-based solutions and prioritize forest purpose in decision-making. This model can benefit different forest types in New Zealand, from industrial plantations to conservation forests. Transitional forestry is a long-term process that aims to enhance timber production, improve forest landscape resilience, and maximize public and biodiversity conservation value.
Forestry management worldwide has become increasingly effective at obtaining high timber yields from productive forests. In New Zealand, a focus on improving an increasingly successful and largely Pinus radiata plantation forestry model over the last 150 years has resulted in some of the most productive timber forests in the temperate zone. In contrast to this success, the full range of forested landscapes across New Zealand, including native forests, are impacted by an array of pressures from introduced pests, diseases, and a changing climate, presenting a collective risk of losses in biological, social and economic value. As the national government policies incentivise reforestation and afforestation, the social acceptability of some forms of newly planted forests is also being challenged. Here, we review relevant literature in the area of integrated forest landscape management to optimise forests as nature-based solutions, presenting 'transitional forestry' as a model design and management paradigm appropriate to a range of forest types, where forest purpose is placed at the heart of decision making. We use New Zealand as a case study region, describing how this purpose-led transitional forestry model can benefit a cross section of forest types, from industrialised forest plantations to dedicated conservation forests and a range of multiple-purpose forests in between. Transitional forestry is an ongoing multi-decade process of change from current 'business-as-usual' forest management to future systems of forest management, embedded across a continuum of forest types. This holistic framework incorporates elements to enhance efficiencies of timber production, improve overall forest landscape resilience, and reduce some potential negative environmental impacts of commercial plantation forestry, while allowing the ecosystem functioning of commercial and non-commercial forests to be maximised, with increased public and biodiversity conservation value. Implementation of transitional forestry addresses tensions that arise between meeting climate mitigation targets and improving biodiversity criteria through afforestation, alongside increasing demand for forest biomass feedstocks to meet the demands of near-term bioenergy and bioeconomy goals. As ambitious government international targets are set for reforestation and afforestation using both native and exotic species, there is an increasing opportunity to make such transitions via integrated thinking that optimises forest values across a continuum of forest types, while embracing the diversity of ways in which such targets can be reached.

作者

我是这篇论文的作者
点击您的名字以认领此论文并将其添加到您的个人资料中。

评论

主要评分

4.6
评分不足

次要评分

新颖性
-
重要性
-
科学严谨性
-
评价这篇论文

推荐

暂无数据
暂无数据