Real-world ecosystem management: Identifying knowledge gaps and overcoming societal barriers
Informations
- Funding country
Norway
- Acronym
- -
- URL
- -
- Start date
- 1/1/2019
- End date
- 12/31/2023
- Budget
- 1,337,256 EUR
Fundings
Name | Role | Start | End | Amount |
---|---|---|---|---|
MILJØFORSK - Environmental Research for a Green Transition | Grant | - | - | 1,337,252 EUR |
Abstract
Ecosystem services from urban forests: Urban and peri-urban forests provide multiple ecosystem services for city dwellers. We conducted an interdisciplinary assessment of ecosystem services of Oslomarka. Institutional, technological, and cultural changes were key contextual factors shaping current ecosystem services composition. Provisioning and habitat services have declined over the past fifty years, regulating have increased in supply. Our data suggest that cultural services also increased overall, but with major changes in their nature and composition. A biophysical assessment of trends, condition, and drivers of change of forest ecosystem services in Norway from 1950 to 2020: Industrial forestry, large scale measures of re- and afforestation, and infrastructure development have been main drivers of forest transformation. Deep transformations in the Norwegian economy shaped trends of forest ecosystem services over the study period. Forest management in Norway has largely favored provisioning services at the expense of supporting, cultural and regulating services. While Norwegian forests retain a strong capacity to deliver provisioning services, the overall ecological condition is relatively poor. Growth in forest area and biomass are insuf?cient indicators for sustainable forest management, and future forest polices would bene?t from improved knowledge on forests ecological condition, resilience against climate change, and contributions to human well-being. Segmented forest ontologies: Since the 1990s, biodiversity mapping has been a key government instrument for protecting threatened species and habitats in Norwegian productive forests. Having major political and practical implications, the methodologies of biodiversity mapping have been highly controversial. We identified two ontologies that were enacted through the methodologies, related to what we term the environmental and the forestry segments. Whereas mapping efforts associated with the environmental segment enacted a varied and complex forest ontology, approaches to mapping from the forestry segment enacted a simple and standardized forest ontology. We argue that the ontologies have different political implications, generally favoring the actors that support them. On a more general level, we show that ontological politics are expressed through enactment of different ontologies. Ecosystem-level management: The concept can be taken to mean adapting management to structures, functions, and natural processes in forest ecosystems. To clarify what international conventions and organizations mean when they use the term, we have reviewed seven crucial documents from e.g., the Convention on Biological Diversity, the UN Sustainable Development Goals for Life on Land, the EU Biodiversity Strategy for 2030 and the EU Forest Strategy for 2030. This may be grouped into ten more or less distinctive topics, e.g., this core requirement: Maintain the structure and biodiversity of ecosystems, and if needed improve their structure and biodiversity as well as prevent loss of biodiversity. One way to decide if forest management fulfill such requirements is to showcase how the structure, functions and dynamics in ecosystems align with or depart from similar conditions in natural forests. Our assessment is that current forest management to a considerable degree deviates from ecosystem-based management. Forest legislation: Forestry in Norway is regulated by the Forestry Act, which is a production law with few and vague environmental provisions. The act’s sustainability regulations lean upon private certification schemes, on which environmental authorities have no influence. Norway’s Biodiversity Act has an unclear standing related to forestry. We argue that forestry activity with significant environmental impact should have been subject to impact assessment due to EEA requirements, but this has never happened. There is a need for a thorough review of the legislation applicable to Norwegian forestry, which is subject to less regulation than any other industry. Three master theses connected to ECOREAL have been submitted in 2022. Outreach: A scientific workshop was held in May 2021 (digital). “Forest ecosystem services in Norway: trends, state, and drivers of change 1950-2020”. 25 participants from Norwegian research institutions. An open webinar on forestry, biodiversity and carbon was held in June 2021. This was a collaboration between four RCN-funded projects: ECOREAL, EcoForest, BioEssHealth and ForBioFunCtioN. In May 2022 we hosted the first stakeholder forum, focused on constraints and possibilities for alternative forestry practices. There was broad participation from forestry, management, research, and NGOs. The forum was quite successful, and a detailed report has been published. We aim to host a similar event in the spring 2023, in addition to a somewhat larger closing conference in late 2023.