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Need for a global map of forest naturalness for a sustainable future.

Alessandro ChiarucciGianluca Piovesan
Published in: Conservation biology : the journal of the Society for Conservation Biology (2019)
There is a growing need to assess and monitor forest cover and its conservation status over global scales to determine human impact on ecosystems and to develop sustainability plans. Recent approaches to measure regional and global forest status and dynamics are based on remotely sensed estimates of tree cover. We argue that tree cover should not be used to assess the area of forest ecosystems because tree cover is an undefined subset of forest cover. For example, tree cover can indicate a positive trend even in the presence of deforestation, as in the case of plantations. We believe a global map of forest naturalness that accounts for the bio-ecological integrity of forest ecosystems, for example, intact forests, old-growth forest patches, rewilding forests (exploited forest landscapes undergoing long-term natural succession), and managed forests is needed for global forest assessment.
Keyphrases
  • climate change
  • human health
  • endothelial cells
  • risk assessment
  • life cycle