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The Impact of Land-use Legacies and Recent Management on Natural Disturbance Susceptibility in Mountain Forests

Dead wood in a mountain forest near Davos, Graubünden. © Ana Stritih, ETH Zürich

Ana Stritih, Cornelius Senf, Rupert Seidl, Adrienne Grêt-Regamey, Peter Bebi
2021
Full article

Mountain forests provide a wide range of ecosystem services, including carbon sequestration and protection from natural hazards. Forest cover in the European Alps has increased over the last century, but in recent years, these forests have experienced an increasing rate of natural disturbances by agents such as windthrow, bark beetle outbreaks, and forest fires.

These disturbances pose a challenge for forest management, making it important to understand how site and stand characteristics, land use legacies and recent management influence disturbance probability. We combined a dataset of forest disturbances detected from space with in-situ forest management records, allowing us to differentiate between different types of disturbances for the Canton of Graubünden, Switzerland, in the years 2005–2018. The resulting dataset of over 28′000 attributed disturbance patches (corresponding to a disturbed forest area of ca. 23′600 ha) was combined with information on topography, forest structure, and historical forest cover. A machine-learning approach was used to investigate the non-linear and interacting relationships between potential drivers and disturbance occurrence. Natural disturbances (especially windthrow and bark beetle outbreaks) were most common at lower elevations, on shallow and south-facing slopes, and in even-aged, spruce-dominated stands with a closed canopy. Forests established in the 20th century were significantly more susceptible to natural disturbances than forests that were already present before 1880, which may be due to the uniform age and vertical structure of secondary forests, as well as legacy effects of former agricultural use. On the other hand, forest management more often took place in forests present before 1880. Management interventions (such as thinning) in turn increased the susceptibility to natural disturbances in the short term. This finding emphasizes the need to balance short-term increases in disturbance susceptibility with long-term benefits in forest resilience when planning management interventions in mountain forests. Our findings highlight the importance of considering multiple interactive drivers, including management and land-use history, for understanding forest disturbance regimes.

Figure2: Time series of forest disturbances in the Canton of Graubünden between the years 2005 and 2018.
Figure2: Time series of forest disturbances in the Canton of Graubünden between the years 2005 and 2018.

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This article has been published in the following newsletter edition:

49 | März 2021: Future Cities Lab Global

  • Thinking Future Systems
  • FCL Global Tana – Co-designing a Blue-green Future for the Agro-urban City of Antananarivo
  • New Agendas Under Planetary Urbanisation: Designing Sustainable Agri-Urbanisms
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  • Introducing Ecosystem Services-Design Loop
Kurzmeldungen
  • Beschneiungsspeicher: erfassen, analysieren und beurteilen
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Publikationen
  • The Impact of Land-use Legacies and Recent Management on Natural Disturbance Susceptibility in Mountain Forests
  • Relational Theories of Urban Form. An Anthology
  • Evaluating Initial Building Designs Considering Possible Future Changes and Decision Flexibility: The Example of The New PET Centre of the University Hospital of Zurich
  • Grenzen überschreiten – Räume aktivieren. Transnationale Ansätze der Raumplanung in Europa
  • A Multi-dimensional Spatial Policy Model for Large-scale Multi-municipal Swiss Contexts
  • Paradise Now. Die neuen Grenzen des Gartens
  • CUARZO: Cities, Urban Planning and Architecture in the Reconstruction of the 0 Zones
  • COVID-19 and the Dilemma of Transport Policy Making
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Prof. Dr. Bryan T. Adey
Prof. Dr. Kay W. Axhausen
Prof. Dr. Tom Avermaete
Prof. Maria Conen
Prof. Dr. Francesco Corman
Dr. Jennifer Duyne Barenstein
Prof. Teresa Galí-Izard
Prof. Dr. Adrienne Grêt-Regamey
Prof. Dr. Guillaume Habert
Prof. Dr. Eva Heinen
Prof. Damian Jerjen
Prof. Dr. David Kaufmann
Prof. Hubert Klumpner
Dr. Anastasios Kouvelas
Prof. Freek Persyn
Prof. Dr. Christian Schmid
Prof. Milica Topalovic
Prof. Martina Voser

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