
eBook - ePub
Towards Forest Sustainability
- 244 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub
Towards Forest Sustainability
About this book
Towards Forest Sustainability is a collection of practical essays by some of the world's leading forest ecologists and managers from the United States of America, Canada, Finland, Sweden, Australia and New Zealand. The authors describe the changes that have taken place in forest management â highlighting what worked, what didn't, and the lessons that have been learned.
This unique set of essays documents the drivers of the change in the logging industry and the resulting outcomes. It provides real-world insights from an international perspective into government policy, industry concerns, and conservation and biodiversity issues.
Frequently asked questions
Yes, you can cancel anytime from the Subscription tab in your account settings on the Perlego website. Your subscription will stay active until the end of your current billing period. Learn how to cancel your subscription.
At the moment all of our mobile-responsive ePub books are available to download via the app. Most of our PDFs are also available to download and we're working on making the final remaining ones downloadable now. Learn more here.
Perlego offers two plans: Essential and Complete
- Essential is ideal for learners and professionals who enjoy exploring a wide range of subjects. Access the Essential Library with 800,000+ trusted titles and best-sellers across business, personal growth, and the humanities. Includes unlimited reading time and Standard Read Aloud voice.
- Complete: Perfect for advanced learners and researchers needing full, unrestricted access. Unlock 1.4M+ books across hundreds of subjects, including academic and specialized titles. The Complete Plan also includes advanced features like Premium Read Aloud and Research Assistant.
We are an online textbook subscription service, where you can get access to an entire online library for less than the price of a single book per month. With over 1 million books across 1000+ topics, weâve got you covered! Learn more here.
Look out for the read-aloud symbol on your next book to see if you can listen to it. The read-aloud tool reads text aloud for you, highlighting the text as it is being read. You can pause it, speed it up and slow it down. Learn more here.
Yes! You can use the Perlego app on both iOS or Android devices to read anytime, anywhere â even offline. Perfect for commutes or when youâre on the go.
Please note we cannot support devices running on iOS 13 and Android 7 or earlier. Learn more about using the app.
Please note we cannot support devices running on iOS 13 and Android 7 or earlier. Learn more about using the app.
Yes, you can access Towards Forest Sustainability by David B. Lindenmayer,Jerry F. Franklin,David Lindenmayer,Jerry Franklin in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Biological Sciences & Ecology. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
Information
1
Challenges to temperate forest
stewardshipâfocusing on the future
Jerry F. Franklin
Too many participants in the current forest policy debatesâstake-holders, media, politicians, and resource professionalsâappear focused on the past rather than on the future. Major economic and social changes are dramatically altering the context within which forest policy will be created and implemented. Equally important are shifts in the types and intensities of challenges that we face in sustaining critical forest functionsâsuch as protection of watershedsâand forest biodiversity.
In North America and many other regions of the world, stake-holders and politicians continue to fight the resource war of the 20th centuryâpreservation versus exploitation. These battles are familiar and comfortable. But the major challenges of the 21st century are not likely to repeat those from the previous century. Few of the forest policy debates, alliances, and âsolutionsâ of the 20th century are likely to be relevant to these new challenges.
Societyâby continuing to focus on old issuesâis also failing to recognise the fundamental changes that are occurring our interrelationships with native forests, including the human stewardship necessary to assure the continued health and functioning of native forests, and their declining role as sources of wood products. In this essay I share my perspectives on some of the important circumstances and issues regarding forest resources that national and global societies must address in the 21st century. The focus is primarily on temperate regions and the developed world. Because of the variety of social and economic factors, the challenges of tropical forest policies are currently and likely to continue to be very different from those affecting temperate and boreal regions.
Globalisation of the wood products industry
Globalisation of the wood products industry is, I believe, the most significant factor influencing the developing context for forest stew-ardship. Technology and globalisation of the world marketplaces are creating a new model for production of the bulk fibre needed to provide for the mass markets in wood products, such as paper and common wood construction materials.
The global marketplace, with its emphasis on moving activities to areas where lowest per unit cost of production can be achieved, fits perfectly with basic corporate goals. Consolidation also appears to fit the global paradigm so we can expect that a few very large, international, publicly traded corporations will increasingly dominate global markets in wood products. The goal of these corporations is to maximise their return on investment; hence, the net present value model will continue to dictate corporate forestry practices just as it has for at least 50 years. Net present value is the discounted values of the revenues and costs from the use of forest resources over time and allows investors to compare returns from different forest resource investments as well as with returns from alternative investments. Maximising net present value is, consquently, taken as the overall goal for forest management under this model.
Technological developments in forestryâas well as the fortuitous discovery of some unusual biological potentialsâfit very well with the goals of global corporate forestry. First, there has been the recognition of the extraordinary production potential of some exotic tree speciesâinitially, some pines and later (with development of appropriate pulping processes) eucalyptus speciesâon temperate, subtropical, and some tropical sites, primarily in the southern hemisphere. Second, there has been the increasing potential for enhanced production using bio-engineered treesâ initially by traditional breeding methods and more recently by direct manipulation of genes.
As a result of these developments, corporate forestry is moving to an agronomic model of wood fibre production and away from traditional forestry models. In effect, the move is towards the development of fibre farms in which intensively managed âfieldsâ of engineered poplars, exotic pines, and eucalypts are grown on short rotations of two or three decadesâperhaps eventually in only a single decade. Adoption of the agronomic model has many advantages from the corporate perspective including much shorter investment cycles, high efficiency in per unit production costs, and reduced environmental constraints, since societies often have fewer expectations of farmsâincluding fibre farmsâthan they have of areas that are clearly forests.
Temperate and subtropical regions of the southern hemisphere are primary sites for the development of corporate forestryâs fibre farms for many reasons.1 Locations include Australia, New Zealand, Chile, Argentina, Uruguay, southeastern Brazil, and South Africa. Productivity of exotic species is extraordinary on many southern hemisphere sites, often at the very upper limits of known wood production. Many of the sites have been previously used for agriculture or grazing so costs of preparing sites or mitigating environmental impacts is often low. The ability to use efficient equipment for tending and harvesting the plantations substantially reduces labour costs. Furthermore, labour and other production costs, including those related to environmental concerns, are typically lower in many countries at lower and southern latitudes than in North America and Europe.
The implications of these new opportunities for corporate investment in fibre production are inevitable. Few, if any, forest sites in the northern hemisphere can compete directly with fibre farms in the southern hemisphere even in terms of biological productivity, let alone total cost of production. Only the very best of the forest sites in the northern hemisphere can approach the productivity levels of exotic plantations in the southern hemisphere. When you add in the costs of labour, taxes, and environmental mediation in North America and Europe the advantages of investing in agronomic wood fibre production in the southern hemisphere are very large. Indeed, the only advantage of north temperate forests appears to be in their proximity to large markets; unfortunately, transportation costs for finished products are typically not a high proportion of the total cost.
Hence, following trends in global production and marketing of the last several decades we can expect that corporate wood production is going to continue to move (1) to the agronomic model and (2) primarily to southern latitudes. It is inevitable based on the imperative of maximising return on investment. Please note that this shift is not about exporting North American or world demand for wood fibre to âthird world countriesâ that âdo not know how to manage their forests and have no environmental laws or regulationsâ as suggested by some observers. Also, generally we are not talking about cutting down native forests in order to provide space for exotic plantations, although this has occurred in the past. The majority of thse plantations are on abandoned agricultural or grazing lands. Furthermore, these developments are not likely to significantly affect the fate of tropical forests. Over 85 per cent of the tropical tree harvest used for wood products is used in-country and does not enter world trade; the only significant global market for such wood is in environmental rogue states, such as Japan, China, Taiwan, and South Korea. These shifts in the locale and techniques for the wood products industry are the consequence of corporate decision-making based on standard business models and practices. These current developments have made a major contribution to the current glut of wood fibre in the global marketplace. They are likely to continue to provide excesssive amouts of wood, at least until the consequences of the shift to fibre farming are fully recognised and appropriate adjustments are made. We can expect that there will be a significant competitive âsorting outâ among countries and regions that are heavily invested in fibre farming; factors affecting the outcome will include relative productive capabilities and total costs of production. Substantial improvements in productive capacity and reductions in costs of production can be expected in subsequent generations of fibre farming as a result of genetic modifications (traditional and genetically engineered) of the farmed species and technological developments in harvesting and processing.
Significant competitive âsortingâ among fibre farming countries and regions is likely to occur with these and other developments. In any case, the new-age fibre farms will certainly have the capacity to meet and grossly exceed global needs for bulk wood fibre for the next century, even in face of the rising global population. They can do so, efficiently and almost certainly without any need to use native forests, except as a source for particular specialised and valued wood products that cannot be mass produced under a short rotation agronomic regime.
Consequences of globalisation for stewardship of native forests
So, isnât it a good thing that we can provide for the wood fibre needs of the world without having to manage any of our native forests? Certainly many participants in global and national forest policy debates think so. Substituting fibre farms for cutting in native forests has been a primary goal of environmentalists in Australia for well over a decade. New Zealand took its native forests âoff the tableâ as a matter of national policy over a decade ago to the joy of most environmentalists.
There are many stakeholdersâinstitutional and individualâ that favour âsolvingâ all our global forest policy debates by substituting exotic plantations for wood production from forests of native species, whether of primary or secondary status. These stake-holders span the spectrum from the wood products industry to hardcore environmentalists and are united in their desire to disengage from the intense conflicts over native forests that characterised the 20th century.
However, a major shift in the global wood products industry from forests and plantations of native species to fibre farming using exotic and bio-engineered species in southern latitudes creates an incredible array of new challenges for society. These include issues of:
- land ownership and use in an environment with decreased potential for economic return from those lands
- stewardship of public forest lands, including provision of the financial resources needed to monitor, protect, and appropriately manage these lands
- the health of the rural communities that are located within forested regions.
For example, in a region like northwestern North America, what will happen to private forest lands, especially the large corporate holdings, when forestry is no longer a profitable enterprise on these lands? Who will acquire them and for what purposes? How will those purposes fit with primary societal needs, such as maintenance of high-quality, well-regulated streamflows or secondary needs, such as open space for recreation and wildlife habitat?
On public lands, where are we going to get the financial resources needed to carry out essential stewardship and how are we going to maintain the skilled woods work forces that will be needed to do this work? How can we retain a capacity to process wood removed from these landsâa capacity that I believe will be important to achieving stewardship objectives on both private and public forest lands. What about the local communities whose fate is strongly linked to that of the forest? And trusts that depend on income from forest lands?
Most temperate forest regions are already struggling with the impacts of massive change, including globalisation, whether or not the ultimate dimensions of the change have been recognised. Some regions, such as the northeastern United States, have already had to cope with the departure of corporate forestry and the disposition of the large tracts of forest that they owned. Societal efforts in such regions to retain forest landscapes and values in the face of such changes provide valuable examples of both the challenges and potential solutions.
The complexities of all of these issues, including some of the potential solutions, are beyond the scope of this essay. However, one issue that I would like to address a little more thoroughly is the need for active management of native forests to maintain native forest function, biodiversity, and health, especially on public lands. As noted above, many stakeholders appear to believe that âpreservingâ all native forests resolves our major forestry conflicts and allows us to return their management to ânatureâ. I do not agree.
A âsolutionâ to forestry issues that divides the worldâs forests into fibre farms and native forestsâthe former to supply all of our wood products and the latter categorically âpreservedâ from active managementâI view as potentially dangerous for the temperate native forests of the world. In my view human society will need to be continuously engaged in active management of many native temperate forests even when they are no longer used as a source of wood products. I believe that the proffered âsolutionââfibre farms and preservesâwill often lead to undesirable outcomes for native forest function, biodiversity, and health and, consequently, the failure of these forests to fulfill the expectations and needs of human society.
The need for active management of forests
So, why do we need to be concerned about our commitment and capacity to carry out active management of native temperate forests? One very important set of reasons is that we have so altered the physical and biological context from those in which the native forests evolved. A second category of important reasons relates to the societal goals that we are setting for our native forest land-scapesâfor example protection of watersheds and maintenance of native biodiversityâthat are clearly not likely to be met with laissez faire management.
Alterations in the physical and biological context for temperate forests are immense and numerous including:
- altered fire and other disturbance regimes
- altered regional and global environmental regimes, including climatic and chemical changes, such as those associated with acid rain
- introductions of exotic organisms, including virulent insect and disease pests, and other fauna and flora that damage, destroy, and compete with native biota
- fragmented landscapes in which both the amount and spatial pattern of specific forest conditions have been drastically altered.
There are no areas of our native temperate forests that are not significantly influenced by these altered physical and biological conditions. And the impacts of altered physical and biological conditions will intensify throughout the 21st century!
Altered fire and disturbance regimes
The issue of disrupted fire regimes provides an outstanding example of the need for human beings to be continuously involved in stewardship of extensive areas of temperate forest. Pre-modern human societies were very effective at modifying natural fire regimes by increasing the number, locales, and timing of ignitions. Modern human societies have been very effective at altering fire regimes in many forest regions by suppressing natural wildfire.
Forest landscapes in western North America provide an example of where natural fire regimes have been dramatically modified during the 20th century. This has been accomplished through a variety of activities including suppression of natural fires, logging of mature and old trees, and active management to create dense (âfully stockedâ) stands of young trees.
The effects of such activities have been particularly profound in the pine and mixed-conifer forests that evolved under a regime of frequent, low to moderate intensity wildfires.2
In these forests, fire suppression has been very effective over the short and mid term. Suppression has resulted in increased stand densities, increased fuel loadings, and greater continuity in fuels (ground-to-crown and crown-to-crown). In many forests, shade-tolerant tree species have largely replaced the shade-tolerant pioneer tree species that are important ecologically and have greater fire resistance. The potential for uncharacteristic stand replacement fires is now very high in many of these forests, putting native forest biodiversity and functions (such as watershed protection) at risk.
Active management of these forests is required to restore and maintain these ecosystems if they are to provide the conditions and services expected by local and global human societies. The negative consequences of allowing wildfire to ret...
Table of contents
- Cover
- Title
- Copyright
- Contents
- Preface
- Participants at the Forestry Roundtable Meeting
- Acknowledgments
- 1. Challenges to temperate forest stewardshipâfocusing on the future
- 2. Are forests different as a policy challenge?
- 3. Towards ecological forestry in Tasmania
- 4. Integrating wildlife conservation and wood production in Victorian montane ash forests
- 5. The role of large mammals in US forests
- 6. Resolving forest management issues in British Columbia
- 7. Finnish forestry in transitionâ finding ways to sustainable forest management
- 8. The role of science in the changing forestry scene in the USA
- 9. Forest biodiversity managementâ the Swedish model
- 10. Sustainable forest management in New Zealand
- 11. A new forest and wood industry policy framework for Australia
- 12. Transitions to ecological sustainability in forestsâ a synthesis
- References and bibliography