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IUFRO The Advocate for Forest Science.
Editor: H. Gyde Lund
IUFRO Guidelines for Designing Multipurpose Resource Inventories. A project of IUFRO 4.02.02. IUFRO World Series Vol. 8. 216 p. IUFRO World Series 8
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IUFRO Secretariat, Hauptstrasse 7, A-1140 Vienna, Austria;
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In most countries resource managers and agricultural and food policy staff require periodic information for all land, soil, vegetation (timber, crops, browse, forage), water, air, fish and wildlife, aesthetics, recreation, wilderness, and energy and mineral resources. Moreover, agriculture and natural resources are so inter-related that these two cannot be disassociated. Decision-makers use this information to meet international requirements, develop national strategic plans, and for local planning. Traditionally organizations collect information on these resources in independent surveys resulting possibly in unnecessary duplication of effort, conflicting data, and information gaps. Properly designed multipurpose resource inventories (MRIs) provide much of the required information more effectively.
The International Union of Forestry Research Organization (IUFRO) Research Group 4.02 sponsored two recent workshops to address the topic of MRIs – the MONTE VERITÃ? CONFERENCE ON FOREST SURVEY DESIGNS – "SIMPLICITY VERSUS EFFICIENCY" AND ASSESSMENT OF NON-TIMBER RESOURCES held in Ascona, Switzerland 2-7 May 1994 and the INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON MULTIPLE RESOURCE INVENTORY & MONITORING OF TROPICAL FORESTS held in Seremban, Malaysia, 21-24 November 1994. The Monte Veritá Conference resolved that "the importance of the forest depends on social and cultural impacts. In industrialised countries, protection and recreation functions play a major role as well as ecological aspects. In the tropics and subtropics, forests are indispensable for providing the population with fuel wood and food. This situation leads to some very different rankings of forest functions." Beside all cultural and economic differences in various countries, participants accepted that the value of non-timber products exceeds the value of timber products by far (Köhl et al. 1995).
Participants at the Malaysia meeting developed the following conclusion and recommendations (Anonymous 1996):
Tropical forests are continuously declining in extent, quality, and biodiversity as a result of deforestation and degradation caused by poverty and rapid population growth. This growth places increasing demands on lands for fuelwood, agricultural crops, and living space. One needs public awareness and actions by decision-makers to control the situation. The decision-makers, in particular, must have sound and comprehensive information and the necessary decision support tools. One should base this information on valid databases generated from credible research, inventory and monitoring programs covering the full range of natural and cultural heritage resources. The Conference recognised that tropical forest information is a basic pillar of sustainable development and balanced forest management.
To address emerging needs and to improve the state of multiple resource inventory and monitoring of tropical forests, inventory specialists should:
The conference participants recognised the importance of multiple resource inventory and monitoring in the tropical forests. The participants also recommended that IUFRO develop a set of guidelines that embrace the following principles for designing and implementing multiple resource inventory and monitoring programs. MRIs should:
The IUFRO Guidelines for Designing Multipurpose Resource Inventories are an outgrowth of those resolutions and recommendations. They are based upon a literature review, a world wide survey of ongoing MRIs (Lund 1997a), and the personal experiences of the contributing authors. The purpose of these guidelines is to help the reader design multipurpose resource inventories to meet international needs and as input for national assessments. While monitoring is discussed, inventory is the primary focus of the guidelines. Many of the ideas we use for inventory are applicable to monitoring, and indeed, resources inventories provide the base for monitoring.
The intended audience are those people that design inventories at the state, provincial or national level, although the guidelines are also useful locally. The authors assume the reader has some prior experience in designing resource inventories.
The design of an MRI often requires working with a great diversity of people with which one may not normally deal. Therefore, we have placed as much emphasis on working with people as we have on the design aspects of multipurpose resource inventories. Following these guidelines will help ensure that one conducts inventories of land, soil, vegetation, water, air, fish and wildlife, aesthetics, recreation, wilderness, and energy and mineral resources in an effective way. However, every situation is different so the Guidelines are general in nature. Take what you can use and create the rest yourself.
Given this background and the need to inventory more than the trees, it is with great pleasure that I present these guidelines to you. I urge all IUFRO member organizations to use the IUFRO Guidelines for Designing Multipurpose Resource Inventories in their data collection activities.
I congratulate and thank IUFRO 4.02, the authors, and reviewers for their work in producing these guidelines which will help in the inventory of our natural resources.
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Sincerely,
Dr. Jeff Burley, IUFRO President
Diverse and often conflicting demands upon land and natural resources around the world increasingly require that decision-makers cater for a wide range of potential human interests within any given area, such as agriculture, biomass productions, biodiversity, recreation, and urban expansion. This means that administrators have to look at the land and its resources for a variety of potential uses – agriculture, biomass production, biodiversity, recreation, urban expansion, etc. To increase the benefits of the data collected and to minimise the expenditures, inventory specialists are turning more and more to multipurpose or integrated resource inventories. This is particularly true at the broader decision-making scales – provincial, national, regional, and global.
These guidelines provide basic information on Multipurpose Resource Inventories (MRIs) for the inventory planner and decision-maker at the provincial or national level although the instructions will be useful at the local level as well. We discuss the need for MRIs, the information requirements, support structure, and the design and implementation issues in depth.
1 MULTIPURPOSE RESOURCE INVENTORIES – WHAT ARE THEY, WHEN TO USE?
2 HOW TO DEVELOP AND IMPLEMENT AN EFFECTIVE MRI
3 CASE STUDIES
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APPENDIX 1. REFERENCES AND ADDITIONAL READING
APPENDIX 2. ABBREVIATIONS AND ACRONYMS
APPENDIX 3. GLOSSARY
APPENDIX 4. LETTER AND QUESTIONNAIRE FOR MRI SURVEY
APPENDIX 5. CONTRIBUTING AUTHORS’ ADDRESSES
INDEX