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IUFRO The Advocate for Forest Science.
NEW STUDY WARNS DAMAGE TO FORESTS FROM CLIMATE CHANGE COULD COST THE PLANET
ITS MAJOR KEEPER OF GREENHOUSE GASES
New York (17 April 2009) –The critical role of forests as massive "sinks" for absorbing greenhouse gases is "at risk of being lost entirely" to climate change-induced environmental stresses that threaten to damage and even decimate forests worldwide, according to a new report released today. The report will be formally presented at the next session of the United Nations Forum on Forests (UNFF) taking place 20 April-1 May 2009 at the UN Headquarters in New York City.
MEDIA CONTACTS
Tarun K. Bathija: +43 1 877 0151 42 or pr(at)iufro.org
Alexander Buck: +43 1 877 0151 13 or buck(at)iufro.org
MATERIALS
1. Press Release
[
English – PDF, 60 KB] [
French – PDF, 80 KB] [
Spanish – PDF, 80 KB]
[German – PDF, 100 KB] [
Finnish – PDF, 80 KB]
2. Full Report: Adaptation of Forests and People to Climate Change – A Global Assessment Report

3. Policy Brief: Making forests fit for climate change

4. Executive Summary
[
English – PDF, 90 KB]
5. Photos
Climate change is expected to have negative effects on the
production of wood and non-wood forest products in many regions. This can
impose additional stresses on people who depend on fuelwood for domestic
energy and on non-wood forest products for their livelihoods.
Photos: Matti Nummelin
Coastal mangroves are important for protecting coastal areas from
floods and storms.
Photo: Geoff Roberts
Eucalyptus forest, South Eatern Australia. More intense and frequent
droughts will likely lead to more fires, especially in Southern temperate
forests.
Photo: Geoff Roberts
Sub-tropical Taxodium distichum swamp in the Everglades, Florida,
United States. Forests that are dependent on specific water levels will be
particularly sensitive to climate change.
Photo: John Innes
Dead white spruce (Picea glauca), Kluane, Yukon Territory, Canada.
A series of warmer-than-average winters have allowed populations of the
Spruce Beetle (Dendroctonus rufipennis) to develop, resulting in the
mortality of almost 400 000 ha of this boreal forest.
Photo: John Innes
Clearance of montane tropical rainforest for agricultural gardens
at Poring, Sabah, Malaysia. Efforts to manage tropical forests more
sustainably must take into account the complex relationships between the
welfare of local people and global concerns such as climate change.
Photo: John Innes
Oil palm plantation Malaysia. In recent years the establishment of oil palm
plantations has increased due to growing demand for biofuels
Photo: John Innes
Boreal forests are particularly affected by climate change. The observed
effects of recent climate change are greater in boreal forests than in other
forest biomes.
Photo: Erkki Oksanen
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