change language:

News

2023-02-23

Occasional Paper No. 36 - Forest Related Nature-Based Approaches - Review of Terms and Concepts – from Afforestation to Forest Landscape Restoration

This report seeks to clarify how seven common terms and concepts are used in the scientific literature, namely "Nature-Based Solution, Ecosystem Based Adaptation, Integrated Landscape Management, Forest Restoration, Forest Landscape Restoration, Afforestation and Rewilding", and how to use them more effectively to support forest landscape restoration implementation.


Nature-based concepts have been embraced by different scientific disciplines and operationalized by practitioners in different ecological, social and historic contexts. Rewilding and Forest Landscape Restoration originated in the academic world and were embraced by policy organizations and popularized by NGOs; other terms, such as Ecosystem-Based Adaptation and Nature-Based Solutions, followed the opposite path, from the policy vernacular to the scientific.

Landscapes dominated by forests are often embedded with other land uses and contribute to achieving the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) by providing multiple ecosystem services. Especially for rural populations, forest landscapes are often the basis for the local economy and social identity. However, forest landscapes are under pressure from the loss and degradation of forest and conversion to other land uses, as well as the impacts of climate change. Therefore, combined strategies for forest landscape preservation, restoration, and adaptive management are needed to prevent significant losses of forest landscape ecosystems and their benefits.

This activity, coordinated by IUFRO's Special Programme for Development of Capacities (IUFRO-SPDC), was conducted in collaboration with the IUFRO Task Force 'Transforming Forest Landscapes for Future Climates and Human Well-being'. The German Federal Ministry for the Environment, Nature Conservation, Nuclear Safety and Consumer Protection (BMUV) financed the research, which was published with funding from the Republic of Korea's National Institute of Forest Science.
 

Authors
John A. Stanturf, William J. Harvey, Gillian Petrokofsky, András Darabant, Leo Petrokofsky, Shankar Adhikari, Gurveen Arora, Jan Bannister, Mercy Derkyi, Ernest Foli, Manuel R. Guariguata, Maria Laura Quevedo Fernandez, Alma L. Trujillo-Miranda

Published in February 2023 as
IUFRO Occasional Paper 36
ISSN 1024-414X
ISBN 978-3-903345-19-5


Download the full paper:

Dateien:
op36.pdf2,42 Mi
<- Zurück zu: News