Large-scale Forest Restoration The Earthscan Forest Library Series
Auteur : Lamb David
Landscapes are being degraded and simplified across the globe. This book explores how forest restoration might be carried out to increase landscape heterogeneity, improve ecological functioning and restore ecosystem services in such landscapes. It focuses on large, landscape-scale reforestation because that is the scale at which restoration is needed if many of the problems that have now developed are to be addressed. It also shows how large-scale forest restoration might improve human livelihoods as well as improve conservation outcomes.
A number of governments have undertaken national reforestation programs in recent years; some have been more successful than others. The author reviews these to explore what type of reforestation should be used, where this should be carried out and how much should be done. For example, are the traditional industrial forms of reforestation necessarily the best to use in all situations? How can forest restoration be reconciled with the need for food security? And, are there spatial thresholds that must be exceeded to generate economic and environmental benefits?
The book also examines the policy and institutional settings needed to encourage large-scale reforestation. This includes a discussion of the place for incentives to encourage landholders to undertake particular types of reforestation and to reforest particular locations. It also considers forms of governance that are likely to lead to an equitable sharing of the costs and benefits of forest restoration.
1. The need for large-scale forest restoration
2. Lessons from the last hundred years
3. Natural forest regrowth
4. Types of planted forests
5. Where in the landscape should forest restoration take place?
6. How much forest restoration is needed?
7. Creating multi-functional landscapes: choices and trade-offs
8. Making it happen: policies and institutions
9. Final discussion
David Lamb taught forest ecology at the University of Queensland, Australia, for 30 years and has since undertaken consultancy work on forest restoration for a range of international organizations and aid agencies, including the World Bank, FAO, AusAID and GTZ. He is a member of the Commissiono n Ecosystem Management of IUCN.
Date de parution : 09-2014
15.6x23.4 cm
Date de parution : 10-2017
15.6x23.4 cm
Thèmes de Large-scale Forest Restoration :
Mots-clés :
reforestation; national; natural; regrowth; programmes; timber; plantations; landscape; exotic; cover; Large Scale Forest Restoration; Tamil Nadu; Large Scale Reforestation; Forest Restoration; Green Wall; Residual Patches; Dynamic Global Vegetation Models; Ecosystem Services; Non-forest Species; Natural Regrowth; Multi-species Plantings; Ecological Restoration; Soil Carbon; Mixed Species Plantations; Restore Forest Cover; Reforestation Programmes; Green Dam; Forest Regrowth; Direct Seeding; Dry Season Flows; Dryland Salinity; Managed Investment Schemes; Natural Forests; Longer Rotations; State Forestry Agencies