Deadwood distribution in European forests

National forest inventories are a primary source of data for the assessment of forest resources and lastly more often biodiversity at national scales. The diversity of adopted sampling designs and measurements reduces the prospect for a reliable comparison of generated estimates. The ICP Forest data...

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Main Authors: Nicola Puletti, Francesca Giannetti, Gherardo Chirici, Roberto Canullo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2017-11-01
Series:Journal of Maps
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17445647.2017.1369184
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spelling doaj-374a579b551e45b583db34d01f3ef7802020-11-25T01:34:30ZengTaylor & Francis GroupJournal of Maps1744-56472017-11-0113273373610.1080/17445647.2017.13691841369184Deadwood distribution in European forestsNicola Puletti0Francesca Giannetti1Gherardo Chirici2Roberto Canullo3CREA Research Centre for Forestry and WoodUniversità degli Studi di FirenzeUniversità degli Studi di FirenzeUniversity of CamerinoNational forest inventories are a primary source of data for the assessment of forest resources and lastly more often biodiversity at national scales. The diversity of adopted sampling designs and measurements reduces the prospect for a reliable comparison of generated estimates. The ICP Forest dataset represents a unique opportunity for a standardized approach of forest estimates through Europe. This work aims to provide a distribution map of the mean deadwood volume in European forest. A total of 3243 ICP Forests plots were analysed and presented. The study area extends over 3,664,576 km2 interesting 19 countries. We observed that the highest percentage of plots show a deadwood volume lower than 50 m3 ha−1, with a few of forests attaining around the maximum of 300 m3 ha−1. Forests with more than 100 m3 ha−1 are concentrated in mountainous regions, central Europe and other regions, linked to high-forest management types, while coppices-derived forest systems (part of the Great Britain, Mediterranean region) show lower deadwood content. The map of deadwood volume on European Forests is of interests for scientists, land planners, forest managers and decision-makers, as a reference for further evaluation of changes, stratified sampling, ground reference for model validation, restoration and conservation purposes.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17445647.2017.1369184Forest ecosystemsdeadwoodEuropeICP forestsstandardized dataset
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nicola Puletti
Francesca Giannetti
Gherardo Chirici
Roberto Canullo
spellingShingle Nicola Puletti
Francesca Giannetti
Gherardo Chirici
Roberto Canullo
Deadwood distribution in European forests
Journal of Maps
Forest ecosystems
deadwood
Europe
ICP forests
standardized dataset
author_facet Nicola Puletti
Francesca Giannetti
Gherardo Chirici
Roberto Canullo
author_sort Nicola Puletti
title Deadwood distribution in European forests
title_short Deadwood distribution in European forests
title_full Deadwood distribution in European forests
title_fullStr Deadwood distribution in European forests
title_full_unstemmed Deadwood distribution in European forests
title_sort deadwood distribution in european forests
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Journal of Maps
issn 1744-5647
publishDate 2017-11-01
description National forest inventories are a primary source of data for the assessment of forest resources and lastly more often biodiversity at national scales. The diversity of adopted sampling designs and measurements reduces the prospect for a reliable comparison of generated estimates. The ICP Forest dataset represents a unique opportunity for a standardized approach of forest estimates through Europe. This work aims to provide a distribution map of the mean deadwood volume in European forest. A total of 3243 ICP Forests plots were analysed and presented. The study area extends over 3,664,576 km2 interesting 19 countries. We observed that the highest percentage of plots show a deadwood volume lower than 50 m3 ha−1, with a few of forests attaining around the maximum of 300 m3 ha−1. Forests with more than 100 m3 ha−1 are concentrated in mountainous regions, central Europe and other regions, linked to high-forest management types, while coppices-derived forest systems (part of the Great Britain, Mediterranean region) show lower deadwood content. The map of deadwood volume on European Forests is of interests for scientists, land planners, forest managers and decision-makers, as a reference for further evaluation of changes, stratified sampling, ground reference for model validation, restoration and conservation purposes.
topic Forest ecosystems
deadwood
Europe
ICP forests
standardized dataset
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17445647.2017.1369184
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