Resilience as a Moving Target: An Evaluation of Last Century Management Strategies in a Dry-Edge Maritime Pine Ecosystem

Forests are intrinsically coupled to human dynamics, both temporally and spatially. This evolution is conditioned by global changes in climatic conditions (teleconnections) and distant socio-economical processes (telecoupling). The main goal of this study is to describe the teleconnections and telec...

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Main Authors: Daniel Moreno-Fernández, Miguel A. Zavala, Jaime Madrigal-González, Francisco Seijo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-08-01
Series:Forests
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/1999-4907/12/9/1151
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spelling doaj-3fc55d7c8ab6449aa8a4ad584bb92c1b2021-09-26T00:10:22ZengMDPI AGForests1999-49072021-08-01121151115110.3390/f12091151Resilience as a Moving Target: An Evaluation of Last Century Management Strategies in a Dry-Edge Maritime Pine EcosystemDaniel Moreno-Fernández0Miguel A. Zavala1Jaime Madrigal-González2Francisco Seijo3Grupo de Ecología y Restauración Forestal (FORECO), Departamento de Ciencias de la Vida, Universidad de Alcalá, Alcalá de Henares, 28805 Madrid, SpainGrupo de Ecología y Restauración Forestal (FORECO), Departamento de Ciencias de la Vida, Universidad de Alcalá, Alcalá de Henares, 28805 Madrid, SpainClimate Change Impacts and Risks in the Anthropocene, Institute for Environmental Sciences, University of Geneva, 66 Boulevard Carl Vogt, 1205 Geneva, SwitzerlandInstituto de Empresa School of Global and Public Affairs, Calle de María de Molina, 13, 28006 Madrid, SpainForests are intrinsically coupled to human dynamics, both temporally and spatially. This evolution is conditioned by global changes in climatic conditions (teleconnections) and distant socio-economical processes (telecoupling). The main goal of this study is to describe the teleconnections and telecoupling dynamics that have shaped structure and processes in a dry-edge—highly vulnerable to desertification—Mediterranean pine forest during the last century and to evaluate the contribution of historical management strategies to this coupled human and natural system’s (CHANS) overall resilience. For this study, we collected relevant human and natural system data from a dry edge <i>Pinus pinaster</i> Ait. located forest in Central Spain using a CHANS analytical framework operationalizing telecoupling and teleconnection. A key extractive economic activity in the studied forest was resin tapping, which was the main form of land use from the 1920s to the 1950s. Since the 1950s changes in the Spanish economy linked to the emergence of new resin-producing countries, such as China, led to a sharp decline in resin production. Despite additional human system transformations affecting forest governance (e.g., the Spanish Civil War, the transition to democracy, European integration, etc.) and changes in biophysical conditions linked to climate change (e.g., aridification, CO<sub>2</sub> fertilization), the standing stocks of <i>P. pinaster</i> increased during the monitoring period due to sound technical and management planning bolstering overall resilience. These historical management decisions, we argue, successfully reconciled overall resilience goals (defined as the maintenance of forest function beyond and desertification avoidance) with three successive historical forest use challenges: intensive firewood collection by local communities in fragile sandy soils, extensive pastoralism in the forest understory and tradeoffs between resin tapping damaged trees, timber production and tree cover as well as the emerging risks of wildfire and climate change.https://www.mdpi.com/1999-4907/12/9/1151CHANSglobalizationhistorical datasocio-ecological frameworksdry-edge
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Daniel Moreno-Fernández
Miguel A. Zavala
Jaime Madrigal-González
Francisco Seijo
spellingShingle Daniel Moreno-Fernández
Miguel A. Zavala
Jaime Madrigal-González
Francisco Seijo
Resilience as a Moving Target: An Evaluation of Last Century Management Strategies in a Dry-Edge Maritime Pine Ecosystem
Forests
CHANS
globalization
historical data
socio-ecological frameworks
dry-edge
author_facet Daniel Moreno-Fernández
Miguel A. Zavala
Jaime Madrigal-González
Francisco Seijo
author_sort Daniel Moreno-Fernández
title Resilience as a Moving Target: An Evaluation of Last Century Management Strategies in a Dry-Edge Maritime Pine Ecosystem
title_short Resilience as a Moving Target: An Evaluation of Last Century Management Strategies in a Dry-Edge Maritime Pine Ecosystem
title_full Resilience as a Moving Target: An Evaluation of Last Century Management Strategies in a Dry-Edge Maritime Pine Ecosystem
title_fullStr Resilience as a Moving Target: An Evaluation of Last Century Management Strategies in a Dry-Edge Maritime Pine Ecosystem
title_full_unstemmed Resilience as a Moving Target: An Evaluation of Last Century Management Strategies in a Dry-Edge Maritime Pine Ecosystem
title_sort resilience as a moving target: an evaluation of last century management strategies in a dry-edge maritime pine ecosystem
publisher MDPI AG
series Forests
issn 1999-4907
publishDate 2021-08-01
description Forests are intrinsically coupled to human dynamics, both temporally and spatially. This evolution is conditioned by global changes in climatic conditions (teleconnections) and distant socio-economical processes (telecoupling). The main goal of this study is to describe the teleconnections and telecoupling dynamics that have shaped structure and processes in a dry-edge—highly vulnerable to desertification—Mediterranean pine forest during the last century and to evaluate the contribution of historical management strategies to this coupled human and natural system’s (CHANS) overall resilience. For this study, we collected relevant human and natural system data from a dry edge <i>Pinus pinaster</i> Ait. located forest in Central Spain using a CHANS analytical framework operationalizing telecoupling and teleconnection. A key extractive economic activity in the studied forest was resin tapping, which was the main form of land use from the 1920s to the 1950s. Since the 1950s changes in the Spanish economy linked to the emergence of new resin-producing countries, such as China, led to a sharp decline in resin production. Despite additional human system transformations affecting forest governance (e.g., the Spanish Civil War, the transition to democracy, European integration, etc.) and changes in biophysical conditions linked to climate change (e.g., aridification, CO<sub>2</sub> fertilization), the standing stocks of <i>P. pinaster</i> increased during the monitoring period due to sound technical and management planning bolstering overall resilience. These historical management decisions, we argue, successfully reconciled overall resilience goals (defined as the maintenance of forest function beyond and desertification avoidance) with three successive historical forest use challenges: intensive firewood collection by local communities in fragile sandy soils, extensive pastoralism in the forest understory and tradeoffs between resin tapping damaged trees, timber production and tree cover as well as the emerging risks of wildfire and climate change.
topic CHANS
globalization
historical data
socio-ecological frameworks
dry-edge
url https://www.mdpi.com/1999-4907/12/9/1151
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