First map of Europe’s last wild forests by the Geography Department of Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin
Researchers from the Geography Department of Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin led the creation of the first map of Europe’s last wild forests, including more than 1.4 million hectares in 34 European countries.. The study, recently published in the journal Diversity & Distributions, highlights that primary forests in Europe are generally very rare, located in remote areas, and fragmented into small patches.
Aim
Primary forests have high conservation value but are rare in Europe due to historic land use. Yet many primary forest patches remain unmapped, and it is unclear to what extent they are effectively protected. Our aim was to (1) compile the most comprehensive European‐scale map of currently known primary forests, (2) analyse the spatial determinants characterizing their location and (3) locate areas where so far unmapped primary forests likely occur.
Main conclusions
Despite their outstanding conservation value, primary forests are rare and their current distribution is the result of centuries of land use and forest management. The conservation outlook for primary forests is uncertain as many are not strictly protected and most are small and fragmented, making them prone to extinction debt and human disturbance. Predicting where unmapped primary forests likely occur could guide conservation efforts, especially in Eastern Europe where large areas of primary forest still exist but are being lost at an alarming pace.
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Download the press release below, for further information:
Link to the study: https://doi.org/10.1111/ddi.12778
Link to the project: https://www.geographie.hu-berlin.de/en/professorships/biogeography/projects/forests
Link to Research blog: https://forestsandco.wordpress.com/
- Research paper
English
2018
- Europe
- Western Balkans
- Natural Sciences
Entry created by Admin WBC-RTI.info on June 18, 2018
Modified on June 18, 2018