4.7 Article

Revisiting the Functional Zoning Concept under Climate Change to Expand the Portfolio of Adaptation Options

Journal

FORESTS
Volume 12, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/f12030273

Keywords

forest vulnerability; adaptive capacity; multiple-use land management; conflicting perspectives; natural processes; high-yield silviculture

Categories

Funding

  1. Forest Change Initiative
  2. Fibre Solutions Program (Canadian Forest Service, Natural Resources Canada)
  3. project Foret s'Adapter itself - NSERC [RDCPJ 485153-15]
  4. Consortium on Regional Climatology and Adaptation to Climate Change Ouranos
  5. Coop des Frontieres

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Climate change poses a threat to the sustainable management of forest ecosystems, requiring a diverse set of management options to address the challenge. Drawing inspiration from functional zoning, a portfolio of management options is presented to intersect management goals with forest vulnerability, in order to effectively manage forests under climate change.
Climate change is threatening our ability to manage forest ecosystems sustainably. Despite strong consensus on the need for a broad portfolio of options to face this challenge, diversified management options have yet to be widely implemented. Inspired by functional zoning, a concept aimed at optimizing biodiversity conservation and wood production in multiple-use forest landscapes, we present a portfolio of management options that intersects management objectives with forest vulnerability to better address the wide range of goals inherent to forest management under climate change. Using this approach, we illustrate how different adaptation options could be implemented when faced with impacts related to climate change and its uncertainty. These options range from establishing ecological reserves in climatic refuges, where self-organizing ecological processes can result in resilient forests, to intensive plantation silviculture that could ensure a stable wood supply in an uncertain future. While adaptation measures in forests that are less vulnerable correspond to the traditional functional zoning management objectives, forests with higher vulnerability might be candidates for transformative measures as they may be more susceptible to abrupt changes in structure and composition. To illustrate how this portfolio of management options could be applied, we present a theoretical case study for the eastern boreal forest of Canada. Even if these options are supported by solid evidence, their implementation across the landscape may present some challenges and will require good communication among stakeholders and with the public.

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