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Can "Closer-to-Nature" Forest Management Sustain Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services in an Uncertain Future? Lessons from Central Europe

  • Ana Stritih
  • , Judit Lecina-Diaz
  • , Johannes Mohr
  • , Christian Schattenberg
  • , Christian Ammer
  • , Nicolo Anselmetto
  • , Jurgen Bauhus
  • , Andrej Boncina
  • , Matteo Garbarino
  • , Tomas Hlasny
  • , Marcus Lindner
  • , Emanuele Lingua
  • , Eva Knific
  • , Kirsten Kruger
  • , Davide Marangon
  • , Donato Morresi
  • , Katarina Mulec
  • , Thomas A. Nagel
  • , Maria Potterf
  • , Jernej Stritih
  • Dominik Thom, Daan Welling, Rupert Seidl

Publication: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

Abstract

Purpose of ReviewForests produce timber, mitigate climate change and provide important habitats; yet their capacity to provide these services under rapid global change is uncertain. "Closer-to-nature" forest management (CNFM) has been proposed by the EU Forest Strategy as a way to reconcile competing demands on forests while enhancing their resilience, but experiences with its implementation remain limited. We synthesized expert knowledge about CNFM in Central Europe, a region with a history of diverse forest management practices that has recently experienced severe impacts of climate change. We used a two-stage Delphi approach (including a questionnaire and a workshop) with experts in forest ecology and management to find a consensus about the effects of specific CNFM tools, and to identify knowledge gaps, barriers, and good practice examples of CNFM.Recent FindingsA wider implementation of CNFM is likely to benefit biodiversity and ecosystem services under climate change, with only one clear trade-off identified between setting areas aside and wood production. However, limited empirical evidence exists for many of the expected effects. Substantial obstacles hinder the implementation of CNFM, including administrative constraints, social barriers, and gaps in knowledge and education. Nonetheless, we identified numerous successful cases of CNFM implementation from local to national scales in Central Europe.SummaryCNFM is viewed as a potent strategy to navigate future social and ecological uncertainties, including large-scale disturbances. However, the implementation of CNFM should be adapted to the local context and ensure landscape-scale heterogeneity. Existing good practices could serve as examples for mainstreaming CNFM in Central Europe and beyond.
Original languageEnglish
Article number1
Number of pages21
JournalCurrent Forestry Reports
Volume12
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2026

UN SDGs

This output contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

  1. SDG 13 - Climate Action
    SDG 13 Climate Action

Keywords

  • Climate change
  • Forest adaptation
  • Forest policy
  • Good practices
  • Natural disturbance
  • Sustainable forest management

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