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The basis of resilience in forest tree species and its use in adaptive forest management in Britain
Author(s) -
Stephen Cavers,
Joan Cottrell
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
forestry an international journal of forest research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.747
H-Index - 63
eISSN - 1464-3626
pISSN - 0015-752X
DOI - 10.1093/forestry/cpu027
Subject(s) - context (archaeology) , psychological resilience , environmental resource management , resilience (materials science) , ecology , geography , biological dispersal , temperate rainforest , population , climate change , forest ecology , forest management , ecosystem , biology , sociology , environmental science , psychology , physics , psychotherapist , thermodynamics , demography , archaeology
Forest ecosystems face a range of challenges in the coming decades, of which climate change, pests and diseases are the most serious. These challenges will be overlaid on a background of historically modified and fragmented forests managed in a wide range of ways for different objectives. As northern temperate forests are species-poor in a global context, their resilience to these challenges is fundamentally dependent on the resilience of individual species. However, dealing with each new threat as it arises is unlikely to be cost effective and in any case, probably not practically feasible. A better strategy for establishing long term resilience would be to harness evolutionary processes, to maximise the capability of individual tree species to respond to new threats by the reorganisation of populations via natural selection; in other words, to be resilient. Such processes depend on the internal variability of species, their mechanisms of dispersal and their ability to recruit new genotypes to a population. In this paper we review the theoretical concept of resilience, examine how it might be applied to tree populations and assess the state of knowledge of Britain’s forests from this perspective

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