The Effect of Forest Management Options on Forest Resilience to Pathogens
Author(s) -
Michaela Roberts,
Christopher A. Gilligan,
A. Kleczkowski,
Nick Hanley,
A. Elizabeth Whalley,
John R. Healey
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
frontiers in forests and global change
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2624-893X
DOI - 10.3389/ffgc.2020.00007
Subject(s) - forest management , psychological resilience , ecosystem services , forest ecology , agroforestry , thinning , resilience (materials science) , coppicing , pruning , environmental resource management , ecosystem , ecology , business , biology , environmental science , woody plant , psychology , physics , agronomy , psychotherapist , thermodynamics
Invasive pathogens threaten the ability of forests globally to produce a range of valuable ecosystem services over time. However, the ability to detect such pathogen invasions—and thus to produce appropriate and timely management responses—is relatively low. We argue that a promising approach is to plan and manage forests in a way that increases their resilience to invasive pathogens not yet present or ubiquitous in the forest. This paper is based on a systematic search and critical review of empirical evidence of the effect of a wide range of forest management options on the primary and secondary infection rates of forest pathogens, and on subsequent forest recovery. Our goals are to inform forest management decision making to increase forest resilience, and to identify the most important evidence gaps for future research. The management options for which there is the strongest evidence that they increase forest resilience to pathogens are: reduced forest connectivity, removal or treatment of inoculum sources such as cut stumps, reduced tree density, removal of diseased trees and increased tree species diversity. In all cases the effect of these options on infection dynamics differs greatly amongst tree and pathogen species and between forest environments. However, the lack of consistent effects of silvicultural systems or of thinning, pruning or coppicing treatments is notable. There is also a lack of evidence of how the effects of treatments are influenced by the scale at which they are applied, e.g., the mixture of tree species. An overall conclusion is that forest managers often need to trade-off increased resilience to tree pathogens against other benefits obtained from forests.
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