Adaptive forest governance to face land use change impacts in Italy: a review
Author(s) -
Matteo Vizzarri,
Lorenzo Sallustio,
Roberto Tognetti,
Elisa Paganini,
Vittorio Garfì,
Donato Salvatore La Mela Veca,
Michele Munafò,
Giovanni Santopuoli,
Marco Marchetti
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
l’italia forestale e montana
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2036-3494
pISSN - 0021-2776
DOI - 10.4129/ifm.2015.4.01
Subject(s) - environmental resource management , land use, land use change and forestry , land use , ecosystem services , psychological resilience , adaptive capacity , context (archaeology) , corporate governance , adaptive management , business , forest management , forest ecology , climate change , adaptive strategies , environmental planning , ecosystem , geography , agroforestry , environmental science , ecology , forestry , psychology , archaeology , finance , psychotherapist , biology
Land use change is one of the most important drivers for the reduction of ecosystem resilience, and the loss ofbiodiversity and services provision. This is a peculiar challenge, especially in Mediterranean mountain environments,where abandonment and forest transition phenomena increasingly threaten the forest capacity to provide benefits for local communities. Under these conditions, forest governance is called to balance the landuse change impacts and the health and stability of forest ecosystems, in order to ensure the long-term sustainabilityof such marginal environments. This paper aims at deeper understanding the impacts of land use change on forest ecosystem on mountain environments in Italy. At first, a downscaled review on the conceptsof land use change and ecosystem services provision is carried out. Then, according to the review results, therelationships between adaptive capacity of forest management and planning, and land use change is deeply described. Finally, future-oriented strategies of adaptive governance to face land use change are proposed. Inthe context of land use change, adaptive governance can improve forest resilience through filling the researchgaps between the national and the global contexts, adopting monitoring and assessment tools to simulate external changes and disturbances, and effectively implement consistent policy measures and strategies at localscale.
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