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The last large intact forests in Northwest Russia
Author(s) -
Tor Kristian Spidsø,
Ole Jakob Sørensen
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
temanord
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Book series
ISSN - 0908-6692
DOI - 10.6027/tn2009-523
Subject(s) - biodiversity , geography , ecosystem services , habitat , ecology , environmental resource management , taiga , indigenous , ecosystem , forestry , environmental science , biology
The forests of Fennoscandia have been in human use for many purposes for centuries, and through the last decades industrialized and cultivated in a manner that can change their ecological function with respect to biodiversity at species and ecosystem levels. In Northwest Russia we can still find large, indigenous forests where human impact is low. They represent the last intact western taiga ecosystems of high value for biodiversity preservation in Russia and Fennoscandia as reservoirs and source habitats for future dispersal of taiga species. The Conference and Workshop in Steinkjer 2007 focused on these matters, but also the ecological importance of these forests for rural culture, socio-economic importance, industrial values and how protection and sustainable societies could go hand in hand. Many of the presentations given at the conference and workshop are here presented together with the Summary and Closing Statement worked out at the end of the sessions. The presentations cover many aspects from ecology, history and culture, conservation and management strategies, inventory tools for defining habitats of specific value to biodiversity, as well as implementation of environmental issues into the forestry laws and certification and educational tools for developing sustainable societies in a broad scale

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