2017
DOI: 10.1016/j.foreco.2016.10.028
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Changes of forest cover and disturbance regimes in the mountain forests of the Alps

Abstract: Natural disturbances, such as avalanches, snow breakage, insect outbreaks, windthrow or fires shape mountain forests globally. However, in many regions over the past centuries human activities have strongly influenced forest dynamics, especially following natural disturbances, thus limiting our understanding of natural ecological processes, particularly in densely-settled regions. In this contribution we briefly review the current understanding of changes in forest cover, forest structure, and disturbance regi… Show more

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Cited by 160 publications
(129 citation statements)
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References 103 publications
(158 reference statements)
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“…LUCC results are generally in line with other studies carried out in other areas, such as the increase of the urban areas (e.g., [55,[80][81][82]) and the reduction of forest areas (e.g., [83][84][85]). …”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 88%
“…LUCC results are generally in line with other studies carried out in other areas, such as the increase of the urban areas (e.g., [55,[80][81][82]) and the reduction of forest areas (e.g., [83][84][85]). …”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 88%
“…In Europe, forest structure could be an important factor synchronizing forest disturbances across large scales. Past forest land use has shaped current forest structure across large parts of Europe (Bebi et al., ; Munteanu et al., ), and high natural disturbance activity in the second half of the ninetenth century resulted in an aging and increasingly disturbance‐prone cohort in the remaining unmanaged forests (Janda et al., ). However, the synchronizing effect of past disturbances and management (i.e., creating homogeneous stands of susceptible species and age cohorts) likely has a considerably longer periodicity (in the order of multiple decades to centuries) than the one identified here.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As many European forests, both managed and unmanaged, are currently bouncing back from past exploitation (e.g., Bebi et al. ) this finding has at least two major implications for climate regulation studies in forest ecosystems: (1) the chosen reference condition (here: the state of the forest in the year 2013) is of decisive importance for the sign and strength of the climate regulation effect (see also Nabuurs et al. , Naudts et al.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%