“…In the Middle Ages (500–1500 CE), multi‐purpose forest management created a heterogeneous forest landscape of native tree species with coppicing, promoting early‐successional stages and pastures, interspersed with veteran trees that harboured old‐growth specialists (Miklín et al, 2018). In contrast, particularly in the Northern Hemisphere, modern forestry since the late 18th century, has focused increasingly on timber production (Rackham, 2008; Schelhaas et al, 2003) often at the expense of structural and biological diversity via planting even‐aged conifer‐dominated forests (Aszalós et al, 2022). In addition, since the early 19th century, forest management has systematically removed dying and dead trees as a precautionary measure against pest outbreaks, with the subsequent disappearance of forest specialists, including many birds, beetles, true bugs, lichens and fungi (Abrego et al, 2015; Seibold, Brandl, et al, 2015).…”