2021
DOI: 10.1007/s40725-021-00140-z
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The Vision of Managing for Pest-Resistant Landscapes: Realistic or Utopic?

Abstract: Purpose of Review Forest managers have long suggested that forests can be made more resilient to insect pests by reducing the abundance of hosts, yet this has rarely been done. The goal of our paper is to review whether recent scientific evidence supports forest manipulation to decrease vulnerability. To achieve this goal, we first ask if outbreaks of forest insect pests have been more severe in recent decades. Next, we assess the relative importance of climate change and forest management–induced… Show more

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Cited by 21 publications
(15 citation statements)
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References 174 publications
(277 reference statements)
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“…This projected decline could affect the quantity and types of trees that can be harvested in the future, as well as carbon sequestration abilities of forest ecosystems (Brecka et al, 2020;Dymond et al, 2010). Strategies favouring forest resiliency or ecosystem transition should be implemented to reduce ecological and economical risks associated with cold-tolerant species decline (Duveneck & Scheller, 2015;Kneeshaw et al, 2021), especially if radiative forcing reaches RCP 8.5 levels. It is also important to mention that apparent uncertainty in model outcome is mostly explained by differences in how the different processes are being simulated/predicted, particularly with respect to the explicit inclusion of species migration and natural disturbances, rather than model disagreements in overall response to climate change.…”
Section: Management Implicationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This projected decline could affect the quantity and types of trees that can be harvested in the future, as well as carbon sequestration abilities of forest ecosystems (Brecka et al, 2020;Dymond et al, 2010). Strategies favouring forest resiliency or ecosystem transition should be implemented to reduce ecological and economical risks associated with cold-tolerant species decline (Duveneck & Scheller, 2015;Kneeshaw et al, 2021), especially if radiative forcing reaches RCP 8.5 levels. It is also important to mention that apparent uncertainty in model outcome is mostly explained by differences in how the different processes are being simulated/predicted, particularly with respect to the explicit inclusion of species migration and natural disturbances, rather than model disagreements in overall response to climate change.…”
Section: Management Implicationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although, in some cases, the promotion of tree species, genera, and traits might result in potentially greater outbreak severity, more diverse communities still have higher chances of containing species that can contribute to recovery processes and increase overall ecological resilience. This is also highlighted in a recent review study by Kneeshaw et al (2021), suggesting that forest resistance to pests can be effectively increased by enhancing tree structural and compositional diversity at stand, neighborhood, and landscape scales.…”
Section: Interaction Between Biotic Disturbances and Managementmentioning
confidence: 85%
“…Climate-driven synergies underlying explosive outbreaks of this insect have been further exacerbated by a long history of spruce plantation establishment in the region (Jansen et al, 2017), leading to relatively continuous food resources (Seidl et al, 2016b, Figure 6). While this example appears like a "perfect storm" event, it is a pattern replicated across many forest insect systems across the globe, particularly in bark beetle systems subject to similarly strong non-linear feedback processes (Burton et al, 2020;Kneeshaw et al, 2021).…”
Section: Cross-scale Interactionsmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…Nonetheless, model designs are ultimately constrained by supporting knowledge and data. In the insect examples above, there is greater consensus on the landscape factors controlling bark beetle dynamics than there are for defoliator dynamics (Kneeshaw et al, 2021). Indeed, bark beetles were included in all four of the disturbance interaction studies that explicitly addressed cross-scaled interactions (Table 5).…”
Section: Questions and Approaches Across Disturbance Typesmentioning
confidence: 99%