Restoring ecosystem services in managed landscapes

Authors and Affiliations: 

Lucie Jerabkova, James Millington, Mark Mulligan

Department of Geography
King's College London
UK

Corresponding author: 
Lucie Jerabkova
Abstract: 

The UK has a low total area of woodlands, compared to most European countries1, and their functioning is impaired by their individual small size and isolation. At the same time, woodlands satisfy a number of vital societal needs, and an increase in their size or improvement in their condition may enhance these benefits, measured as various ecosystem services. We assess possible outcomes of different scenarios of woodland restoration and management in terms of the flow of ecosystem services under future climate. We use two ongoing large-scale restoration projects in England and Scotland (National Forest and the Great Trossachs Forest) as case studies, and focus on simulating the effects of both, creating new woodlands, and changes in the existing ones. The ‘ecosystem services flow’ refers to provision of products and benefits from the ecosystems to society, and incorporates several descriptors of the process: WHAT service is provided, QUANTITY measured by a metric, WHERE is the source of the service, in absolute and relative location, and HOW the service provision changes over time. Is it stable, fluctuating, increasing or declining?
We integrate a suite of simulation modelling tools in a spatially explicit approach to project long-term landscape-scale dynamics of existing and potential woodlands. We use tools such as InVest and CostingNature, to quantify the ecosystem services associated with each scenario, and assess sensitivity of the models to structural and environmental factors, such as size, age, and forest type of woodland patches, to discern relative role of different drivers. The target ecosystem services include timber production, renewable energy, biodiversity, nutrient retention, carbon sequestration, erosion control, water retention, air quality, and recreation and education. The project aims to fill a significant knowledge gap by its novel approach of multifunctional, dynamic projections of ecosystem services provision over time, integrated with spatial analyses and strengthen by use of multiple tools and scales. It will improve our understanding of the drivers underlying the changes in ecosystem services provision, and provide salient information to managers and policy makers for decisions in the face of future uncertainties.

References: 

1 Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO). Global Forest Land-Use Change 1990–2005; Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations: Rome, Italy, 2012. [Google Scholar]

Oral or poster: 
Poster presentation
Abstract order: 
7