Reprint

Afforestation and Reforestation: Drivers, Dynamics, and Impacts

Edited by
October 2019
194 pages
  • ISBN978-3-03921-447-1 (Paperback)
  • ISBN978-3-03921-448-8 (PDF)

This book is a reprint of the Special Issue Afforestation and Reforestation: Drivers, Dynamics, and Impacts that was published in

Biology & Life Sciences
Environmental & Earth Sciences
Summary

Afforestation/reforestation (or forestation) has been implemented worldwide as an effective measure towards sustainable ecosystem services and addresses global environmental problems such as climate change. The conversion of grasslands, croplands, shrublands, or bare lands to forests can dramatically alter forest water, energy, and carbon cycles and, thus, ecosystem services (e.g., carbon sequestration, soil erosion control, and water quality improvement). Large-scale afforestation/reforestation is typically driven by policies and, in turn, can also have substantial socioeconomic impacts. To enable success, forestation endeavors require novel approaches that involve a series of complex processes and interdisciplinary sciences. For example, exotic or fast-growing tree species are often used to improve soil conditions of degraded lands or maximize productivity, and it often takes a long time to understand and quantify the consequences of such practices at watershed or regional scales. Maintaining the sustainability of man-made forests is becoming increasingly challenging under a changing environment and disturbance regime changes such as wildland fires, urbanization, drought, air pollution, climate change, and socioeconomic change. Therefore, this Special Issue focuses on case studies of the drivers, dynamics, and impacts of afforestation/reforestation at regional, national, or global scales. These new studies provide an update on the scientific advances related to forestation. This information is urgently needed by land managers and policy makers to better manage forest resources in today’s rapidly changing environments.

Format
  • Paperback
License
© 2019 by the authors; CC BY-NC-ND license
Keywords
structural equation model; Robinia pseudoacacia L. and Pinus tabulaeformis Carr. mixed plantations; stand structure; soil characteristics; soil and water conservation function; Artemisia ordosica; chlorophyll fluorescence; energy partitioning; phenophase; photoprotection; afforestation; heat dissipation probes; in situ calibration; soil water balance; transpiration; dye tests; ring-porous trees; vegetation cover change; evapotranspiration; Poyang Lake Basin; remote sensing; net primary productivity; Loess Plateau; climate fluctuation; human activity; vegetation restoration; simulation modeling; CASA; MODIS; remote sensing; vegetation greening; water-energy balance; quantification; different climatic conditions; understory plants; soil enzymes; soil microbial biomass; soil respiration; afforestation ecosystem; forest cover; ecosystem model; BTOPMC model; LAI; streamflow; sediment load; living brush mattress; root distribution; shear strength; spatio-temporal scales; soil bioengineering; riverbank; precipitation variation; vegetation restoration; evapotranspiration (ET); surface runoff; base flow; empirical statistics; slope change ratio of cumulative quantities (SCRCQ); composted pine bark; fresh pine sawdust; seedling quality; peat moss; Pinus engelmannii Carr.