Forest growth in Europe shows diverging large regional trends

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  • Hans Pretzsch
  • Miren del Río
  • Catia Arcangeli
  • Kamil Bielak
  • Malgorzata Dudzinska
  • David Ian Forrester
  • Joachim Klädtke
  • Ulrich Kohnle
  • Thomas Ledermann
  • Robert Matthews
  • Jürgen Nagel
  • Ralf Nagel
  • François Ningre
  • Nord-Larsen, Thomas
  • Peter Biber

Forests cover about one-third of Europe’s surface and their growth is essential for climate protection through carbon sequestration and many other economic, environmental, and sociocultural ecosystem services. However, reports on how climate change affects forest growth are contradictory, even for same regions. We used 415 unique long-term experiments including 642 plots across Europe covering seven tree species and surveys from 1878 to 2016, and showed that on average forest growth strongly accelerated since the earliest surveys. Based on a subset of 189 plots in Scots pine (the most widespread tree species in Europe) and high-resolution climate data, we identified clear large-regional differences; growth is strongly increasing in Northern Europe and decreasing in the Southwest. A less pronounced increase, which is probably not mainly driven by climate, prevails on large areas of Western, Central and Eastern Europe. The identified regional growth trends suggest adaptive management on regional level for achieving climate-smart forests.

Original languageEnglish
Article number15373
JournalScientific Reports
Volume13
Number of pages12
ISSN2045-2322
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2023

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