The state of forest vegetation management in Europe in the 21st century

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

The state of forest vegetation management in Europe in the 21st century. / McCarthy, Nick; Bentsen, Niclas Scott; Willoughby, Ian; Balandier, Philippe.

In: European Journal of Forest Research (Print Edition), Vol. 130, No. 1, 2011, p. 7-16.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

McCarthy, N, Bentsen, NS, Willoughby, I & Balandier, P 2011, 'The state of forest vegetation management in Europe in the 21st century', European Journal of Forest Research (Print Edition), vol. 130, no. 1, pp. 7-16. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10342-010-0429-5

APA

McCarthy, N., Bentsen, N. S., Willoughby, I., & Balandier, P. (2011). The state of forest vegetation management in Europe in the 21st century. European Journal of Forest Research (Print Edition), 130(1), 7-16. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10342-010-0429-5

Vancouver

McCarthy N, Bentsen NS, Willoughby I, Balandier P. The state of forest vegetation management in Europe in the 21st century. European Journal of Forest Research (Print Edition). 2011;130(1):7-16. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10342-010-0429-5

Author

McCarthy, Nick ; Bentsen, Niclas Scott ; Willoughby, Ian ; Balandier, Philippe. / The state of forest vegetation management in Europe in the 21st century. In: European Journal of Forest Research (Print Edition). 2011 ; Vol. 130, No. 1. pp. 7-16.

Bibtex

@article{36f17150b59d11df825b000ea68e967b,
title = "The state of forest vegetation management in Europe in the 21st century",
abstract = "Abstract COST (COST is an intergovernmental framework for European cooperation in science and technology. COST funds network activities, workshops and conferences with the aim to reducing the fragmentation in European research) Action E47, European Network for Forest Vegetation Management—Towards Environmental Sustainability was formed in 2005 and gathered scientists and practitioners from eighteen European countries with the objective of sharing current scientific advances and best practice in the field of forest vegetation management to identify common knowledge gaps and European research potentials. This paper summarizes the work of the COST action and concludes that although diverse countries have by necessity adopted different means of addressing the challenges of forest vegetation management in Europe in the 21st century, some common themes are still evident. In all countries, there is a consensus that vegetation management is a critical silvicultural operation to achieve forest establishment, regeneration, growth and production. It appears that herbicides are still in use to some degree in all the countries reviewed, although at a lower intensity in many of the northern countries compared to other regions. The most common alternatives to herbicides adopted are the use of mechanical methods to cut vegetation and achieve soil cultivation; overstorey canopy manipulation to control vegetation by light availability; and in some instances the use of mulches or biological control. Any reductions in herbicide use achieved do not seem to have been driven solely by participation in forest certification schemes. Other factors, such as national initiatives or the availability of additional resources to implement more expensive non-chemical approaches, may be equally important. The development of more cost-effective and practical guidance for managers across Europe on non-chemical control methods can best be brought about by future collaborative research into more sustainable and holistic methods of managing forest vegetation, through the identification of silvicultural approaches to reduce or eliminate pesticide use and through gaining a better understanding of the fundamental mechanisms and impacts of competition. ",
author = "Nick McCarthy and Bentsen, {Niclas Scott} and Ian Willoughby and Philippe Balandier",
year = "2011",
doi = "10.1007/s10342-010-0429-5",
language = "English",
volume = "130",
pages = "7--16",
journal = "European Journal of Forest Research",
issn = "1612-4669",
publisher = "Springer",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The state of forest vegetation management in Europe in the 21st century

AU - McCarthy, Nick

AU - Bentsen, Niclas Scott

AU - Willoughby, Ian

AU - Balandier, Philippe

PY - 2011

Y1 - 2011

N2 - Abstract COST (COST is an intergovernmental framework for European cooperation in science and technology. COST funds network activities, workshops and conferences with the aim to reducing the fragmentation in European research) Action E47, European Network for Forest Vegetation Management—Towards Environmental Sustainability was formed in 2005 and gathered scientists and practitioners from eighteen European countries with the objective of sharing current scientific advances and best practice in the field of forest vegetation management to identify common knowledge gaps and European research potentials. This paper summarizes the work of the COST action and concludes that although diverse countries have by necessity adopted different means of addressing the challenges of forest vegetation management in Europe in the 21st century, some common themes are still evident. In all countries, there is a consensus that vegetation management is a critical silvicultural operation to achieve forest establishment, regeneration, growth and production. It appears that herbicides are still in use to some degree in all the countries reviewed, although at a lower intensity in many of the northern countries compared to other regions. The most common alternatives to herbicides adopted are the use of mechanical methods to cut vegetation and achieve soil cultivation; overstorey canopy manipulation to control vegetation by light availability; and in some instances the use of mulches or biological control. Any reductions in herbicide use achieved do not seem to have been driven solely by participation in forest certification schemes. Other factors, such as national initiatives or the availability of additional resources to implement more expensive non-chemical approaches, may be equally important. The development of more cost-effective and practical guidance for managers across Europe on non-chemical control methods can best be brought about by future collaborative research into more sustainable and holistic methods of managing forest vegetation, through the identification of silvicultural approaches to reduce or eliminate pesticide use and through gaining a better understanding of the fundamental mechanisms and impacts of competition.

AB - Abstract COST (COST is an intergovernmental framework for European cooperation in science and technology. COST funds network activities, workshops and conferences with the aim to reducing the fragmentation in European research) Action E47, European Network for Forest Vegetation Management—Towards Environmental Sustainability was formed in 2005 and gathered scientists and practitioners from eighteen European countries with the objective of sharing current scientific advances and best practice in the field of forest vegetation management to identify common knowledge gaps and European research potentials. This paper summarizes the work of the COST action and concludes that although diverse countries have by necessity adopted different means of addressing the challenges of forest vegetation management in Europe in the 21st century, some common themes are still evident. In all countries, there is a consensus that vegetation management is a critical silvicultural operation to achieve forest establishment, regeneration, growth and production. It appears that herbicides are still in use to some degree in all the countries reviewed, although at a lower intensity in many of the northern countries compared to other regions. The most common alternatives to herbicides adopted are the use of mechanical methods to cut vegetation and achieve soil cultivation; overstorey canopy manipulation to control vegetation by light availability; and in some instances the use of mulches or biological control. Any reductions in herbicide use achieved do not seem to have been driven solely by participation in forest certification schemes. Other factors, such as national initiatives or the availability of additional resources to implement more expensive non-chemical approaches, may be equally important. The development of more cost-effective and practical guidance for managers across Europe on non-chemical control methods can best be brought about by future collaborative research into more sustainable and holistic methods of managing forest vegetation, through the identification of silvicultural approaches to reduce or eliminate pesticide use and through gaining a better understanding of the fundamental mechanisms and impacts of competition.

U2 - 10.1007/s10342-010-0429-5

DO - 10.1007/s10342-010-0429-5

M3 - Journal article

VL - 130

SP - 7

EP - 16

JO - European Journal of Forest Research

JF - European Journal of Forest Research

SN - 1612-4669

IS - 1

ER -

ID: 21724799