TY - JOUR
T1 - Modelling natural disturbances in forest ecosystems
T2 - A review
AU - Seidl, Rupert
AU - Fernandes, Paulo M.
AU - Fonseca, Teresa F.
AU - Gillet, François
AU - Jönsson, Anna Maria
AU - Merganičová, Katarína
AU - Netherer, Sigrid
AU - Arpaci, Alexander
AU - Bontemps, Jean Daniel
AU - Bugmann, Harald
AU - González-Olabarria, Jose Ramon
AU - Lasch, Petra
AU - Meredieu, Céline
AU - Moreira, Francisco
AU - Schelhaas, Mart Jan
AU - Mohren, Frits
N1 - Funding Information:
This work is a result of working group 2 of the European Union COST action FP0603 “Forest models for research and decision support in sustainable forest management”. R. Seidl received support from a Marie Curie Fellowship within the European Community's Seventh Framework Program (grant agreement 237085 ). A.M. Jönsson acknowledges support from the Mistra Swedish Research Programme for Climate, Impacts and Adaptation , and Grant No. 214-2008-205 to B. Smith from the Swedish Research Council FORMAS. J.R. González-Olabarria received support from the Juan de la Cierva program, Spanish Ministry of Science and Education. Furthermore, the review was supported by the project “Recuperação de áreas ardidas” (financed by IFAP, Portugal), the European Union COST Action FP0701 “Post-fire forest management in southern Europe”, and the European Union integrated project MOTIVE “Models for adaptive forest management” (grant No. 226544 ), co-sponsored by the strategic research programs “Sustainable spatial development of ecosystems, landscapes, seas and regions” and “Climate change” of the Dutch Ministry of Agriculture, Nature Conservation and Food Quality. We thank H. Peltola and two anonymous reviewers for their thoughtful comments on an earlier version of the manuscript.
PY - 2011/2/24
Y1 - 2011/2/24
N2 - Natural disturbances play a key role in ecosystem dynamics and are important factors for sustainable forest ecosystem management. Quantitative models are frequently employed to tackle the complexities associated with disturbance processes. Here we review the wide variety of approaches to modelling natural disturbances in forest ecosystems, addressing the full spectrum of disturbance modelling from single events to integrated disturbance regimes. We applied a general, process-based framework founded in disturbance ecology to analyze modelling approaches for drought, wind, forest fires, insect pests and ungulate browsing. Modelling approaches were reviewed by disturbance agent and mechanism, and a set of general disturbance modelling concepts was deduced. We found that although the number of disturbance modelling approaches emerging over the last 15 years has increased strongly, statistical concepts for descriptive modelling are still largely prevalent over mechanistic concepts for explanatory and predictive applications. Yet, considering the increasing importance of disturbances for forest dynamics and ecosystem stewardship under anthropogenic climate change, the latter concepts are crucial tool for understanding and coping with change in forest ecosystems. Current challenges for disturbance modelling in forest ecosystems are thus (i) to overcome remaining limits in process understanding, (ii) to further a mechanistic foundation in disturbance modelling, (iii) to integrate multiple disturbance processes in dynamic ecosystem models for decision support in forest management, and (iv) to bring together scaling capabilities across several levels of organization with a representation of system complexity that captures the emergent behaviour of disturbance regimes.
AB - Natural disturbances play a key role in ecosystem dynamics and are important factors for sustainable forest ecosystem management. Quantitative models are frequently employed to tackle the complexities associated with disturbance processes. Here we review the wide variety of approaches to modelling natural disturbances in forest ecosystems, addressing the full spectrum of disturbance modelling from single events to integrated disturbance regimes. We applied a general, process-based framework founded in disturbance ecology to analyze modelling approaches for drought, wind, forest fires, insect pests and ungulate browsing. Modelling approaches were reviewed by disturbance agent and mechanism, and a set of general disturbance modelling concepts was deduced. We found that although the number of disturbance modelling approaches emerging over the last 15 years has increased strongly, statistical concepts for descriptive modelling are still largely prevalent over mechanistic concepts for explanatory and predictive applications. Yet, considering the increasing importance of disturbances for forest dynamics and ecosystem stewardship under anthropogenic climate change, the latter concepts are crucial tool for understanding and coping with change in forest ecosystems. Current challenges for disturbance modelling in forest ecosystems are thus (i) to overcome remaining limits in process understanding, (ii) to further a mechanistic foundation in disturbance modelling, (iii) to integrate multiple disturbance processes in dynamic ecosystem models for decision support in forest management, and (iv) to bring together scaling capabilities across several levels of organization with a representation of system complexity that captures the emergent behaviour of disturbance regimes.
KW - Browsing
KW - Disturbance modelling
KW - Drought
KW - Insect herbivory
KW - Wildfire
KW - Wind storm
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/78651453224
U2 - 10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2010.09.040
DO - 10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2010.09.040
M3 - Review article
AN - SCOPUS:78651453224
SN - 0304-3800
VL - 222
SP - 903
EP - 924
JO - Ecological Modelling
JF - Ecological Modelling
IS - 4
ER -