COST Action E27 Protected Forest Areas in Europe – Analysis and Harmonisation (PROFOR) Working Group 1 Key subject ‘Naturalness’ Questionnaire for Working Group 1 – Part 1 March 2004 Country: POLAND COST E27 WG 1 contact person Name: Jadwiga Sienkiewicz Institution: Institute of Environmental Protection Email: Jadwiga.Sienkiewicz@ios.edu.pl Rationale One goal of the COST Action E27 is to clarify the concept of naturalness as used for forest protection. A reason for this is that maintenance and restoration of naturalness is a primary motive for forest protection. The importance of naturalness for Protected Forest Areas is also considered in the PFA table of WG 1 and Etienne Branquart’s questionnaire on selection criteria. The degree of naturalness of forest ecosystems reflects the intensity of human intervention. Different levels of utilisation intensity are characterised not only by different structures but also by different species communities which means that human influence changes the biological diversity of an area. Naturalness can be described by degrees of naturalness. Within the Temperate and Boreal Forest Resources Assessment (TBFRA) (UN-ECE1/FAO2 2000) and the MCPFE3 Report on Sustainable Forest Management in Europe (MCPFE 2003), three degrees of naturalness, namely ‘undisturbed by man’, ‘semi-natural’ and ‘plantations’, were used. According to this classification scheme, forests undisturbed by man, which have a high conservation value, are forests where processes, composition of tree species and structure remain natural or have been restored. Plantations usually represent ecosystems on their own, with artificial dynamics establishing species communities distinct from the original ecosystem. Seminatural forests are neither undisturbed by man nor plantations and display certain characteristics of the natural ecosystem. 1 United Nations Economic Commission for Europe Food and Agriculture Organisation of the United Nations 3 Ministerial Conference on the Protection of Forests in Europe 2 1 The definitions given by the UN-ECE, FAO and MCPFE give only a very basic idea of what is meant by ‘undisturbed by man’, ‘semi-natural’ and ‘plantations’. They need further interpretation and precision to be applicable to national forest conditions. Additionally, most forests in Europe (70%) are semi-natural, with a wide spectrum ranging from forests managed in a close-to-nature way to forests whose management is close to plantation silviculture. It is desirable to introduce one or more subdivisions in order to differentiate more efficiently. The COST Action E27 aims at contributing to the development of a classification scheme that is more appropriate for European conditions. Questions After each section, a box is provided for any further comments or information. We would be very interested in your additional remarks. 1. Is the subject “naturalness of forests” discussed in your country other than within the reporting for the Temperate and Boreal Forest Resources Assessment (TBFRA) and the MCPFE Report on Sustainable Forest Management in Europe? Comments: IScientific literature in Poland discusses n.of f. within the broad context of biodiversity loss, sustainable forest management and reflection of this discussion is to be found in the official document "State Policy on Forests" Yes No 2. If such a discussion takes place, has it led to one or more concepts of forest naturalness that are generally accepted by national forest experts (is there a common idea of original naturalness4, are there widespread ideas of what today’s natural forests look like or would look like in your country? Comments: naturalness is considered as the state "unchanged (or feebly changed) by human management, the concept of potential natural forest vegetation is widely accepted, cf. publication entitled: " Compatibility of a phytocoenose with a biotope in forest ecosystems" edited by Warsaw Agricultural Academy in 2001 in Polish Yes No 3. Do these concepts of naturalness include classification schemes for describing forms of naturalness (forest type classification5, scales of naturalness6)? If scales of naturalness do exist (the international scale of UNECE/FAO and MCPFE excluded), do they comprise more than three degrees of naturalness? Is the concept of the potential natural vegetation (according to Tüxen 1956) widely used within these concepts and classification schemes of naturalness? Comments: Potential natural vegetation identified and classified with the use of syntaxonomical units provides a tool to define the degree of naturalness, scale by Dierschke or similar is practically used for describing naturalness Yes No Yes No Yes No If there are classification schemes, are they used for assessing forest naturalness in practice (systematic field examinations)? If they are used for this purpose, which institutions are responsible for the assessment: a) the administrative bodies and research institutes of the forest administration, b) the administrative bodies and research institutes of the nature conservation administration, c) other institutions? Which forests are evaluated: Yes No Alone Partly All of them Parts of them 4. 4 The state which existed before people became a significant ecological factor (Peterken 1996). e.g. virgin forest, cultured forest , primary forest, secondary forest, ancient forest, recent forest 6 e.g. natural > close-to-nature > semi-natural > far-from-nature > artificial (Dierschke 1989) 5 2 a) forests in Protected Forest Areas mainly protected for biodiversity ( MCPFE classes 1.1 to 1.3), b) forests in other Protected Forest Areas, c) publicly owned forests outside Protected Forest Areas, d) privately owned forests outside Protected Forest Areas? How is the assessment of forest naturalness carried out: comprehensively or by sampling? a) forests in Protected Forest Areas mainly protected for biodiversity ( MCPFE classes 1.1 to 1.3): b) forests in other Protected Forest Areas: c) publicly owned forests outside Protected Forest Areas: d) privately owned forests outside Protected Forest Areas: Comments: The asessment of naturalness is done within the procedures of forest inventories (partly), or for the forest monitoring purposes, or for forest ecosystem study purposes (Forest Research Institute, Forest Universities) 5. Do you know one or more national experts who deal with the description, classification and assessment of forest naturalness? If you know such experts, please note down their name, the institution at which they work, their email address and their field of work related to forest naturalness, if you consider it appropriate to do so. Comprehensively By sampling Yes No Expert 1: Name: prof. Tomasz Załuski Institution: Email: Field of work: Expert 2: Name: Dr Marek Kloss Institution: Email: Field of work: Expert 3: Name: Dr Paweł Pawlaczyk Institution: Email: Field of work: Comments: Bibliography Dierschke, H. (1989): Natürlichkeitsgrade von Wäldern und Forsten (Degrees of naturalness of forests). In: Norddeutsche Naturschutzakademie: NNA-Berichte 2 (3), 149. MCPFE (2003): State of Europe’s Forests 2003. The MCPFE Report on Sustainable Forest Management in Europe. Jointly prepared by the MCPFE Liaison Unit Vienna and UNECE/FAO. Vienna, 126 pp. Peterken, G. F. (1996): Natural Woodland. Ecology and Conservation in Northern Temperate Regions. Cambridge University Press. Cambridge, 522 pp. Tüxen, R. (1956): Die heutige potentielle natürliche Vegetation als Gegenstand der Vegetationskartierung (The present potential natural vegetation as an object of vegetation mapping). Angewandte Pflanzensoziologie (Stolzenau/Weser) 13, 15-42. 3 UN-ECE/FAO (2000): Forest Resources of Europe, CIS, North America, Australia, Japan and New Zealand (industrialized temperate/boreal countries). Main Report. UN-ECE/FAO Contribution to the Global Forest Resources Assessment 2000. Geneva Timber and Forest Study Papers No. 17, 445 pp. Please send the questionnaire back to jan.welzholz@forst.uni-goettingen.de by 14th April 2004. Please do not hesitate to contact us if you have any questions. The results of this enquiry will be presented at our next meeting in Lithuania in May. Many thanks for your help and best regards, Jan Carl Welzholz and Renate Bürger-Arndt Institute for Forest Policy, Forest History and Nature Conservation Georg August University, Göttingen Büsgenweg 3 D-37077 Göttingen Germany Tel.: +49 (0)551 39-3754 Fax: +49 (0)551 39-3415 Email: jan.welzholz@forst.uni-goettingen.de 4