The biodiversity and ecosystem service contributions and trade-offs of forest restoration approaches
University of Cambridge · Ministry of Education · +13 more institutions
Abstract
Forest restoration is being scaled up globally to deliver critical ecosystem services and biodiversity benefits; however, there is a lack of rigorous comparison of cobenefit delivery across different restoration approaches. Through global synthesis, we used 25,950 matched data pairs from 264 studies in 53 countries to assess how delivery of climate, soil, water, and wood production services, in addition to biodiversity, compares across a range of tree plantations and native forests. Benefits of aboveground carbon storage, water provisioning, and especially soil erosion control and biodiversity are better delivered by native forests, with compositionally simpler, younger plantations in drier regions performing…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 71.67
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 456
Authors
14- FHFangyuan HuaCorresponding
University of Cambridge, Ministry of Education, Conservation Leadership Programme
- LAL. A. BruijnzeelCorresponding
King's College London, Yunnan University, Yunnan Institute of Environmental Sciences
- PMPaula Meli
Universidad de La Frontera, Forest Science and Research Institute
- PAPhilip A. Martin
University of Cambridge, Basque Centre for Climate Change, Conservation Leadership Programme
- JZJun Zhang
Yunnan University, Yunnan Institute of Environmental Sciences, Environmental Analysis and Remote Sensing (Netherlands)
Topics & keywords
- Biodiversity
- Ecosystem services
- Provisioning
- Ecosystem
- Agroforestry
- Environmental science
- Production (economics)
- Wood production
- Life in Land