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Search: WFRF:(Moen Jon) > Journal article > Bengtsson Jan

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1.
  • Gamfeldt, Lars, 1975, et al. (author)
  • Higher levels of multiple ecosystem services are found in forests with more tree species
  • 2013
  • In: Nature Communications. - : Springer Science and Business Media LLC. - 2041-1723. ; 4
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Forests are of major importance to human society, contributing several crucial ecosystem services. Biodiversity is suggested to positively influence multiple services but evidence from natural systems at scales relevant to management is scarce. Here, across a scale of 400,000 km2, we report that tree species richness in production forests shows positive to positively hump-shaped relationships with multiple ecosystem services. These include production of tree biomass, soil carbon storage, berry production and game production potential. For example, biomass production was approximately 50% greater with five than with one tree species. In addition, we show positive relationships between tree species richness and proxies for other biodiversity components. Importantly, no single tree species was able to promote all services, and some services were negatively correlated to each other. Management of production forests will therefore benefit from considering multiple tree species to sustain the full range of benefits that the society obtains from forests.
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2.
  • Jonsson, Micael, et al. (author)
  • Levels of forest ecosystem services depend on specific mixtures of commercial tree species.
  • 2019
  • In: Nature Plants. - : Springer Science and Business Media LLC. - 2055-0278 .- 2055-026X. ; 5
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Global and local ecosystem change resulting in diversity loss has motivated efforts to understand relationships between species diversity and ecosystem services. However, it is unclear how such a general understanding can inform policies for the management of ecosystem services in production systems, because these systems are primarily used for food or fibre, and are rarely managed for the conservation of species diversity. Here, using data from a nationwide forest inventory covering an area of 230,000 km2, we show that relative abundances of commercial tree species in mixed stands strongly influence the potential to provide ecosystem services. The mixes provided higher levels of ecosystem services compared to respective plant monocultures (overyielding or transgressive overyielding) in 35% of the investigated cases, and lower (underyielding) in 9% of the cases. We further show that relative abundances, not just species richness per se, of specific tree-species mixtures affect the potential of forests to provide multiple ecosystem services, which is crucial information for policy and sustainable forest management.
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3.
  • Jonsson, Micael, et al. (author)
  • Stand age and climate influence forest ecosystem service delivery and multifunctionality
  • 2020
  • In: Environmental Research Letters. - : IOP Publishing. - 1748-9326. ; 15:9
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • We examine how levels of multiple ecosystem services (ESs) change with succession in forests with different tree species composition. More specifically we ask how ecosystem age interacts with environmental conditions to regulate ES delivery. Using the nationwide Swedish forest inventory, comprising boreal and temperate regions, we investigated how levels of six provisioning, regulating, recreational, and/or cultural forest ESs changed with forest age (10-185 years) in stands of different tree species composition. We also tested whether the number of ESs delivered (i.e. multifunctionality) changed substantially with stand age, using different threshold levels for ES delivery. Accounting for environmental conditions and stand properties, we found that levels of single ESs changed with stand age. Tree biomass production usually peaked in young to medium aged stands. In contrast, production of berries and game, and services related to biodiversity, were typically highest in old stands (120-185 years). Consistent with this strong temporal tradeoff, multifunctionality at lower threshold levels increased with stand age in most monocultures and mixtures, with the highest multifunctionality being reached somewhere between 100 and 185 years, depending on tree species composition. This was not evident for the highest threshold ES level (the top-20%), however. Moreover, multifunctionality usually decreased with warmer climatic conditions, with the exception of spruce-pine-birch mixtures. Taken together, our results show that a reduced forest age, e.g. due to forestry targeting early harvest of stands, most likely would limit the delivery of several ESs valued by society and result in less multifunctional forests. To maintain the capacity of forests to deliver high levels of multiple ESs, the role of stand age and tree species composition should be considered in decisions on how to manage future forests.
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4.
  • Maes, Joachim, et al. (author)
  • An indicator framework for assessing ecosystem services in support of the EU Biodiversity Strategy to 2020
  • 2016
  • In: Ecosystem Services. - : Elsevier. - 2212-0416 .- 2212-0416. ; 17, s. 14-23
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • In the EU, the mapping and assessment of ecosystems and their services, abbreviated to MAES, is seen as a key action for the advancement of biodiversity objectives, and also to inform the development and implementation of related policies on water, climate, agriculture, forest, marine and regional planning. In this study, we present the development of an analytical framework which ensures that consistent approaches are used throughout the EU. It is framed by a broad set of key policy questions and structured around a conceptual framework that links human societies and their well-being with the environment. Next, this framework is tested through four thematic pilot studies, including stakeholders and experts working at different scales and governance levels, which contributed indicators to assess the state of ecosystem services. Indicators were scored according to different criteria and assorted per ecosystem type and ecosystem services using the common international classification of ecosystem services (CICES) as typology. We concluded that there is potential to develop a first EU wide ecosystem assessment on the basis of existing data if they are combined in a creative way. However, substantial data gaps remain to be filled before a fully integrated and complete ecosystem assessment can be carried out.
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5.
  • Rist, Lucy, et al. (author)
  • Applying resilience thinking to production ecosystems
  • 2014
  • In: Ecosphere. - 2150-8925 .- 2150-8925. ; 5:6, s. 73-
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Production ecosystems typically have a high dependence on supporting and regulating ecosystem services and while they have thus far managed to sustain production, this has often been at the cost of externalities imposed on other systems and locations. One of the largest challenges facing humanity is to secure the production of food and fiber while avoiding long-term negative impacts on ecosystems and the range of services that they provide. Resilience has been used as a framework for understanding sustainability challenges in a range of ecosystem types, but has not been systematically applied across the range of systems specifically used for the production of food and fiber in terrestrial, freshwater, and marine environments. This paper applied a resilience lens to production ecosystems in which anthropogenic inputs play varying roles in determining system dynamics and outputs. We argue that the traditional resilience framework requires important additions when applied to production systems. We show how sustained anthropogenic inputs of external resources can lead to a "coercion'' of resilience and describe how the global interconnectedness of many production systems can camouflage signals indicating resilience loss.
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6.
  • Snäll, Tord, et al. (author)
  • High rates of short-term dynamics of forest ecosystem services
  • 2021
  • In: Nature Sustainability. - : Nature Publishing Group. - 2398-9629. ; 4, s. 951-957
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Currently, the main tools for assessing and managing ecosystem services at large scales are maps providing snapshots of their potential supply. However, many ecosystems change over short timescales; thus, such maps soon become inaccurate. Here we show high rates of short-term dynamics of three key forest ecosystem services: wood production, bilberry production and topsoil carbon storage. Almost 85% of the coldspots and 65% of the hotspots for these services had changed into a different state over a ten-year period. Wood production showed higher rates of short-term dynamics than bilberry production and carbon storage. The high rates of dynamics mean that static snapshot ecosystem service maps provide limited information for assessing and managing multifunctional, dynamic landscapes, such as forests. We advocate that dynamic, spatially explicit tools to assess and manage ecosystem service dynamics be further developed and applied in post-2020 biodiversity and ecosystem service policy supporting frameworks.
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  • Result 1-6 of 6
Type of publication
Type of content
peer-reviewed (6)
Author/Editor
Moen, Jon (6)
Snäll, Tord (5)
Gamfeldt, Lars, 1975 (3)
Jonsson, Micael (3)
Angeler, David (1)
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Andersson, Erik (1)
Gustafsson, Lena (1)
Tidåker, Pernilla (1)
Troell, Max (1)
Milestad, Rebecka (1)
Kjellander, Petter (1)
Stendahl, Johan (1)
Lindborg, Regina (1)
Lavalle, Carlo (1)
Andren, Henrik (1)
Mikusinski, Grzegorz (1)
Fröberg, Mats (1)
Barredo, José I. (1)
Bastrup-Birk, Annema ... (1)
Teller, Anne (1)
Grêt-Regamey, Adrien ... (1)
Santos-Martín, Ferna ... (1)
San-Miguel-Ayanz, Je ... (1)
Sponseller, Ryan A. (1)
Mair, Louise (1)
Grizzetti, Bruna (1)
Felton, Adam (1)
Nyström, M (1)
Moberg, Fredrik (1)
Maes, Joachim (1)
Czúcz, Bálint (1)
Erhard, Markus (1)
Marta-Pedroso, Crist ... (1)
Zulian, Grazia (1)
Pereira, Henrique M. (1)
Österblom, H. (1)
Westerlund, Bertil (1)
Rist, Lucy (1)
Piroddi, Chiara (1)
Bagchi, R. (1)
Ruiz-Jaen, M. C. (1)
Philipson, C. D. (1)
Degeorges, Patrick (1)
Kristensen, Peter (1)
Somma, Francesca (1)
Egoh, Benis (1)
Liquete, Camino (1)
Paracchini, Maria Lu ... (1)
Cardoso, Ana (1)
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University
Umeå University (6)
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (6)
University of Gothenburg (3)
Stockholm University (2)
Royal Institute of Technology (1)
Language
English (6)
Research subject (UKÄ/SCB)
Natural sciences (6)
Agricultural Sciences (4)
Medical and Health Sciences (1)

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