Europe
Author
Kusmin, Jurgen
Erol, Secil Yurdakul
Johann, Elisabeth
Agnoletti, Mauro
Boeloeni, Janos
Holl, Kate
Latorre, Jesus Garcia
Latorre, Juan Garcia
Molnar, Zsolt
Rochel, Xavier
Rotherham, Ian D.
Saratsi, Eirini
Smith, Mike
Tarang, Lembitu
van Benthem, Mark
van Laar, Jim
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Forests and other wooded lands cover about a third of the European land area and are therefore a characteristic element of the continent's natural and cultural landscape. Woodland has always provided people with economic, social and environmental products and services. Indeed the history of Western civilisation would be dramatically different without the multiple benefits forests provided to society. However, the current distribution and composition of forests in most parts of Europe reflect the profound cumulative impacts of many centuries of land use change and forest management. While in many cases the loss of biodiversity of cultural landscapes we observe today is closely related to modern exploitation strategies, very often this situation is connected with changes in traditional agricultural systems and the abandonment of traditional land management practices.
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