Category :
Article
article id 5604,
category
Article
Nigel Dudley,
Jean-Paul Jeanrenaud,
Adam Markham.
(1996).
Conservation in boreal forests under conditions of climate change.
Silva Fennica
vol.
30
no.
2–3
article id 5604.
https://doi.org/10.14214/sf.a9249
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Addressing the potential impact of climate change on boreal forest ecosystems will require a range of new conservation techniques. During the early 1990s, the scope of WWF's (the World Wide Fund for Nature) forest policy work has broadened from a focus on tropical moist forests to a more general consideration of all the world's forests. Climate change is only one of a series of threats currently facing boreal forests.
Planning conservation strategies that take account of global warming is not easy when there are many computer models of climate change, sometimes predicting very different ecological effects. Climate change could result in some particularly extreme problems for the boreal forest biome. A summary of the problems and opportunities in boreal forests is presented. WWF has also been drawing up strategies for conservation on a global, regional and national level. The organization has concluded that conservation strategies aimed at combatting climate change need not be in direct conflict with other conservation planning requirements. However, proposals have emerged for ways to address the impacts of climate change that would have detrimental impacts on existing conservation plans.
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Dudley,
E-mail:
nd@mm.unknown
-
Jeanrenaud,
E-mail:
jj@mm.unknown
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Markham,
E-mail:
am@mm.unknown
article id 5118,
category
Article
Matti Nuorteva,
Jyrki Patomäki,
Lennart Saari.
(1981).
Large poplar longhorn, Saperda carcharias (L.), as food for white-backed woodpecker, Dendrocopos leucotos (Bechst.).
Silva Fennica
vol.
15
no.
2
article id 5118.
https://doi.org/10.14214/sf.a15059
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In a locality in Southern Finland where the white-backed woodpecker, Dendrocopos leucotos (Bechst.), was previously breeding was found many conical borings excavated during the winter in young aspens (Populus tremula L.) on average 8.1 cm in diameter. Full-grown larvae of Saperda carcharias (L.) (Coleoptera, Cerambycidae) hibernated in pupal chambers constructed about 0.5 m above ground level. Below this chamber the larva has usually prepared an exit hole. After the larva has blocked itself in the pupating chamber it is easy to prey for the woodpecker during the whole winter.
There were usually 1–5 conical borings in the same trunk. The number of these borings did not correspond with the amounts of larvae eaten, since the woodpecker often made these borings in places from which it could not obtain a prey. The woodpeckers stopped excavating in those cases when the larvae in the galleries were dead. The exit holes and the conical borings occluded within a few years. The galleries within the tree will not heal and several years later a new larva may utilize them. In the wintering habitats of the white-backed woodpecker the availability of food could be improved by increasing the amount of S. sarcharias larvae. This is easily done by encouraging young aspens.
The PDF includes a summary in Finnish.
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Nuorteva,
E-mail:
mn@mm.unknown
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Patomäki,
E-mail:
jp@mm.unknown
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Saari,
E-mail:
ls@mm.unknown
article id 4911,
category
Article
Leo J. Salo.
(1974).
Wilderness-alueet Yhdysvaltain kansallispuistoissa.
Silva Fennica
vol.
8
no.
4
article id 4911.
https://doi.org/10.14214/sf.a14755
English title:
Wilderness areas in American national parks.
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The paper deals with the establishment and present situation of the national parks in USA. The aim of the establishment of national parks was, on the one hand, to preserve part of the natural environment, and on the other hand, to reserve areas suitable for recreation. In addition to the national parks, or rather within them, so-called wilderness areas have been established since 1964. In these areas even such measures as fire and insect control are avoided to the greatest extent possible. The use of the wilderness areas for recreation is restricted to foot and horse trails as well as watercourses, all motorized transportation being prohibited. Campgrounds are provided with only the most primitive comforts. So far only a few wilderness areas have been established in the national parks, but there are tens of suitable areas that have been reserved for this purpose.
The PDF includes a summary in English.
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Salo,
E-mail:
ls@mm.unknown
article id 4824,
category
Article
Peitsa Mikola.
(1970).
Metsä- ja puutalouden tehtävät luonnonsuojelussa.
Silva Fennica
vol.
4
no.
3
article id 4824.
https://doi.org/10.14214/sf.a14613
English title:
The role of forestry and forest industries in conservation.
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The purpose of forestry has hitherto been seen mainly as economic conservation, i.e. the use and management of timber resources on a sustainable yield basis. Along with the rising standard of living, however, amenity values of the environment will become more appreciated, which means that forestry and forest industries will be concerned with conservation of immaterial resources of nature as well. Since inland lakes cover some 10% of the surface area of Finland, and forests occupy more than 70% of the land area, forests and lakes are essential constituents of the Finnish environment during both work and leisure.
The main task of the pulp and paper industry in conservation is the control of water pollution. Today some 10% of Finnish lakes are polluted. Pulp and paper industries contribute 75% of the total waste water load of the Finnish lakes. Increasing water pollution can be prevented by improved processing technology, waste water treatment, and economic use of industrial wastes. Thus, the waste water load of the lakes has not increased in the last 10 years, despite doubling of pulp and paper production. According to the prognoses, by the year 2000 the waste water load from pulp and paper industries will be reduced to one half or one fourth of the present level although the capacity will still be increasing.
In forest management more emphasis should be paid on the aesthetic and recreational values of forests. Along with increasing leisure the need for recreational areas is growing. Scenic and recreational aspects must be considered in the management of industrial forests, too. With wise management, high timber yield is compatible with the maintenance of an enjoyable environment. Good silviculture takes account of timber production, wildlife management and landscape architecture simultaneously. National forestry development programs must be based on the principle of the multiple use of forests.
The PDF includes a summary in English.
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Mikola,
E-mail:
pm@mm.unknown
article id 4640,
category
Article
Jaakko Jalas.
(1953).
Rokua : suunnitellun kansallispuiston kasvillisuus ja kasvisto.
Silva Fennica
no.
81
article id 4640.
https://doi.org/10.14214/sf.a9102
English title:
Vegetation and flora in the planned national park of Rokua in Northern Finland.
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The 4.4 km2 sized area of Rokua is a sandy ridge situated in the transitional zone between Central and Northern Finland. It has been suggested to become a new national park due to its, in the area unique landscape and geological characteristics.
The vegetation of the area has been little studied. A vegetation analysis was performed in 1945, 1947 and 1949. Due to low nutrients in the sandy soil, the number of species is relatively low, including 236 vascular plants. The climate is continental. Lichen covering of soil in the Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris L.) dominated forests is mostly intact compared to the more northern areas, because grazing of reindeer has been little. Fellings have increased in the surrounding areas of the planned national park. The article includes a detailed description of vegetation and flora in the area.
The article includes a summary in German.
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Jalas,
E-mail:
jj@mm.unknown
article id 4639,
category
Article
Luonnon- ja kansallispuistokomitea.
(1953).
Uusien luonnon- ja kansallispuistojen perustaminen valtion maille : luonnon- ja kansallispuistokomitean mietintö.
Silva Fennica
no.
79
article id 4639.
https://doi.org/10.14214/sf.a9101
English title:
Establishment of new nature parks and national parks on the state-owned lands in Finland.
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The article is report of the Nature Park and National Park Committee appointed by the Government of Finland in 1950. It contains a proposal for establishment of new nature parks and natural parks on state-owned lands in Finland. The article also includes a draft of act and decree for establishment of the new nature parks and national parks.
In order to replace the nature reserves lost through the 1944 Armistice with new areas and to create a comprehensive network of nature and national parks, including Southern Finland, the committee proposes new protected areas. The proposal includes the following nature parks: Jussaari, Vaskijärvi, Vesijako, Sinivuori, Häädetkeidas, Salamajärvi, Ulvinsalo, Paljakka, Runkaus, Maltio, Sompio, and Kevo. National parks include Liesjärvi, Linnansaari, Petkeljärvi, Pyhähäkki, Rokua, Oulanka-Juuma, and Lemmenjoki. The total area of the suggested new 23 nature reserves is 1,425 km2. The committee suggets that the administration of the new nature parks and national parks should remain in the responsibility of Forest Service and Forest Research Institute.
The article contains a summary in English
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Luonnon- ja kansallispuistokomitea,
E-mail:
–
Category :
Article
article id 7588,
category
Article
English title:
The forest and mire vegetation of the Oulanka National Park, Northern Finland.
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The Oulanka National Park is situated in the district of Kuusamo on the eastern border of Finland, close to the Arctic Circle and within the coniferous forest zone. It covers a surface area of 107 km2, and is known for the richness of its vegetation and flora, a product of a varied bedrock pattern including occurrences of dolomite. A description is given of the vegetation of the 9 forest and 47 peatland types distinguishable in the area by means of tables based on quadrat surveys. The distribution of each forest and peatland type is described in a vegetation map. The vegetation types are discussed in terms of the structure of their soil and the ecological and floristic features of their plant cover.
The PDF includes a summary in English.
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Söyrinki,
E-mail:
ns@mm.unknown
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Salmela,
E-mail:
rs@mm.unknown
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Suvanto,
E-mail:
js@mm.unknown
Category :
Research article
article id 35,
category
Research article
Tapio Rantala.
(2011).
Democratic legitimacy of the forest sector and nature conservation decision-making in Finnish print media discussion.
Silva Fennica
vol.
45
no.
1
article id 35.
https://doi.org/10.14214/sf.35
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The study explores perceived democratic legitimacy of forest-related decision-making processes in the Finnish print media discourse. The data consists of the readers’ letters in four journals (n = 530), and the comments given during the preparation of the Finnish National Forest Program (n = 140). The objective is to identify the patterns of democratic legitimacy and respective performance evaluations of actual decision-making processes. The patterns can be classified as support for: (A) democracy and other forms of government, (B) different forms of participation, and (C) principles of democracy. The principles can be further classified into 1) core regime, 2) input, 3) throughput, and 4) output principles. Democratic legitimacy was found to be an important source of legitimacy in the public discussion since democratic patterns were found in more than half of the texts. The most common core legitimacy principles included freedom of speech, good national and international standing, forerunnership, and legality at national and international level. The central principles related to input legitimacy included popular sovereignty, a voice for the people, popular participation, openness, presenting alternatives, and urgency. The consensus and majority rules were found to be the most prominent throughput principles. Democratic output legitimacy included accountability, responsibility, cooperation, commitment, responsiveness, the possibility to appeal, credibility, comprehensiveness, and understandability. The findings suggest that among the writers of readers’ letters there is less contestation regarding the principles of democratic legitimacy but there are significant disagreements concerning the performance of decision-making processes. The negative performance evaluations were two times more frequent than the positive evaluations.
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Rantala,
Department of Forest Sciences, P.O. Box 27, FI-00014 University of Helsinki, Finland
E-mail:
tapio.rantala@helsinki.fi
article id 393,
category
Research article
Seppo Rouvinen,
Anne Rautiainen,
Jari Kouki.
(2005).
A relation between historical forest use and current dead woody material in a boreal protected old-growth forest in Finland.
Silva Fennica
vol.
39
no.
1
article id 393.
https://doi.org/10.14214/sf.393
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Assessing the human impact on the naturalness and vegetation characteristics of protected areas is one of the key issues when designing forest conservation networks in Fennoscandia. We studied the small-scale, detailed relationship between forest utilization history and the current availability of dead woody material in a protected old-growth forest area in North Karelia, eastern Finland. From the study area of 32.4 ha, all the stumps (diameter ≥ 5 cm and height < 1.3 m, classified as natural, man-made and of undetermined origin) were measured using 25 x 25 m sub-plots. Standing and fallen dead trees (dbh ≥ 5 cm) were measured on 50 x 50 m plots in an area of 7.8 ha. The average number of stumps was 130 per ha, and over half of the stumps were classified as man-made. However, the historical documents since the 1910s showed no logging in the area: some of the largest man-made stumps probably originated from an earlier time, but most of those stumps were made considerably later. The variation in the total number of stumps (per ha) was great (range 0–560/ha, 0–16 m2/ha), with no clear clustering in space. However, clustering of man-made stumps was detected. The average volume of pooled standing and fallen trees was 84 m3/ha, with a range of 37–146 m3/ha. The other noticeable man-made disturbance besides logging was notching of aspens, which has a scatteredly significant influence on the amount of dead trees. In conclusion, the protected old-growth forest was not as a whole in a natural state but showed different degrees of human impact from virtually untouched patches to quite heavily managed patches. The results suggest that the number of man-made stumps may be a relatively quick and easy method of assessing the naturalness of woody biomass structure in the Fennoscandian boreal forests.
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Rouvinen,
University of Joensuu, Faculty of Forestry, P.O. Box 111, FI-80101 Joensuu, Finland
E-mail:
seppo.rouvinen@joensuu.fi
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Rautiainen,
University of Joensuu, Faculty of Forestry, P.O. Box 111, FI-80101 Joensuu, Finland
E-mail:
ar@nn.fi
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Kouki,
University of Joensuu, Faculty of Forestry, P.O. Box 111, FI-80101 Joensuu, Finland
E-mail:
jk@nn.fi
article id 526,
category
Research article
Matleena Kniivilä,
Olli Saastamoinen.
(2002).
The opportunity costs of forest conservation in a local economy.
Silva Fennica
vol.
36
no.
4
article id 526.
https://doi.org/10.14214/sf.526
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Costs generated by nature conservation are repeatedly under discussion. Most often the costs of conservation are estimated as aggregate figures at the national or regional level or alternatively, for a forest owner. In this study they were examined at the local level, in the forestry dependent municipality of Ilomantsi in Eastern Finland. The estimations of lost net revenues (stumpage income less silvicultural costs), wages, entrepreneurial income and profits, employment and value added were based on alternative forest management plans calculated for conservation areas. The annual losses as regards employment during the first decade were estimated to be 5.7–20.4 jobs. Later, the employment effects were estimated to be 2.4–6.3 lost jobs. Although the value added lost during the first decade was estimated to be at maximum only 3.4% of the present total value added of the municipality, the share of the value added of forestry was estimated to be higher than the mere protected forest land share would indicate. The use of conservation areas for forestry would create a moderate increase of employment in forestry, i.e. 3.8–14%, during the first decade, but it would later stabilise at a much lower level. Employment impacts at the municipal level were estimated as very small (at maximum 0.9%), but on the other hand, for some villages even single jobs may matter. The main reasons for the minor impacts were the high mechanisation rate of logging and the major flow of stumpage income outside the locality.
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Kniivilä,
University of Joensuu, Faculty of Forestry, P.O. Box 111, FIN-80101 Joensuu, Finland
E-mail:
matleena.kniivila@joensuu.fi
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Saastamoinen,
University of Joensuu, Faculty of Forestry, P.O. Box 111, FIN-80101 Joensuu, Finland
E-mail:
os@nn.fi
article id 675,
category
Research article
Per Linder,
Peter Jonsson,
Mats Niklasson.
(1998).
Tree mortality after prescribed burning in an old-growth Scots pine forest in northern Sweden.
Silva Fennica
vol.
32
no.
4
article id 675.
https://doi.org/10.14214/sf.675
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Tree mortality and input of dead trees were studied after a prescribed burning in a forest reserve in northern Sweden. The stand was a multi-layered old-growth forest. The overstorey was dominated by Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris L.) and the understorey consisted of mixed Scots pine and Norway spruce (Picea abies L. Karst.). Ground vegetation was dominated by ericaceous dwarf-shrubs and feathermosses. The stand has been affected by six forest fires during the last 500 years. The prescribed burning was a low intensity surface fire that scorched almost 90% of the ground. Tree mortality for smaller pines and spruces (DBH < 10 cm) was over 80% in the burned parts of the reserve. For larger pines, 10–50 cm DBH, mortality showed a decreasing trend with increasing diameter, from 14% in class 10–20 cm DBH to 1.4% in class 40–50 cm DBH. However, pines with DBH ≥ 50 cm had a significantly higher mortality, 20%, since a high proportion of them had open fire scars containing cavities, caused by fungi and insects, which enabled the fire to burn inside the trunks and hollow them out. The fire-induced mortality resulted in a 21 m3 ha–1 input of dead trees, of which 12 m3 ha–1 consisted of trees with DBH ≥ 30 cm. An increased mortality among larger trees after low-intensity fires has not previously been described in Fennoscandian boreal forests, probably owing to a lack of recent fires in old-growth stands. However, since large pines with open fire scars were once a common feature in the natural boreal forest, we suggest that this type of tree mortality should be mimicked in forestry practices aiming to maintain and restore natural forest biodiversity.
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Linder,
Department of Forest Vegetation Ecology, SLU, S-901 83 Umeå, Sweden
E-mail:
pl@nn.se
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Jonsson,
Department of Forest Vegetation Ecology, SLU, S-901 83 Umeå, Sweden
E-mail:
pj@nn.se
-
Niklasson,
Southern Swedish Forest Research Centre, SLU, Box 49, S-230 53 Alnarp, Sweden
E-mail:
mn@nn.se
Category :
Discussion article
article id 572,
category
Discussion article
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Kuuluvainen,
Department of Forest Ecology, University of Helsinki, P.O.Box 27 FIN-00014, Finland
E-mail:
timo.kuuluvainen@helsinki.fi
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Aapala,
Finnish Environment Institute, Expert Services Department, Nature Division, P.O. Box 140, FIN-00251 Helsinki
E-mail:
ka@nn.fi
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Ahlroth,
University Museum, Section of Natural History, P.O. Box 35, FIN-40351, Jyväskylä, Finland
E-mail:
pa@nn.fi
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Kuusinen,
Ministry of the Environment, Land Use Department, P.O.Box 380, FIN-00131 Helsinki, Finland
E-mail:
mk@nn.fi
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Lindholm,
Finnish Environment Institute, Expert Services Department, Nature Division, P.O. Box 140, FIN-00251 Helsinki
E-mail:
tl@nn.fi
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Sallantaus,
Pirkanmaa Regional Environment Centre, P.O. Box 297, FIN-33101 Tampere, Finland
E-mail:
ts@nn.fi
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Siitonen,
Finnish Forest Research Institute, Vantaa Research Centre, P.O. Box 18, FIN-01301 Vantaa, Finland
E-mail:
juha.siitonen@metla.fi
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Tukia,
Finnish Environment Institute, Expert Services Department, Nature Division, P.O. Box 140, FIN-00251 Helsinki
E-mail:
ht@nn.fi