Climate actions
Climate change can increase herbivorous populations that benefit from warmer conditions. Some herbivores can become a stressor in forests and there is potential for them to increase in size and intensity if the above mentioned changes in climate lower winter mortality and allow herbivorous populations to grow. As climate change exacerbates many forest stressors, it will be increasingly important to protect the regeneration of desired species from these animals. At the landscape level, an example of tactic that is sometimes employed to influence deers’ habits is to harvest timber in mountain forests to reduce the migration of some species to adjacent coniferous forests, where regeneration is highly vulnerable. Examples of booth-level adaptation tactics include using fences and other barriers, as well as “hiding” more desirable species in a mix of less desirable species. Biodiversity conservation; reliable data collection.
Manage herbivores to protect or promote regeneration
Objective
Preserve the integrity of the forest.
Description
Expected results
Preserved forest ecosystem.
Result indicators
Number of plant species preserved
Involved actors
Environmental agencies and local government.
Expected timeline for action
Best practices
Criticalities
Scope of the action
Type of proposed actions
Sector of action
Climate impacts
Implementation scale
Source