Reconciling the different uses and values of deadwood in the European Green Deal
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Mansuy, Nicolas; Barredo, Jose I.; Migliavacca, Mirco; Pilli, Roberto; Bitol Leverkus, Alexandro; Janouskova, Klara; Mubareka, SarahEditorial
Elsevier
Materia
bioeconomy biodiversity bioenergy
Date
2024-09-20Referencia bibliográfica
Mansuy, N. et. al. One Earth 7, 20, (2024). [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.oneear.2024.08.001]
Sponsorship
JRC Biomass Mandate; European Bioeconomy Strategy; Administrative Agreement DG ENV-JRC nos. 090201/ 2022/886616/aa/envd.2 and 36197Abstract
The growing demand for woody biomass to meet the environmental and climate objectives of the European
Green Deal raises concerns about the capacity of forest ecosystems to sustain their diverse services and
functions. Deadwood, an often-overlooked source of biomass, exemplifies this dilemma, yet the evidence
needed to enhance its management is sparse. Here, we put the role of deadwood into perspective through
a literature review and comparison of estimates in managed and unmanaged forests. We demonstrate that
deadwood intersects many overlapping and sometimes conflicting policies, playing a multifaceted role in
the bioeconomy, biodiversity conservation, soil health, fire mitigation, bioenergy, and carbon storage. Given
the increasing pressure on deadwood and the ecosystem services it provides, we argue that coherent and
mutually supportive policies are needed to develop multifunctional pathways that reconcile deadwood management
with biodiversity, bioenergy, and climate objectives. Therefore, we suggest that harmonized data
and monitoring are essential, along with transdisciplinary collaboration, to identify trade-offs between
biomass uses and values and ensure the maintenance of functional forest ecosystems.