The effects of climate change on the multifunctional role of basilicata’s forests: The effects induced on yield and co2 absorption

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Abstract

The first studies on the possible impact of climate change on European forests and the development of adaptation and mitigation strategies began in the 1990s and resulted in the identification of risk assessment models and forest management tools. The prediction of climate change impacts on forests has been based using the evidence theory or Dempster-Shafer (DS)’s theory, appropriately spatialised. The implemented evidence lines refer to the concepts of vulnerability and resilience. The results of the DS model, applied to the Basilicata region, were utilised to assess the loss in biomass production capacity and CO2 absorption ability of different forest-derived biomasses. The loss in stumpage value and in the estimated CO2 absorption shows a reduction over time of forest system’s economic value that is basically higher in 2050 than in 2100. The applied methodological approach has shown that the high degree of spatial and information detail may be helpful to produce good predictions to envisage environmental policy strategies for the monitoring and mitigation of the damages caused by the climate change, with a view to ensuring the ecosystems’ capacity to produce positive externalities, including air carbon sequestration capacity.

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APA

Romano, S., Fanelli, L., Viccaro, M., Napoli, F. D., & Cozzi, M. (2015). The effects of climate change on the multifunctional role of basilicata’s forests: The effects induced on yield and co2 absorption. In The Sustainability of Agro-Food and Natural Resource Systems in the Mediterranean Basin (pp. 191–207). Springer International Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-16357-4_13

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