Assessment and Monitoring Protocols to Guarantee the Maintenance of Biodiversity in Certified Forests: A Case Study for FSC (Forest Stewardship Council) Forests in Southwestern Spain
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Area of Study
2.2. Identification of HCVs in the Management Units
2.3. Assessment of the HCVs in the Management Units
2.4. Monitoring of the HCVAs in the Management Units
- Presence of Priority Habitats for the Habitats Directive (marked with an * in Annex I).
- Presence of threatened flora.
- Presence of Invasive species.
- Global assessment of the state of conservation: based on the result obtained in the assessment phase. This parameter is considered when the FMU is assessed as “Unfavourable-bad”
- Conservation actions (when some proposals were made in the assessment phase to promote the conservation).
- Fragmentation of the habitat: Analysis of the habitat fragmentation through the Conefor 2.6 software (http://www.conefor.org/). This methodology [24,25], based on graph theory, allows us to know the habitat availability and the state of fragmentation and isolation of each patch in the global matrix and the possibilities for connection and dispersion of species. A value is assigned to each habitat depending on its role in the connectivity. In this way, the software clearly identifies those habitats which are particularly isolated.
- Technical Assessment: All the aforementioned parameters are easily assessed as they are based on objective and measured criteria. Nevertheless, there are certain habitats/circumstances where it is advisable to consider an additional criterion based on the opinion of experts in the area. Following a deep characterisation of the conservation areas, it was decided that the presence of mature forests or singular or infrequent elements in the area should be considered in this additional parameter. The presence of these elements, often relict, means they are of great interest in terms of conservation and maintenance is key to guaranteeing adequate management of the territory.
3. Results
3.1. Identification of HCVAs
3.2. Assessment of HCVs in HCVAs
3.3. Monitoring of HCVAs
- Forests and edaphoclimatic communities:
- -
- Thermo-Mediterranean Holm oak forests (Myrtus communis-Quercetum rotundifoliae), 17 patches.
- -
- Meso-Mediterranean Holm oak forests (Pyro bourgaeanae-Quercetum rotundifoliae), en 35 rodales.
- -
- Thermo-Mediterranean Cork oak forests (Myrto communis-Quercetum suberis), 11 patches.
- -
- Meso-Mediterranean Cork oak forests (Sanguisorbo hybridae-Quercetum suberis), 28 patches.
- -
- Riparian Alder forests (Scrophulario scorodoniae-Alnetum glutinosae), 11 patches.
- Singular or infrequent habitats in the study area:
- -
- Riparian Red willow (Viti viniferae-Salicetum atrocinereae), 7 patches.
- -
- Riparian Pedicel willow (Nerio oleandri-Salicetum pedicellatae), 1 patch.
- -
- Heath (Erico ciliaris-Ulicetum minoris), 3 patches.
- -
- Reed bed (Juncetum rugoso-effusi), 16 patches.
- -
- Riparian elm forests (Aro italici-Ulmetum minoris), 1 patch.
- -
- Mine heather (Junco rugosi-Ericetum andevalensis), 2 patches.
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
EU Code | Community | N° Patches | AREA (ha) |
2260 | Halimio halimifolii-Stauracanthetum genistoidis | 4 | 8.40 |
3110 | Scirpo fluitantis-Juncetum heterophylli | 10 | 69.10 |
3150 | Lemnetum minoris | 1 | 1.90 |
Lemnetum gibbae | 1 | 14.70 | |
Callitricho stagnalis-Ranunculetum saniculifolii | 3 | 12.10 | |
4020* | Erico ciliaris-Ulicetum minoris | 3 | 1.20 |
4030 | Erico australis-Cistetum populifolii | 4 | 360.76 |
Genisto hirsutae-Cistetum ladaniferi subas. ericetosum australis | 25 | 1081.98 | |
Halimio ocymoidis-Ericetum umbellatae | 41 | 1946.28 | |
Ulici eriocladi-Cistetum ladaniferi subas. ericetosum australis | 50 | 1591.36 | |
5110 | Lonicero hispanicae-Rubetum ulmifolii | 8 | 27.41 |
5330 | Retamo sphaerocarpae-Cytisetum bourgaei | 4 | 14.88 |
Genistetum polyanthi | 25 | 123.07 | |
Phillyreo angustifoliae-Arbutetum unedonis | 52 | 742.09 | |
Asparago albi-Rhamnetum oleoidis | 59 | 711.68 | |
6220* | Trifolio subterranei-Poetum bulbosae | 2 | 15.87 |
Pulicario paludosae-Agrostietum porretii | 5 | 25.27 | |
Paronychio cymosae-Pterocephaletum diandri | 6 | 132.44 | |
Gaudinio fragilis-Agrostietum castellanae | 7 | 20.08 | |
Trifolio cherleri-Plantaginetum bellardi | 13 | 261.47 | |
Dauco criniti-Hyparrhenietum sinaicae | 15 | 195.50 | |
6310 | Dehesa of Quercus suber | 18 | 74.48 |
Dehesa of Quercus ilex | 28 | 580.46 | |
6410 | Juncetum rugoso-effusi | 16 | 41.95 |
6420 | Junco rugosi-Ericetum andevalensis | 2 | 3.25 |
Holoschoeno-Juncetum acuti | 3 | 21.06 | |
Trifolio resupinati-Holoschoenetum | 10 | 104.99 | |
8220 | Polypodietum serrati | 2 | 4.03 |
Cheilantho maderensis-Cosentinietum velleae | 10 | 88.37 | |
Coincyo longirostrae-Dianthetum lusitani | 14 | 125.25 | |
Asplenio billotii-Cheilanthetum hispanicae | 39 | 616.98 | |
Selaginello denticulatae-Anogrammetum leptophyllae | 42 | 442.55 | |
8230 | Sedetum caespitoso-arenarii | 5 | 24,90 |
1B0 | Ficario ranunculoidis-Fraxinetum angustifoliae | 13 | 33.55 |
91E0* | Scrophulario scorodoniae-Alnetum glutinosae | 11 | 9.19 |
92A0 | Crataego brevispinae-Populetum albae | 1 | 0.11 |
Nerio oleandri-Populetum albae | 1 | 0.39 | |
Nerio oleandri-Salicetum pedicellatae | 1 | 0.58 | |
Aro italici-Ulmetum minoris | 1 | 3.25 | |
Salici pedicellatae-Populetum albae | 2 | 0.95 | |
Viti viniferae-Salicetum atrocinereae | 7 | 5.25 | |
92D0 | Polygono equisetiformis-Tamaricetum africanae | 3 | 1.83 |
Pyro bourgaeanae-Flueggeetum tinctoriae | 14 | 26.42 | |
Rubo ulmifolii-Nerietum oleandri | 123 | 687.26 | |
9330 | Myrto communis-Quercetum suberis | 11 | 361.65 |
Sanguisorbo agrimonioidis-Quercetum suberis | 28 | 693.94 | |
9340 | Myrto communis-Quercetum rotundifoliae | 17 | 196.13 |
Pyro bourgueanae-Quercetum rotundifoliae | 34 | 339.82 |
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Land Uses | Area (ha) | % |
---|---|---|
Forest Management (ha) | 38,850.41 | 74.68 |
Eucalyptus globulus Labill | 35,987.74 | 69.18 |
Eucalyptus maidenii F. Muell. | 1349.10 | 2.59 |
Eucalyptus camaldulensis Dehnh. | 806.86 | 1.55 |
Eucalyptus dunnii Maiden | 123.62 | 0.24 |
Eucalyptus saligna Sm. | 47.00 | 0.09 |
Other Eucalyptus spp. | 124.71 | 0.24 |
Other land uses | 411.38 | 0.79 |
Conservation Areas (ha) | 13,172.23 | 25.32 |
Total Area (ha) | 52,022.64 | 100 |
HCV Resource Network: Common Guidance for HCV Identification | HCV Resource Network: Common Guidance for Management and Monitoring | Methodology Used in This Study | |
---|---|---|---|
Key terms and concepts | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Indicators and data sources | General | - | Specific and ready to be used by forest manager |
Case Study | Several, brief | Several, brief | One, thoroughly detailed |
HCV Identification methodology | - | - | Yes, with specific indicators ready to be used. Based on Habitats Directive—replicable in other MUs and countries |
HCV assessment methodology | - | - | Yes |
HCV monitoring methodology | - | General | Specific, based on collected data |
Criteria | Description | Parameters |
---|---|---|
A | Current and potential area within management unit | Favourable: >75% of the potential surface Unfavourable-inadequate: between 30–75% of the potential surface Unfavourable-bad: occupies less than 30% of the potential surface |
B | Minimum area and degree of isolation | FORESTS: Favourable: >10 ha. Unfavourable-inadequate: 2–10 ha. Unfavourable-bad: <2 ha. RIPARIAN: Favourable: >2 ha. Unfavourable-inadequate: 0.5–2 ha. Unfavourable-bad: <0.5 ha. SCRUBS: Favourable: >5 ha. Unfavourable-inadequate: 2–5 ha. Unfavourable-bad: <2 ha. PASTURES AND ROCKY AREAS: Favourable: >2 ha. Unfavourable-inadequate: 0.5–2 ha. Unfavourable-bad: <0.5 ha. |
C | Number of characteristic species | Based on identified species in the inventories in relation to the original description of the community present in bibliography. Favourable: all characteristics species are present. Unfavourable-inadequate: 1 characteristic species is missing. Unfavourable-bad: 1 or more characteristic species are missing. |
D | Invasion of invasive alien flora | Degree of area affected and hazard level of the species detected HIGH LEVEL: Favourable: <1%. Unfavourable-inadequate: 1–10%. Unfavourable-bad: >10%. MEDIUM LEVEL: Favourable: <5%. Unfavourable-inadequate: 5–25%. Unfavourable-bad: >25%. LOW LEVEL: Favourable: <10%. Unfavourable-inadequate: 10–40%. Unfavourable-bad: >40%. |
E | Presence of protected or threatened plants | Number of species and relative abundance. Favourable: presence of viable populations. Unfavourable-inadequate: presence of few or declined populations. Unfavourable-bad: disappearance of previously known populations or registered decline of more than 50%. |
F | Evidence of recent forest fires | Favourable: There are no signs of fires. Unfavourable-inadequate: Visible signs of past fires. Unfavourable-bad: Recent and direct damages by fire |
Prioritization Level | Assessment Value | Monitoring Frequency |
---|---|---|
1 | ≥4 | 3 years |
2 | 2–3 | 6 years |
3 | 0–1 | Monitoring not necessary |
EU Habitat Type | N Patches | AREA (ha) | Unfavourable | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Favourable | Inadequate | Bad | |||
2Coastal Sand Dunes and Inland Dunes | 4 | 8.35 | |||
2260. Cisto-Lavenduletalia dune sclerophyllous scrubs | 4 | 8.35 | 4 | 0 | 0 |
3 Freshwater Habitats | 15 | 97.87 | |||
3110. Oligotrophic waters containing very few minerals of sandy plains (Littorelletalia uniflorae) | 10 | 69.12 | 10 | 0 | 0 |
3150. Natural eutrophic lakes with Magnopotamion or Hydrocharition—type vegetation | 5 | 28.75 | 5 | 0 | 0 |
4 Temperate Heath and Scrub | 123 | 4981.56 | |||
4020. * Temperate Atlantic wet heaths with Erica ciliaris and Erica tetralix | 3 | 1.18 | 2 | 1 | 0 |
4030. European dry heaths | 120 | 4980.38 | 120 | 0 | 0 |
5Sclerophyllous Scrub (Matorral) | 148 | 1619.13 | |||
5110. Stable xerothermophilous formations with Buxus sempervirens on rock slopes (Berberidion p.p.) | 8 | 27.41 | 8 | 0 | 0 |
5330. Thermo-Mediterranean and pre-desert scrub | 140 | 1591.72 | 128 | 12 | 0 |
6Natural and Semi-Natural Grassland Formations | 125 | 1476.82 | |||
6220. * Pseudo-steppe with grasses and annuals of the Thero-Brachypodietea | 48 | 650.63 | 48 | 0 | 0 |
6310. Dehesas with evergreen Quercus spp. | 46 | 654.94 | 46 | 0 | 0 |
6410. Molinia meadows on calcareous, peaty or clayey-silt-laden soils (Molinion caeruleae) | 16 | 41.95 | 15 | 1 | 0 |
6420. Mediterranean tall humid grasslands of the Molinio-Holoschoenion | 15 | 129.30 | 15 | 0 | 0 |
8Rocky Habitats and Caves | 112 | 1302.08 | |||
8220. Siliceous rocky slopes with chasmophytic vegetation | 107 | 1277.18 | 107 | 0 | 0 |
8230. Siliceous rock with vegetation of the Sedo-Scleranthion or Sedo albi-Veronicion dillenii | 5 | 24.9 | 5 | 0 | 0 |
9 Forests | 268 | 2361.64 | |||
91B0. Thermophilous Fraxinus angustifolia woods | 13 | 33.55 | 13 | 0 | 0 |
91E0. * Alluvial forests with Alnus glutinosa and Fraxinus excelsior (Alno-Padion, Alnion incanae, Salicion albae) | 11 | 9.19 | 11 | 0 | 0 |
92A0. Salix alba and Populus alba galleries | 13 | 10.53 | 9 | 4 | 0 |
92D0. Southern riparian galleries and thickets (Nerio-Tamaricetea and Securinegion tinctoriae) | 140 | 715.51 | 137 | 3 | 0 |
9330. Quercus suber forests | 40 | 1056.91 | 34 | 5 | 1 |
9340. Quercus ilex and Quercus rotundifolia forests | 51 | 535.95 | 40 | 11 | 0 |
Total | 795 | 11,847.45 |
Prioritization Level | Assessment Value | Monitoring Period | Number of Patches |
---|---|---|---|
1 | ≥4 | 3 years | 5 |
2 | 2–3 | 6 years | 86 |
3 | 0–1 | Monitoring not necessary | 704 |
Criteria for Prioritization | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Management Unit | Habitat Type | Community | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | Result |
316-EL BONAL | 4020 * Temperate Atlantic wet heaths with Erica ciliaris and Erica tetralix | Erico ciliaris-Ulicetum minoris | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 4 |
334-PALLARES | 4020 * Temperate Atlantic wet heaths with Erica ciliaris and Erica tetralix | Erico ciliaris-Ulicetum minoris | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 4 |
525-ALQUERIA DEL POZO | 9340Quercus ilex and Quercus rotundifolia forests | Myrto communis-Quercetum rotundifoliae | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 4 |
539-LA GIRALDA | 4020 * Temperate Atlantic wet heaths with Erica ciliaris and Erica tetralix | Erico ciliaris-Ulicetum minoris | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 4 |
667-ALGARROBO | 92D0Southern riparian galleries and thickets | Polygono-Tamaricetum africanae | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 4 |
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Sánchez-Almendro, A.J.; Hidalgo, P.J.; Galán, R.; Carrasco, J.M.; López-Tirado, J. Assessment and Monitoring Protocols to Guarantee the Maintenance of Biodiversity in Certified Forests: A Case Study for FSC (Forest Stewardship Council) Forests in Southwestern Spain. Forests 2018, 9, 705. https://doi.org/10.3390/f9110705
Sánchez-Almendro AJ, Hidalgo PJ, Galán R, Carrasco JM, López-Tirado J. Assessment and Monitoring Protocols to Guarantee the Maintenance of Biodiversity in Certified Forests: A Case Study for FSC (Forest Stewardship Council) Forests in Southwestern Spain. Forests. 2018; 9(11):705. https://doi.org/10.3390/f9110705
Chicago/Turabian StyleSánchez-Almendro, Antonio J., Pablo J. Hidalgo, Rosario Galán, José M. Carrasco, and Javier López-Tirado. 2018. "Assessment and Monitoring Protocols to Guarantee the Maintenance of Biodiversity in Certified Forests: A Case Study for FSC (Forest Stewardship Council) Forests in Southwestern Spain" Forests 9, no. 11: 705. https://doi.org/10.3390/f9110705
APA StyleSánchez-Almendro, A. J., Hidalgo, P. J., Galán, R., Carrasco, J. M., & López-Tirado, J. (2018). Assessment and Monitoring Protocols to Guarantee the Maintenance of Biodiversity in Certified Forests: A Case Study for FSC (Forest Stewardship Council) Forests in Southwestern Spain. Forests, 9(11), 705. https://doi.org/10.3390/f9110705