Key role of forests 'may be lost'
By Mark Kinver
Science and environment reporter, BBC News


Coniferous forests are particularly susceptible to climatic changes

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/low/science/nature/8004517.stm

Forests' role as massive carbon sinks is "at risk of being lost 
entirely", top forestry scientists have warned.

The International Union of Forest Research Organizations (IUFRO) says 
forests are under increasing degrees of stress as a result of climate 
change.

Forests could release vast amounts of carbon if temperatures rise 
2.5C (4.5F) above pre-industrial levels, it adds.

The findings will be presented at the UN Forum on Forests, which 
begins on Monday in New York.

Compiled by 35 leading forestry scientists, the report provides what 
is described as the first global assessment of the ability of forests 
to adapt to climate change.


  The fact remains that the only way to ensure that forests do not 
suffer unprecedented harm is to achieve large reductions in 
greenhouse gas emissions

Professor Andreas Fischlin,
Assessment co-author

"We normally think of forests as putting the brakes on global 
warming," observed Professor Risto Seppala from the Finnish Forest 
Research Institute, who chaired the report's expert panel.

"But over the next few decades, damage induced by climate change 
could cause forests to release huge quantities of carbon and create a 
situation in which they do more to accelerate warming than to slow it 
down."

Debate defining

The scientists hope that the report, called Adaption of Forests and 
People to Climate Change - A Global Assessment, will help inform 
climate negotiators.


Warm winters have allowed spruce beetles to cause widespread damage

The international climate debate has focused primarily on emissions 
from deforestation, but the researchers say their analysis shows that 
attention must also be paid to the impacts of climate change on 
forests.

While deforestation is responsible for about 20% of greenhouse gas 
emissions from human activities, forests currently absorb more carbon 
than they emit.

But the problem is that the balance could shift as the planet warms, 
the report concludes, and the sequestration service provided by the 
forest biomes "could be lost entirely if the Earth heats up by 2.5C 
or more".

The assessment says higher temperatures - along with prolonged 
droughts, more pest invasions, and other environmental stresses - 
would trigger considerable forest destruction and degradation.

This could create a dangerous feedback loop, it adds, in which damage 
to forests from climate change would increase global carbon emissions 
that then exacerbate global warming.

The report's key findings include:

* Droughts are projected to become more intense and frequent in 
subtropical and southern temperate forests

* Commercial timber plantations are set to become unviable in some 
areas, but more productive in others

* Climate change could result in "deepening poverty, deteriorating 
public health, and social conflict" among African forest-dependent 
communities

The IUFRO assessment will be considered by delegates at the eighth 
session of the UN Forum on Forests, which has the objective of 
promoting the "management, conservation and sustainable development 
of all types of forest".

Co-author Professor Andreas Fischlin from the Swiss Federal Institute 
of Technology commented: "Even if adaption measures are fully 
implemented, unmitigated climate change would - during the course of 
the current century - exceed the adaptive capacity of many forests.

"The fact remains that the only way to ensure that forests do not 
suffer unprecedented harm is to achieve large reductions in 
greenhouse gas emissions."
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