Vol. 65 No. 1 (2010):
Articles

The application of the ecosystem approach through sustainable forest management: an Italian case study.

Anna Barbati
Università della Tuscia
Piermaria Corona
Università della Tuscia
Luigi Portoghesi
Università della Tuscia
Francesco Iovino
Università della Calabria
Marco Marchetti
Università del Molise
Giuliano Menguzzato
Università degli Studi Mediterranea di Reggio Calabria

Published 2013-05-06

Keywords

  • Convention on Biological Diversity,
  • Pan-European Biological and Landscape,
  • Diversity Strategy,
  • forest management on a natural basis,
  • systemic silviculture

Abstract

During the last decades adapting silvicultural systems to a changed society, increasingly aware of the multifunctional role of forests, was a much debated issue in Italy. Stemming from this discussion is the systemic silviculture concept, an adaptive forest management tool aimed at cultivating the forest as a self-organizing system and focusing on sustaining its functional efficiency as the best way to enhance forest multi-functionality. This concept has much connection with the Ecosystem Approach defined by the Convention on Biological Diversity as a strategy for the integrated management of land, water and living resources that promotes conservation and sustainable use in an equitable way. In the following a case study is presented where the principles of systemic silviculture are implemented in the management of private and common forest properties in the Serre mountains of the Calabria Region (Italy); relationships with the Ecosystem Approach principles are analyzed in order to evaluate to what extent systemic silviculture can be regarded as a means to bring the EA to the implementation level.