Active and passive forest management: effects on ecosystem services across protected and unprotected areas in a Southern European regional context

Landscape-scale forest management is widely recognized as a means to sustain and enhance multiple forest ecosystem services. Recent policy frameworks, such as the EU2030 Forest and Biodiversity Strategies, and approaches including sustainable forest management, closer-to-nature silviculture and rewi...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Authors: Spadoni, Gian Luca, Moris, Jose V., Kirschner, Judith, Miguel Magaña, Sergio de, Oliveras Menor, Imma, Passamani, Cinzia, Terzuolo, Piergiorgio, Gottero, Franco, Moguédec, Gilles Le, Ascoli, Davide, Motta, Renzo
Format: article
Status:Published version
Publication Date:2026
Country:España
Institution:Universitat de Lleida (UdL)
Repository:Repositori Obert UdL
OAI Identifier:oai:dnet:.___________::03b401958a685a37f386481f73b73b90
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foreco.2025.123387
https://hdl.handle.net/10459.1/470079
Access Level:Open access
Keyword:Unmanaged forests
Rewilding
Forest land abandonment
Latent reserves
Description
Summary:Landscape-scale forest management is widely recognized as a means to sustain and enhance multiple forest ecosystem services. Recent policy frameworks, such as the EU2030 Forest and Biodiversity Strategies, and approaches including sustainable forest management, closer-to-nature silviculture and rewilding, point towards contrasting management pathways: some encourage active interventions through silvicultural practices, whereas others promote strict non-intervention. Yet the spatial distribution of these different approaches at the regional level and their potential to provide ecosystem services remain poorly understood. In this study, we investigated how diverging management approaches influence ecosystem services across the entire forested area of the Piedmont region (Italy). Based on data from regional forest management plans, we reclassified intended management strategies into Active forest management (including silvicultural practices of varying intensity) and Passive forest management (no intervention), and quantified the distribution of both management types. Using principal component analysis (PCA) and generalised linear models (GLM), we explored relationships between management type and three ecosystem services: carbon stock, fire hazard mitigation, and biodiversity (diversity of tree species). We also examined how Protected Areas are associated with the different types of management and whether they can mediate their effect on ecosystem services. Our results show that 60 % of Piedmont’s forests are planned for Active management, though implementation is hindered by increasing forest land abandonment. Active forest management was associated with higher levels of the three ecosystem services. Protected Areas seem to promote Passive management, while their influence in ecosystem services provision appears scarcely significant. Based on our findings, we advocate: (i) promoting active forest management in abandoned forests, (ii) prioritizing active management approaches to enhance ecosystem services provision, and (iii) leverage unprotected passively managed forests when expanding the Protected Area network, a priority set out in the EU2030 Forest and Biodiversity Strategies.