Continued loss of temperate old-growth forests in the Romanian Carpathians despite an increasing protected area network.
Knorn, J., T. Kuemmerle, V. C. Radeloff, W. S. Keeton, V. Gancz, I.-A. Biris, M. Svoboda, P. Griffiths, A. Hahatis, and P. Hostert. 2013. Continued loss of temperate old-growth forests in the Romanian Carpathians despite an increasing protected area network. Environmental Conservation, Available on CJO 2012 doi:10.1017/ S0376892912000355.
Abstract:
Old-growth forests around the world are vanishing
rapidly and have been lost almost completely from the
European temperate forest region. Poor management
practices, often triggered by socioeconomic and
institutional change, are the main causes of loss.
Recent trends in old-growth forest cover in Romania,
where some of the last remaining tracts of these
forests within Europe are located, are revealed by
satellite image analysis. Forest cover declined by 1.3 %
from 2000 to 2010. Romania’s protected area network
has been expanded substantially since the country’s
accession to the European Union in 2007, and most
of the remaining old-growth forests now are located
within protected areas. Surprisingly though, 72% of
the old-growth forest disturbances are found within
protected areas, highlighting the threats still facing
these forests. It appears that logging in old-growth
forests is, at least in part, related to institutional
reforms, insufficient protection and ownership changes
since the collapse of communism in 1989. The majority
of harvesting activities in old-growth forest areas are
in accordance with the law. Without improvements to
their governance, the future of Romania’s old-growth
forests and the important