CONSERVATION IMPLICATIONS OF EXPORTING DOMESTIC WOOD HARVEST TO NEIGHBORING COUNTRIES

Among wealthy countries, increasing imports of natural resources to allow for unchecked consumption and greater domestic environmental conservation has become commonplace. This practice can negatively affect biodiversity conservation planning if natural resource harvest is merely pushed across polit...

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Main Authors: AUDREY MAYER, PEKKA KAUPPI, PAIVI TIKKA, PER ANGELSTAM
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:http://oaspub.epa.gov/eims/eimsapi.dispdetail?deid=132389
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spelling ftepa:oai:epaEIMS:132389 2023-05-15T16:11:57+02:00 CONSERVATION IMPLICATIONS OF EXPORTING DOMESTIC WOOD HARVEST TO NEIGHBORING COUNTRIES AUDREY MAYER PEKKA KAUPPI PAIVI TIKKA PER ANGELSTAM 2006-04-19T18:11:44Z http://oaspub.epa.gov/eims/eimsapi.dispdetail?deid=132389 unknown NATIONAL RISK MANAGEMENT RESEARCH LABORATORY Text 2006 ftepa 2007-11-21T14:47:35Z Among wealthy countries, increasing imports of natural resources to allow for unchecked consumption and greater domestic environmental conservation has become commonplace. This practice can negatively affect biodiversity conservation planning if natural resource harvest is merely pushed across political borders. As an example, we focus on the boreal forest ecosystem of Finland and northwest Russia. While the majority of protected forests are in northern Finland, the majority of biodiversity is in southern Finland, where protection is more difficult due to high private ownership, and functionality of conservation networks is more uncertain due to a longer history of land use. In northwest Russia, current protected areas are inadequate to preserve most of the region’s naturally dynamic and old growth forests. Increased importation of wood from northwest Russia to Finland may jeopardize the long term viability of species in high diversity conservation areas in Russia and Finland, isolating conservation areas and lowering the age of the surrounding forest mosaic. The boreal forest ecosystem of Fennoscandia and northwest Russia would thus be best conserved by a large scale, coordinated conservation strategy that addresses long-term conservation goals and wood consumption, forest industries, logging practices and trade. Text Fennoscandia Northern Finland Northwest Russia Environmental Protection Agency (EPA): Science Inventory
institution Open Polar
collection Environmental Protection Agency (EPA): Science Inventory
op_collection_id ftepa
language unknown
description Among wealthy countries, increasing imports of natural resources to allow for unchecked consumption and greater domestic environmental conservation has become commonplace. This practice can negatively affect biodiversity conservation planning if natural resource harvest is merely pushed across political borders. As an example, we focus on the boreal forest ecosystem of Finland and northwest Russia. While the majority of protected forests are in northern Finland, the majority of biodiversity is in southern Finland, where protection is more difficult due to high private ownership, and functionality of conservation networks is more uncertain due to a longer history of land use. In northwest Russia, current protected areas are inadequate to preserve most of the region’s naturally dynamic and old growth forests. Increased importation of wood from northwest Russia to Finland may jeopardize the long term viability of species in high diversity conservation areas in Russia and Finland, isolating conservation areas and lowering the age of the surrounding forest mosaic. The boreal forest ecosystem of Fennoscandia and northwest Russia would thus be best conserved by a large scale, coordinated conservation strategy that addresses long-term conservation goals and wood consumption, forest industries, logging practices and trade.
format Text
author AUDREY MAYER
PEKKA KAUPPI
PAIVI TIKKA
PER ANGELSTAM
spellingShingle AUDREY MAYER
PEKKA KAUPPI
PAIVI TIKKA
PER ANGELSTAM
CONSERVATION IMPLICATIONS OF EXPORTING DOMESTIC WOOD HARVEST TO NEIGHBORING COUNTRIES
author_facet AUDREY MAYER
PEKKA KAUPPI
PAIVI TIKKA
PER ANGELSTAM
author_sort AUDREY MAYER
title CONSERVATION IMPLICATIONS OF EXPORTING DOMESTIC WOOD HARVEST TO NEIGHBORING COUNTRIES
title_short CONSERVATION IMPLICATIONS OF EXPORTING DOMESTIC WOOD HARVEST TO NEIGHBORING COUNTRIES
title_full CONSERVATION IMPLICATIONS OF EXPORTING DOMESTIC WOOD HARVEST TO NEIGHBORING COUNTRIES
title_fullStr CONSERVATION IMPLICATIONS OF EXPORTING DOMESTIC WOOD HARVEST TO NEIGHBORING COUNTRIES
title_full_unstemmed CONSERVATION IMPLICATIONS OF EXPORTING DOMESTIC WOOD HARVEST TO NEIGHBORING COUNTRIES
title_sort conservation implications of exporting domestic wood harvest to neighboring countries
publishDate 2006
url http://oaspub.epa.gov/eims/eimsapi.dispdetail?deid=132389
genre Fennoscandia
Northern Finland
Northwest Russia
genre_facet Fennoscandia
Northern Finland
Northwest Russia
op_source NATIONAL RISK MANAGEMENT RESEARCH LABORATORY
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