Handbook of field sampling for multi-taxon biodiversity studies in European forests

Research output: Book/ReportBookResearchpeer-review

  • Sabina Burrascano
  • Giovanni Trentanovi
  • Yoan Paillet
  • Paolo Giordani
  • Simonetta Bagella
  • Thomas Campagnaro
  • Alessandro Campanaro
  • Francesco Chianucci
  • Pallieter De Smedt
  • Itziar García-Mijangos
  • Dinka Matošević
  • Tommaso Sitzia
  • Inken Doerfler
  • Jeňýk Hofmeister
  • Asko Lõhmus
  • Silvana Munzi
  • Kadri Runnel
  • Flóra Tinya
  • Kris Vandekerkhove
  • Theo van der Sluis
  • Peter Odor
  • Lorenzo Balducci
  • Andrés Bravo-Oviedo
  • Réka Aszalós
  • Gediminas Brazaitis
  • Cutini Andrea
  • Ettore D'Andrea
  • Jan Hošek
  • Philippe Janssen
  • Nathalie Korboulewsky
  • Daniel Kozák
  • Thibault Lachat
  • Rosana Lopez
  • Anders Mårell
  • Radim Matula
  • Martin Mikoláš
  • Björn Nordén
  • Snežana Popov
  • Meelis Pärtel
  • Johannes Penner
  • Peter Schall
  • Miroslav Svoboda
  • Mariana Ujházyová
  • Kris Verheyen
  • Fotios Xystrakis

Sustainable Forest Management (SFM) is crucial for biodiversity conservation. Although it should be assessed by monitoring the diversity of multiple taxonomic groups, most current SFM criteria and indicators account only for trees or consider indirect biodiversity proxies.Several projects performed multi-taxon sampling to investigate the effects of forest management on biodiversity, but through heterogeneous sampling approaches that hamper the identification of general trends, and the broad-scale inference for designing SFM.The COST Action BOTTOMS-UP (CA18207) established a network of researchers involved in 41 projects on European forest multi-taxon biodiversity across 13 European countries.

We provide an overview of the sampling approaches to multi-taxon biodiversity, standing trees and deadwood in the form of an operational handbook for nine different taxonomic groups and for the sampling of standing trees and lying deadwood. For each of these forest components, we provide two standards that differ in spatial scale and effort, and give specific instructions for the comparability across standards, taxonomic groups and studies. This handbook derives from an effort of networking and synthesis and represents a pragmatic synthesis and an important step forward to direct monitoring of forest biodiversity, in Europe and elsewhere
Original languageEnglish
PublisherCOST (European Cooperation in Science and Technology)
Number of pages110
ISBN (Print)978-88-31222-50-1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2022

Bibliographical note

The text and tables included in this handbook mostly derive from the article: Burrascano, S., Trentanovi, G., Paillet, Y., Heilmann-Clausen, J., Giordani, P., Bagella, S., Bravo-Oviedo, A., Campagnaro, T., Campanaro, A., Chianucci, F., De Smedt, P., García-Mijangos, I., Matošević, D., Sitzia, T., Aszalós, R., Brazaitis, G., Cutini, A., D’Andrea, E., Doer er, I., Hofmeister, J., Hošek, J., Janssen, P., Kepfer Rojas, S., Korboulewsky, N., Kozák, D., Lachat, T., Lõhmus, A., Lopez, R., Mårell, A., Matula, R., Mikoláš, M., Munzi, S., Nordén, B., Pärtel, M., Penner, J., Runnel, K., Schall, P., Svoboda, M., Tinya, F., Ujházyová, M., Vandekerkhove, K., Verheyen, K., Xystrakis, F., Ódor, P., 2021. Handbook of field sampling for multi-taxon biodiversity studies in European forests. Ecological Indicators 132, 108266. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolind.2021.108266 .

Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 The Authors

    Research areas

  • Biodiversity, Field methods, Forest stand structure, Indicators, Multi-taxon, Sampling protocol

ID: 386196849