Dear Colleagues,
We would like to invite you to submit abstracts to our technical session for the IUFRO
Congress in Stockholm, 2024.
The title is "Global forests in a hotter and drier world: Assessing forest damage and
tree mortality from climate change-accelerated insect outbreaks and infectious
diseases".
This session is a joint effort between the IUFRO Task Force on Monitoring Global Tree
Mortality Patterns and Trends and Working Group 07.03.06: Integrated Management of Forest
Defoliating Insects of Division 7.00.00 - Forest Health.
The session includes 15-minute talks, 5-minute flash talks, posters and a panel
discussion. Submissions are now open. Session speakers will be selected by the organizing
committee as well as the session organizers.
Here is a link to the meeting and submission details and description:
https://iufro2024.com/iufro-world-congress-2024/aim-and-scope/<https://c…
https://iufro2024.com/call-for-congress-abstract<https://can01.safelinks…
Technical Session: Global forests in a hotter and drier world: Assessing forest damage and
tree mortality from climate change-accelerated insect outbreaks and infectious
diseases".
Global forest ecosystems are facing unprecedented climate conditions in many parts of the
world. Over the last 50 years, observations are accumulating of increasing forest decline
and tree mortality following hotter droughts, often caused and accelerated by biotic
interactions with damaging insects and infectious diseases. The globalized trade market
exacerbates this phenomenon by the displacement of biotic agents across natural barriers
to naïve and thus highly vulnerable forest ecosystems. Given the importance that forests
play for maintaining global biogeochemical cycles, human livelihood and welfare, and for
providing essential ecosystem services, a thorough understanding of current and future
states of global forests is badly needed for forest managements planning and, at a higher
level, for policy decision making. Current assessments of forest damage and decline as
well as rates of tree mortality are often of low spatial and temporal resolution and are
not available for many regions across the globe, in particular the large forest regions of
the Eurasian boreal forest and the tropical forests of South America and Africa.
This session seeks to initiate a joint effort across scientific disciplines and
administrative agencies concerned with forest damage assessments. The goal is to stimulate
collaborations across regional and national boundaries with the aim to initiate an
international (subcontinental to global) spatially-explicit database on forest damage. We
welcome contributions from ground-based assessments of forest condition (e.g., national
forest inventories) as well as from international initiatives for monitoring tree
mortality and forest insects and diseases. Furthermore, we encourage submissions
presenting new methodologies for detection and monitoring of biotic forest disturbances,
in particular remote sensing approaches, as well as GIS-driven analytical assessments of
forest insect and disease epidemiological dynamics.
We look forward to receiving your submissions to this session.
Best regards,
Deepa Pureswaran (defoliator working group) and Henrik Hartmann (tree mortality task
force)
Deepa Pureswaran, PhD
Research Scientist, Forest Insect Ecology
Natural Resources Canada
Canadian Forest Service, Atlantic Forestry Centre
Scientifique, Écologie des insectes forestiers
Ressources naturelles Canada
Service canadien des forêts, Centre de foresterie de l'Atlantique
1350, Regent Street
Fredericton, NB E3C 2G6
Canada
Websites:
https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Deepa_Pureswaran/research
http://cfs.nrcan.gc.ca/employees/read/dpureswa