Journal article

Adaptive risk management for certifiably sustainable forestry

BA Wintle, DB Lindenmayer

Forest Ecology and Management | Published : 2008

Abstract

The past decade has seen a global surge in forest management certification, with over 200 million hectares of the world's forest now certified as sustainably harvested. Because forests are some of the most species-rich environments on earth and more than 90% of the world's forests occur outside formal protected area systems, forest management certification will be one of the pervasive influences on global biodiversity for the foreseeable future. We find that current forest certification schemes are largely deficient because they fail to demand: (i) measurable management objectives for biodiversity, (ii) formal risk assessment of competing management options that integrate impacts on biodiver..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

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Funding Acknowledgements

This project was supported by a Commonwealth Environment Research Facility (CERF) grant to the authors and DP0774288 to Wintle. We thank members of the Australian Forestry Standard Reference Committee for constructive discussions about certification issues and Tom Spies, Terry Walshe, Sarah Bekessy and one anonymous reviewer for helpful comments on the manuscript.