In the first 36 months of the project, the FORWARD team has made the following major achievements:
– the development and publication of a conceptual framework of post-disturbance forest reorganization, setting the agenda and frame for the analyses conducted within the project (WP0);
– the setup of a suite of connected experiments to test interactive abiotic and biotic drivers of forest reorganization in situ (Berchtesgaden National Park) as well as in walk-in climate chambers (WP1). The experimental work has concluded in the fall of 2024, with a focus on data analysis and publication in the next project period;
– the development and publication of the next-generation forest landscape model iLand 2.0 including the publication of source code and parameters for 150 tree species (WP2).
– concerted simulation and analyses of the three FORWARD study sites across three continents (Grand Teton National Park, Berchtesgaden National Park, Shiretoko National Park), towards a better understanding of how climate change results in the reorganization of forest landscapes with widely different disturbance regimes (WP3). This work is ongoing, with the first paper already published, and will be continued in the next period of the project;
– the analysis of reorganization impacts on ecosystem services and biodiversity and the development of management response strategies (WP4). Here we have focused particularly on disturbance impacts on ecosystem services (including an economic valuation), as well as on management response strategies related to uneven-aged forest management and the reforestation of disturbed areas with tree species robust to future climate change. In the next period of the project in situ assessments of biodiversity and ecosystem services will be conducted for the three main study systems of the project; and
– the assessment of global hotspots of climate risks in forest ecosystems (WP5), and the improved simulation of major reorganization processes such as disturbance in forest models. In the next project period a further analysis on global forest structure is planned.
Overall, the FORWARD team has published 39 papers in peer-reviewed journals in the first 36 months of the project, including works in Science, PNAS, Nature Ecology and Evolution as well as Global Change Biology.