Siegelement der Uni Freiburg in Form eines Kleeblatts

Session: Deadwood in Changing Forest Ecosystems: A Risk or an Asset?

Übersicht / Overview

Titel / Title: Deadwood in Changing Forest Ecosystems: A Risk or an Asset?

Thema / Topic: 2. Gefährdung und Schutz von Natur und Biodiversität im globalen Wandel / Endangering and protecting nature and biodiversity in a global context

Leitung / Coveners: Kenton Stutz, Robin Schäfferling

Bevorzugte Sprache / Preferred language: Englisch & Deutsch / English & German

Inhalte / Content: Vorträge & Poster / oral presentations & posters

Beschreibung / Description

Deadwood is a multifunctional and dynamic feature of forest ecosystems as it is a hotspot of biodiversity, carbon and forest soil functioning. Forest resilience thus can be improved when deadwood supports tree growth through increased water retention, nutrient availability and soil organic carbon stocks especially when stressed by e.g. drought. Yet resilience can be reduced when deadwood heightens the risk and intensity of forest fires, pathogens, and pests. To evaluate deadwood’s contribution to forest resilience via biodiversity, soil functions, (soil) water dynamics, carbon fluxes and fire, we need a better understanding of deadwood quantities and characteristics in forests, underlying faunal and microbial biogeochemical dynamics, and wood decomposition from the canopy to subsoil.

The aim of this session is to illuminate the complex role of deadwood in forest ecosystems by addressing its full range of functions, discussing methods for interdisciplinary deadwood research and deriving implications for sustainable and climate mitigating forest management. We invite contributions on quantification of deadwood at different scales, deadwood fauna, fungi, and microbial community dynamics; decomposition processes, the deadwood-soil interface, the potential of deadwood for carbon sequestration (under different environmental conditions), the hydrological effects of deadwood and forest fire risk. Exploratory studies as well as experimental or modelling approaches are welcome.

Keywords: Biodiversity, Soil, Hydrology, Resilience, Disturbance