Seeking consensus in German forest conservation: An analysis of contemporary concepts

Setting operational conservation objectives is a major challenge for effective biodiversity conservation worldwide. To analyse forest conservation objectives in Germany in a transparent manner and to achieve a consistent and consensual framework, we systematically classified conser...

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Main Authors: Laura Demant, Peter Meyer, Holger Sennhenn-Reulen, Helge Walentowski, Erwin Bergmeier
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Pensoft Publishers 2019-05-01
Series:Nature Conservation
Online Access:https://natureconservation.pensoft.net/article/35049/download/pdf/
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spelling doaj-2104916e07024c4e885482f6d55ad2462020-11-25T01:50:30ZengPensoft PublishersNature Conservation1314-69471314-33012019-05-013512310.3897/natureconservation.35.3504935049Seeking consensus in German forest conservation: An analysis of contemporary conceptsLaura Demant0Peter Meyer1Holger Sennhenn-Reulen2Helge Walentowski3Erwin Bergmeier4University of GöttingenNorthwest German Forest Research InstituteNorthwest German Forest Research InstituteUniversity of Applied Sciences and Arts GöttingenUniversity of Göttingen Setting operational conservation objectives is a major challenge for effective biodiversity conservation worldwide. To analyse forest conservation objectives in Germany in a transparent manner and to achieve a consistent and consensual framework, we systematically classified conservation objectives suggested in concepts by different stakeholders. We analysed 79 biodiversity and forest conservation concepts of different stakeholder groups at various scales and applied textual content analysis and Dirichlet regression to reach a high degree of transferability and applicability. Our analysis revealed a broad consensus concerning forest conservation across stakeholders and scales, albeit with slight differences in focus, but we detected a scale-related mismatch. A wide array of conservation objectives covered social, biotic and abiotic natural resources. Conservation of species, ecosystems and structural elements in forests were found to be of primary importance across stakeholders and scale levels. Shortcomings in the conservation concepts were found in addressing genetic diversity, abiotic resources and socio-cultural objectives. Our results show that problems in forest conservation may be rooted in trade-offs between aims, targeting mismatch across scale levels and insufficient implementation of objectives. https://natureconservation.pensoft.net/article/35049/download/pdf/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Laura Demant
Peter Meyer
Holger Sennhenn-Reulen
Helge Walentowski
Erwin Bergmeier
spellingShingle Laura Demant
Peter Meyer
Holger Sennhenn-Reulen
Helge Walentowski
Erwin Bergmeier
Seeking consensus in German forest conservation: An analysis of contemporary concepts
Nature Conservation
author_facet Laura Demant
Peter Meyer
Holger Sennhenn-Reulen
Helge Walentowski
Erwin Bergmeier
author_sort Laura Demant
title Seeking consensus in German forest conservation: An analysis of contemporary concepts
title_short Seeking consensus in German forest conservation: An analysis of contemporary concepts
title_full Seeking consensus in German forest conservation: An analysis of contemporary concepts
title_fullStr Seeking consensus in German forest conservation: An analysis of contemporary concepts
title_full_unstemmed Seeking consensus in German forest conservation: An analysis of contemporary concepts
title_sort seeking consensus in german forest conservation: an analysis of contemporary concepts
publisher Pensoft Publishers
series Nature Conservation
issn 1314-6947
1314-3301
publishDate 2019-05-01
description Setting operational conservation objectives is a major challenge for effective biodiversity conservation worldwide. To analyse forest conservation objectives in Germany in a transparent manner and to achieve a consistent and consensual framework, we systematically classified conservation objectives suggested in concepts by different stakeholders. We analysed 79 biodiversity and forest conservation concepts of different stakeholder groups at various scales and applied textual content analysis and Dirichlet regression to reach a high degree of transferability and applicability. Our analysis revealed a broad consensus concerning forest conservation across stakeholders and scales, albeit with slight differences in focus, but we detected a scale-related mismatch. A wide array of conservation objectives covered social, biotic and abiotic natural resources. Conservation of species, ecosystems and structural elements in forests were found to be of primary importance across stakeholders and scale levels. Shortcomings in the conservation concepts were found in addressing genetic diversity, abiotic resources and socio-cultural objectives. Our results show that problems in forest conservation may be rooted in trade-offs between aims, targeting mismatch across scale levels and insufficient implementation of objectives.
url https://natureconservation.pensoft.net/article/35049/download/pdf/
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