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Role of disturbed vegetation in mapping the boreal zone in northern Eurasia
Authors:Annika Hofgaard  Gareth Rees  Hans Tømmervik  Olga Tutubalina  Elena Golubeva  Natalia Lukina  Kjell Arild Høgda  Stein Rune Karlsen  Ludmila Isaeva  Viacheslav Kharuk
Institution:1. Norwegian Institute for Nature Research, Trondheim, Norway.;2. Scott Polar Research Institute, University of Cambridge, United Kingdom.;3. Norwegian Institute for Nature Research, Troms?, Norway.;4. Faculty of Geography, M.V. Lomonosov Moscow State University, Moscow, Russian Federation.;5. Centre on the Problems of Ecology and Productivity of Forests, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, Russia.;6. Northern Research Institute, Troms?, Norway.;7. Institute of the Industrial Ecology ?f the North, Kola Science Center, Russian Academy of Sciences.;8. Sukachev Forest Institute, Akademgorodok Krasnoyarsk, Russian Federation.
Abstract:Question: Is there a need for disturbance mapping integrated in the CircumBoreal Vegetation Mapping Program? Location: Eurasian boreal forest. Disturbance and mapping: The boreal zone is characterized by a multitude of natural and anthropogenic disturbance agents with importance over a wide range of spatial and temporal scales. Disturbance is a prime driver of succession in most of the boreal zone, producing landscape diversity characterized by a large‐scale vegetation mosaic of early to late succession states. When mapping the circumboreal vegetation, spatial extent, time involved from disturbance to recovered condition and likelihood of interacting disturbance types are crucial for how current vegetation is interpreted and subsequently included as map characteristics. In this paper we present examples from the boreal zone where natural and/or anthropogenic disturbance regimes dominate the state and distribution of vegetation, and possibilities for assessing the nature and extent of the disturbed regions using remotely sensed data. Conclusion: Disturbed vegetation occupies large areas in the boreal zone and related vegetation successions should be adequately represented when mapping the zone. In regions where the ‘potential natural vegetation’ is a hypothetical reconstruction from remnants of ‘natural’ vegetation it would be preferable to use the concept of ‘actual real vegetation’ for which remote sensing at coarse, medium and fine resolution is an efficient tool. The Land Cover Classification System (LCCS) may offer sufficient flexibility to incorporate information about the disturbance of circumboreal vegetation.
Keywords:Boreal vegetation  Circumboreal vegetation map  Disturbance  Remote sensing
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