Authors
Johan A Oldekop, Laura Vang Rasmussen, Arun Agrawal, Anthony J Bebbington, Patrick Meyfroidt, David N Bengston, Allen Blackman, Stephen Brooks, Iain Davidson-Hunt, Penny Davies, Stanley C Dinsi, Lorenza B Fontana, Tatiana Gumucio, Chetan Kumar, Kundan Kumar, Dominic Moran, Tuyeni H Mwampamba, Robert Nasi, Margareta Nilsson, Miguel A Pinedo-Vasquez, Jeanine M Rhemtulla, William J Sutherland, Cristy Watkins, Sarah J Wilson
Publication date
2020/12
Source
Nature Plants
Volume
6
Issue
12
Pages
1400-1407
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group UK
Description
Forests have re-taken centre stage in global conversations about sustainability, climate and biodiversity. Here, we use a horizon scanning approach to identify five large-scale trends that are likely to have substantial medium- and long-term effects on forests and forest livelihoods: forest megadisturbances; changing rural demographics; the rise of the middle-class in low- and middle-income countries; increased availability, access and use of digital technologies; and large-scale infrastructure development. These trends represent human and environmental processes that are exceptionally large in geographical extent and magnitude, and difficult to reverse. They are creating new agricultural and urban frontiers, changing existing rural landscapes and practices, opening spaces for novel conservation priorities and facilitating an unprecedented development of monitoring and evaluation platforms that can be used by …
Total citations
20202021202220232024115292417
Scholar articles
JA Oldekop, LV Rasmussen, A Agrawal, AJ Bebbington… - Nature Plants, 2020