Climate change will increase forest disturbances in Europe throughout the 21st century [Research article summary]
Le changement climatique accentuera les perturbations forestières en Europe tout au long du XXIe siècle
Grünig, Marc ; Rammer, Werner ; Senf, Cornelius ; Albrich, Katharina ; André, Frédéric ; Augustynczik, Andrey L. D. ; Baumann, Martin ; Bohn, Friedrich J. ; Bouwman, Meike ; Bugmann, Harald ; Collalti, Alessio ; Cristal, Irina ; Dalmonech, Daniela ; De Coligny, Francois ; Dobor, Laura ; Dollinger, Christina ; Espelta, Josep Maria ; Forrester, David I. ; Garcia-Gonzalo, Jordi ; González-Olabarria, José Ramón ; Hiltner, Ulrike ; Hlásny, Tomás ; Honkaniemi, Juha ; Huber, Nica ; Jonard, Mathieu ; Jönsson, Anna Maria ; Kunstler, Georges ; Lagergren, Fredrik ; Lindner, Marcus ; Mina, Marco ; Moos, Christine ; Morin, Xavier ; Muys, Bart ; Nabuurs, Gert-Jan ; Nieberg, Mats ; Patacca, Marco ; Peltoniemi, Mikko ; Reyer, Christopher P. O. ; Schelhaas, Mart-Jan ; Storms, Ilié ; Thom, Dominik ; Toïgo, Maude ; Seidl, Rupert
Année de publication
2026
Wildfires, insect outbreaks, and storms cause large pulses of tree mortality. Climate change amplifies these forest disturbances, yet their future magnitude and extent remain uncertain. Here, we simulated future forest disturbance regimes at 100-meter resolution across Europe using a deep learning-based simulation framework. Our results show that forest disturbances will continue to increase throughout the 21st century, with disturbed areas more than doubling relative to the recent past under an unabated continuation of climate change. Wildfires are the main agent driving future disturbance change. Changing disturbances result in an increase in young forests, substantially altering Europe's forest demography. Because of their profound implications for forest carbon storage and the habitat value of forest ecosystems, disturbances should be a priority of forest policy and management.</div>
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