Publication Details
The impact of climate change on forest systems in the northern United States: Projections and implications for forest management [Chapter 8]
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Year Published
2020
Publication
In: Stanturf, John A., ed. Achieving sustainable management of boreal and temperate forests. Cambridge, UK: Burleigh and Dodds Science Publishing. p 239-290.
Abstract
Forests play an essential role in the social, economic, and ecological lives of the inhabitants of the northern United States. Forests cover 69.6 million ha, or 42% of the land area of this region, which is both the most heavily forested and the most densely populated quadrant of the United States (Fig. 1). To preserve a full range of forest ecosystem services into the future, managers are working to identify and implement strategies and tactics that take into account the potentially dramatic effects of a changing climate (Nagel et al., 2010). The region encompasses almost 30° of longitude and 10° of latitude and extends from the Atlantic Ocean west to the Great Plains, containing 20 states: Connecticut, Delaware, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, New Hampshire, New Jersey, Ohio, Maryland, Pennsylvania, New Hampshire, New York, Rhode Island, and Wisconsin.
Keywords
forests; climate change; forest managementCitation
Moser, W. Keith; Butler-Leopold, Patricia; Hausman, Constance; Iverson, Louis; Ontl, Todd; Brand, Leslie; Matthews, Stephen; Peters, Matthew; Prasad, Anantha. 2020. The impact of climate change on forest systems in the northern United States: Projections and implications for forest management [Chapter 8]. In: Stanturf, John A., ed. Achieving sustainable management of boreal and temperate forests. Cambridge, UK: Burleigh and Dodds Science Publishing. p 239-290.