Program
Program
TUESDAY 24/10
08:00 - 13:00
08:00 Registration and Information desk
09:00 Welcoming Coffee - Atrium
09:30 Opening Session – Auditorium
Which includes the Rector of the University of Évora, Hermínia Vasconcelos Vilar (or representative), the Research Director of INRAE and IUFRO Div8 Coordinator, Sandra Luque, the Director of the Research Unit MED, Fátima Batista and the Conference Chair, Teresa Pinto Correia
Chair: Teresa Pinto Correia
10:00 PL 1 Fire regimes of Portugal: pastoral, periurban, wild, and agricultural
José Miguel Cardoso Pereira
10:30 PL 2 Living labs for systemic innovations in silvopastoral systems: opportunities and challenges
Pier Paolo Roggero
11:30 Coffee Break - Atrium
12:00 Poster Session – Small square
13:00 Lunch – Room 129
Parallel Sessions (14:00 – 17:30)
1. Human-nature relationships to support multifunctional forested landscapes, including socio-ecological approaches: Oral Presentations – Room 124
Chair: Helena Guimarães
14:00 OC 1.1 Finding the path in the forest – An interdisciplinary approach towards multifunctionality in northern forests
Cecilia Akselsson
14:15 OC 1.2 Effective Communication: Key to Advancing Multifunctional Forestry in the Climate Change Period
Marcel Riedl
14:30 OC 1.3 Urban greenspace for Nature, Society and Culture across diverse landscapes and contexts in Eastern Europe
Marine Elbakidze
14:45 OC 1.4 Where Forest Meets the Ocean: Operationalising an Integrated Landscape-Seascape Approach in Eastern Taiwan (2016-2023)
Kuang-Chung Lee
15:00 OC 1.5 Our Common Water
Lars Högbom
2. Innovative Tools, Methods and Approaches to improve decision-support and monitoring systems (e.g., coupling models, remote sensing, spatial tools, terrestrial sensors): Oral Presentations - Auditorium
Chair: Pierre Sicard
14:00 OC 2.1 Canopy-based Classification of Urban Vegetation from Very High-Resolution Satellite Imagery
Fatimatou Coulibaly
14:15 OC 2.2 The role of spaceborne LiDAR systems for forest monitoring
Sérgio Godinho
14:30 OC 2.5 Close range remote sensing of relative humidity
Alexandru Claudiu Dobre
3. Global change, vulnerability and adaptive management of forested landscapes – How to manage increasing pressures and threats above the current resilience tipping points: Oral Presentations – Room 131
Chair: Sergio Prats
14:00 OC 3.1 Effect of mixture and management of a Southern European beech forest on carbon stocks and sinks
Lorenzo MW Rossi
14:15 OC 3.2 Impact of five tree species conversion modalities on fauna and fungi soil biodiversity as monitored by DNA-metabarcoding in temperate forests
Vicent Moulin
14:30 OC 3.3 Pyrenean oak forests under global change - integrating projected suitable areas in management plans
Isabel Passos
14:45 OC 3.5 Tree growth responses to climate variability provide insight about future tipping points in subalpine forests of western North America
Elizabeth Campbell
5. Silvopastoral systems and sustainable integrative solutions at the landscape level: Oral presentations – Room 115
Chair: Marina Castro
14:00 OC 5.1 Developing soil early indicators on Montados’ soil functions
Oscar Gonzalez-Pelayo
14:15 OC 5.2 The positive effect of trees on pasture quality and soil carbon sequestration in holm oak savannas
Alejandro Carrascosa Becerril
14:30 OC 5.3 The relationship between Canopy greenness and water availability in Cork and Holm Oak within the Portuguese Montado
Danielle Rudley
14:45 OC 5.4 Towards satellite remote sensing of quality of Mediterranean grasslands to support management in agro-silvo-pastoral systems
Jesús Fernández Habas
Round Table: Forest Landscape Restoration initiatives: biodiversity, economy and people – Teachers’ Lounge
Chairs: Anna Barbati; John Devaney; João Carlos Azevedo
14:00 RT 1 Forest Landscape Restoration: resilient socioecological landscapes in the making
René Zamora Cristales,Mónca Toro-Manriquez, Alejandro Huertas
15:30 Coffee Break
2. Innovative Tools, Methods and Approaches to improve decision-support and monitoring systems (e.g., coupling models, remote sensing, spatial tools, terrestrial sensors): Oral Presentations – Auditorium
Chair: Nuno Guiomar
16:00 OC 2.5 Improving conservation targets for forest biodiversity: toward operational solutions from space
Sandra Luque
16:15 OC 2.6 Species distribution models using remote-sensed dynamic habitat index
Samuel Alleaume
16:30 OC 2.7 Using remote sensing to model the breeding habitat of the Black Grouse, in open forest
Alexandre Defossez
16:45 OC 2.8 Matching the effects of forest structure with management for predicting species occupancy at multiple spatial scales
Adriano Mazziotta
3. Global change, vulnerability and adaptive management of forested landscapes – How to manage increasing pressures and threats above the current resilience tipping points: Oral Presentations – Room 131
Chair: Ana Cristina Gonçalves
16:00 OC 3.6 How will climate change impact maritime pine forest distribution and productivity in Portugal?
Cristina Alegria
16:15 OC 3.7 SWAT based responses on two contrasting eucalypt-dominated catchments under different climate scenarios
João Rocha
16:30 OC 3.9 Soil organic carbon stock in managed, unmanaged, and disturbed Nothofagus forests in Chilean Patagonia
Mónica Toro-Manriquez
4. Forest management, public policies, governance models and decision making: Oral presentations – Room 124
Chair: Mª Helena Guimarães
16:00 OC 4.1 Landscape transformation through collaborative approaches
Sandra Valente
16:15 OC 4.2 Collaborative and strategic landscape planning for wildfire management – evidence from Portugal
Teresa Pinto Correia
16:30 OC 4.3 Poor performance of community forests to sustainable livelihoods in Cameroon: long-term impact assessment and ways forward
Guillaume Lescuyer
16:45 OC 4.4 Assessing Connectivity and Habitat Suitability of Green Infrastructure in the Boreal Forest of Sweden
Ewa Orlikowska
5. Silvopastoral systems and sustainable integrative solutions at the landscape level: Oral presentations – Room 115
Chair: Marina Castro
16:00 OC 5.5 The transformation of the silvopastoral landscape of Montesinho Natural Park (1995 – 2021)
Vitor Seripieri
16:15 OC 5.6 Stakeholder-informed assessment of grassland management for ecosystem services in dehesa/montado systems
Verena Arndt
16:30 OC 5.7 Don't Put All your Eggs in One Basket: Montado silvo-pastoral system as a case study of resilience
Isabel Ferraz de Oliveira
16:45 OC 5.8 Potential of Bituminaria bituminosa as a new forage perennial legume in Montados and Dehesas of the Iberian Peninsula
Jesús Fernández Habas
Round Table: Global change, vulnerability and adaptive management of forested landscapes – How to manage increasing pressures and threats above the current resilience tipping points - Sala de docentes
Chairs: Pierre Sicard; Alessandra De Marco
16:00 RT 2 Air Pollution and Climate Change Impacts
Yasumoto Hoskhika;Ovidiu Badea; Cristina Branquinho; Melania Michetti
17:30 Ad-hoc meetings
18:30 Sunset drink
Wednesday 25/10
08:00 - 9:00
08:00 Registration and Information desk
08:30 Field Trip: Arrival to the meeting point
09:00 Field Trip: Bus departure
Field Trips
Field Trip 1 (Green) – “Montado – a silvopastoral system with high biodiversity value”
Tiago Marques
The Montado is a multifunctional silvopastoral system that is known for its high levels of biodiversity and sustainable use of natural resources. However, in recent times, a general decline in the system has been observed in many areas due to various causes such as diseases, climate change, overgrazing, changes in land use and soil fertility. This decay is having negative impacts on biodiversity, ecosystem services, and the livelihoods of local communities. The Montado is a Mediterranean agro-sylvo-pastoral system, characterized by the presence of cork oak (Quercus suber) and holm oak (Quercus rotundifolia) trees, that are the main elements of the landscape. The scrub communities are diverse and typical of Mediterranean regions, and the landscape is also home to various freshwater habitats such as streams and temporary ponds, which enrich the biodiversity of the area. The cork oak is especially valuable for its bark that is harvested for cork production, which is an important economic activity. The acorns of the holm oak can feed the black pigs that graze in the undergrowth.
During this walk, we will explore a Montado landscape in the Mediterranean region, characterized by its well-preserved riparian areas. We will cover a distance of 10-12 kilometers and discuss the natural and social values of the landscape, as well as the management practices that are necessary to maintain them. This visit will provide an opportunity to learn about the biodiversity, ecosystem services, and cultural significance of the Montado, as well as the challenges and opportunities for its sustainable management.
Duration: 7.5 hours
Location: Serra de Monfurado, a Natura 2000 site near Évora
Field Trip 2 (Yellow) – “Sylvopastoral systems and sustainable integrative solutions at the landscape level”
Isabel Ferraz de Oliveira & Elvira Sales Baptista
Our visit will take us to different sustainable integrative approaches of sylvopastoral systems based on Montado. The Montado is a unique silvo-pastoral system based on native pastures under a canopy of evergreen oaks, where animals are raised free-ranging all year round. These systems have low labour and capital inputs and can provide a variety of ecosystem services. The oak trees are central to the multifunctional sylvopastoral Montado as, besides the cork and acorns’ production, they also provide shade and shelter to livestock. Regarding feed resources, the Montado main constraints are related to low soil fertility and rainfall variation that have a huge impact on pasture biomass and animal productivity. Sustainable integrative solutions at the landscape level to cope with uncertainty within this system will be discussed. The farms are located within 50 Km from Évora, in the heart of the Montado.
Visit to two estates to see, in situ, the different activities, with special emphasis on forestry and grazing, which contribute to the integrated and sustainable management of the Montado.
Duration: 7.5 hours
Location: Farms near Évora
Field Trip 3 (Red) – “Cork and Forest Stands”
Ana Cristina Gonçalves
Visit to the Amorim cork factory and cork oak and umbrella pine forest stands. Corticeira Amorim is the world’s biggest cork processing group and makes an unparalleled contribution to the business, market, economy, innovation and the sustainability of the entire cork industry. Founded in 1870, the company soon realized the infinite potential of this 100% natural raw material, transforming it into a widely-appreciated object in the context of an open, curious, alert, informed and prosperous society.
Cork oak and umbrella pine forest stands are multiple use systems characterized by its low density, heterogeneous spatial distribution, in which the main productions are bark (cork oak) and fruit, frequently associated to other productions such as grazing and non-woody products.
Duration: 7.5 hours
Location: Coruche
THURSDAY 26/10
08:00 - 10:30
08:00 Registration and Information desk
Chair: Sandra Luque
09:00 PL 3 Forest governance in transition - caught between global agendas and local needs
Camilla Sandström
09:30 PL 4 Innovations to Enable, Invest and Monitor Landscape Restoration Implementation: Public and private finance to restore 350 million hectares of degraded landscapes globally
René Zamora Cristales
10:30 Coffee Break – Atrium
Parallel Sessions (11:00 – 12:30)
3. Global change, vulnerability and adaptive management of forested landscapes – How to manage increasing pressures and threats above the current resilience tipping points: Oral Presentations – Room 124
Chair: Sérgio Prats
11:00 OC 3.10 Even Cooler Insights: On the power of forests to (Water and Earth and) cool the Planet
David Ellison
11:15 OC 3.11 Landscape fire severity: a multi-scale analysis of the drivers
Nuno Guiomar
11:30 OC 3.12 Temporal and spatial patterns of extreme wildfire events at the European landscape scale
Vanda Acácio
11:45 OC 3.13 Assessing the economic value of the Fire Protection Ecosystem Service in a mountainous landscape in northern Portugal
Ângelo Sil
4. Forest management, public policies, governance models and decision making: Oral presentations – Auditorium
Chair: Mónica Toro-Manríquez
11:00 OC 4.5 Moving to clear-cut free alternatives in Swedish forestry
Renats Trubins
11:15 OC 4.7 Spatial decision support tools for assessing land-based climate mitigation actions
Ekaterina Tarasova
11:30 OC 4.8 The Impact of Forest Management Plans on Forest Disturbances in Logging Concessions of the Congo Basin
Marc Bouvier
11:45 OC 4.9 Characterization and Analysis of Rural Property Register as an Instrument for Land Management
Maria de Belém Costa Freitas
5. Silvopastoral systems and sustainable integrative solutions at the landscape level: Oral presentations – Room 115
Chair: Isabel Ferraz de Oliveira
11:00 OC 5.09 How many trees to fall: how and where are we losing the Montado silvo-pastoral system?
J. Tiago Marques
11:15 OC 5.10 Assisted Cork Oak regeneration; The effect of shading and herbaceousvegetation removal
Maria C. Caldeira
11:30 OC 5.11 Impact of cattle grazing spatiotemporal variation on cork oak seedling survival
Abdullah Ibne Wadud
11:45 OC 5.12 Effects of conservation zones on the biodiversity and ecosystem services of Mediterranean evergreen oak woodlands
Miguel Nuno Bugalho
12:00 OC 5.13 MIXED production at the landscape level: an emergy assessment on different agricultural systems under the same management
Joana Marinheiro
6. Forest Landscape Restoration initiatives: biodiversity, economy and people: Oral Presentations – Room 131
Chair: Patrícia Bacalhau
11:00 OC 6.1 Learning from the past to face future challenges: gathering expert knowledge on the evolution of forest restoration in Europe
Maitane Erdozain
11:15 OC 6.3 Trees4water- Tree based solutions for water quality improvement
Cláudia Carvalho Santos
11:30 OC 6.4 Seedballs: Exploring its potential for an alternative planting strategies in elevating forest landscape restoration effort for Sarawak, Malaysia
Annya Ambrose
Round Table: Human-nature relationships to support multifunctional forested landscapes, including socio-ecological approaches - Teachers’ Lounge
Chairs: Sandra Luque and Paulina G. Karimova
11:00 RT 3 A Nexus approach to improving biodiversity and ecosystem services for sustainable landscapes on the road towards 2030 conservation targets
Kuang-Chung Lee; Marine Elbakidze
12:30 Lunch – Room 129
13:30 Poster Session – Small Square
Parallel Sessions (14:30 – 18:00)
2. Innovative Tools, Methods and Approaches to improve decision-support and monitoring systems (e.g., coupling models, remote sensing, spatial tools, terrestrial sensors): Oral Presentations – Room 131
Chair: Sandra Luque
14:30 OC 2.9 Priority areas identification and management strategies for landscape forest restoration in Mozambique
Frédérique Montfort
14:45 OC 2.10 Hurricane Activities in Gulf of Mexico Lead to Conversion of Forested Land: Implications for Water Quantity/Quality
Latif Kalin
15:00 OC 2.11 Assessing the Fragmentation, Canopy Loss and Spatial Distribution of Forest Cover in Kakamega National Forest Reserve
Erick O. Osewe
15:15 OC 2.13 Prioritizing Woodland Expansion with ECOFOREST: A Web-Based Tool for Ecosystem Service-Based Spatial Targeting
Alessandro Gimona
4. Forest management, public policies, governance models and decision making: Oral presentations – Auditorium
Chair: Francesca Giannetti
14:30 OC 4.10 Forest certification and economic valorization in Europe: main drivers and limitations
Sofia Corticeiro
14:45 OC 4.11 Matching policy and academic practices – the case of the Montado results-based payments
Mª Helena Guimarães
15:00 OC 4.12 Riparian buffer zones in production forests create unequal costs among forest owners
Tristan Bakx
15:15 OC 4.13 Institutional structures for protecting biodiversity and preventing illegal activities in forested landscapes in selected Western Balkan countries
Maja Radosavljevic
15:30 OC 4.14 Private forest owners’ organizations adherence to policy tools in Portugal
Paula Simões
5. Silvopastoral systems and sustainable integrative solutions at the landscape level: Oral presentations – Room 115
Chair: Athanasios Ragkos
14:30 OC 5.14 Perceived benefits from agroforestry landscapes across North-Eastern Europe: What matters and for whom?
Marine Elbakidze
14:45 OC 5.15 Agroforestry business model innovation network (AF4EU)
Maria Rosa Mosquera-Lousada
15:00 OC 5.16 Modelling shepherds’ decision-making about grazing on forested mountain landscapes - contributions for keeping discontinuity
Catarina Esgalhado
15:15 OC 5.18 Residual signature of sewage sludge in soil bacterial communities 15 years after application
Maria Rosa Mosquera-Lousada
6. Forest Landscape Restoration initiatives: biodiversity, economy and people: Oral Presentations – Room 124
Chair: Miguel Bugalho
14:30 OC 6.6 Rehabilitation of Nothofagus pumilio forests in northern Chilean Patagonia
Alejandro Huertas Herrera
14:45 OC 6.7 Can biochar amendment of forest fire-affected soil reduce soil erosion by water?
Oscar Gonzalez-Pelayo
15:00 OC 6.8 Climate Resilient Forest Restoration
Patricia Maloney
15:15 OC 6.9 What’s the value of Seed Dispersal?
José Benedicto Royuela
15:30 OC 6.10 Upscaling forest restoration with SUPERB: The Spanish demonstrative area
Judit Torres Fernández del Campo
Round Table: Global change, vulnerability and adaptive management of forested landscapes – How to manage increasing pressures and threats above the current resilience tipping points – Teachers’ Lounge
Chairs: David Ellison; Mingfang Zhang
14:30 RT 4 IUFRO Forest and Water Task Force Roundtable Discussion: Managing the Forest-Water & Energy Nexus in an Increasingly Competitive & Challenging World
Nadeem Shah; Irena Creed; Lars Högbom; Adam Wei
16:00 Coffee Break – Room 129
1. Human-nature relationships to support multifunctional forested landscapes, including socio-ecological approaches: Oral Presentations – Room 115
Chair: João Azevedo
16:30 OC 1.6 Post-abandonment landscape trajectories in Terras de Trás-os-Montes, Portugal
Lien Imbrechts
16:45 OC 1.7 Expert's Perception Analysis on Alternatives to Compensate Feed Deficits for Livestock during Shortage Periods in Dehesas
Verena Arndt
17:00 OC 1.8 How people perceive the ecosystem services provided by Pyrenean oak forests
Anabela Paula
2. Innovative Tools, Methods and Approaches to improve decision-support and monitoring systems (e.g., coupling models, remote sensing, spatial tools, terrestrial sensors): Oral Presentations – Room 131
Chair: Ana Cristina Gonçalves
16:30 OC 2.14 Landscape Approaches as operational artifacts to move towards more sustainable governance of rural land-uses in the Mediterranean macro-regional context
José Muñoz-Rojas
16:45 OC 2.15 Towards a Forest Bocage: multifunctionality of a network of broadleaved hedgerows in a pine plantation landscape
Nattan Plat
17:00 OC 2.16 Functional connectivity models to inform sustainable management practices in standard production forests
Pedro A. Salgueiro
17:15 OC 2.17 Critical biomass harvesting for policy support in northern forests
Cecilia Akselsson
3. Global change, vulnerability and adaptive management of forested landscapes – How to manage increasing pressures and threats above the current resilience tipping points: Oral Presentations – Room 124
Chair: J. Tiago Marques
16:30 OC 3.15 Unravelling bat species’ response to environmental structure and patterns of occupancy in a Mediterranean landscape
Frederico Martins
16:45 OC 3.16 Trends in airborne oak pollen: climate change effects in Oaks Forest in Alentejo Region (South Portugal)
Elsa Caeiro
17:00 OC 3.17 Mediterranean woodlands on the edge – Road pressure on rodent-mediated seed dispersal
João Craveiro
17:15 OC 3.18 Responses of Quercus ilex seedlings to combined, drought and Phytophthora cinnamomi, stresses: a metabolomic analysis
Marta Tienda Parrilla
4. Forest management, public policies, governance models and decision making: Oral presentations – Auditorium
Chair: Marine Elbakidze
16:30 OC 4.15 Prescribed fire management strategy for post-harvest eucalypt plantations in Portugal
Sofia Corticeiro
16:45 OC 4.16 Forging fire-resilient landscapes: fire-smart solutions for sustainable wildfire risk prevention
Anna Barbati
17:00 OC 4.17 How willing are individuals to be involved in forest fire prevention in Portugal?
Maria Eduarda Fernandes
17:15 OC 4.18 The effect of knowledge in stakeholders’ involvement in forest management: the example of Matas do Litoral public forest
Maria Eduarda Fernandes
Round Table: Forest Landscape Restoration initiatives: biodiversity, economy and people – Teachers’ Lounge
Chair: Pia Katila
16:30 RT 5 Context matters for forest restoration
Glenn Galloway, Wil de Jong, Pablo Pacheco, Carol J. Pierce Colfer, Georg Winkel
18:00 IUFRO General Meeting
19:30 Conference Dinner
FRIDAY 27/10
08:00 Registration and Information desk
Parallel Sessions (09:00 – 11:00)
1. Human-nature relationships to support multifunctional forested landscapes, including socio-ecological approaches: Oral Presentations – Room 131
Chair: Gerardo Moreno
09:00 OC 1.10 The Portuguese natural resin sector: from resin tapping to the second transformation industry
Joana Vieira
09:15 OC 1.11 Pine-based forestry deters forest restoration in tropical mountain landscapes with traditional agriculture in southern Mexico
Mario González-Espinosa
09:30 OC 1.12 Charcoal production in Licuati key biodiversity area: A participatory assessment of forest management and degradation
Filipa Zacarias
2. Innovative Tools, Methods and Approaches to improve decision-support and monitoring systems (e.g., coupling models, remote sensing, spatial tools, terrestrial sensors): Oral Presentations – Auditorium
Chair: J. Tiago Marques
09:00 OC 2.18 Fire severity effects on soil Carbon and Nitrogen stocks in southern Iberian Peninsula: comparing prescribed and wildfires
Sergio Prats
09:15 OC 2.19 Effects of land-use changes and fire events in the population dynamics of Acacia dealbata: a hybrid modelling approach
Cristina Lima
09:30 OC 2.20 National Evaluation of Invasive Tree and Understory Forest Plant Prevalence across the United States
Kevin Potter
3. Global change, vulnerability and adaptive management of forested landscapes – How to manage increasing pressures and threats above the current resilience tipping points: Oral Presentations – Auditorium
Chair: J. Tiago Marques
10:00 OC 3.19 Increasing disturbance activity in forest ecosystems – Tipping points and adaptive management
Dominik Thom
10:15 OC 3.20 Bridging experimental and monitoring research for the assessment of ozone impacts on Mediterranean trees
Yasumoto Hoshika
4. Forest management, public policies, governance models and decision making: Oral presentations – Room 131
Chair: Gerardo Moreno
10:00 OC 4.19 Is Woodland Expansion an Economically Efficient Alternative for Offsetting Carbon?
Paola Ovando
10:15 4.21 Pruning the economy: implications of degrowth scenarios for the forest sector
Paul Rougieux
11:00 Coffee Break – Auditorium
Round Table & Launching of the Research Group SILVOPASTORAL SYSTEMS and PASTORALISM, in IUFRO Div 8 – Forest Environment - Auditorium
Chair: Teresa Pinto Correia
11:30 RT 6 Facing Global Change, which policies to support the resilience of Mediterranean forests?
Organization: CHANGE – Institute for Global Change and Sustainability, Portugal
With
Athanasios Ragkos, Agricultural Economics Research Institute , Athens & coordinator of the Prima Project PASTINNOVA
Rosa Onofre, Regional Directorate for Planning and Environment (CCDRA), Alentejo, Portugal
Gerardo Moreno, Universidade de Extremeadura, Spain
Ana Cristina Cardoso, Cork Supply
& Launching of the Research Group SILVOPASTORAL SYSTEMS and PASTORALISM, in IUFRO Div 8 – Forest Environment
13:00 Lunch – Room 129
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