Keywords: forest management, wood products, forest owner
ACTRIS is the pan-European research infrastructure producing high-quality data and information on short-lived atmospheric constituents and on the processes leading to the variability of these constituents in natural and controlled atmospheres.
ACTRIS promotes the provision of access to a large variety of high-quality services to a wide range of users and needs, for scientific, technological and innovation-oriented usage.
ACTRIS core components are the National facilities, constituting in observatory and exploratory platoforms, and the Central Facilities, fundamental for the provision of harmonized high-quality data.
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Keywords: forest management, wood products, forest owner
The Centre for Aerosol In Situ - European Centre for Aerosol Calibration (CAIS-ECAC) and the Centre for Reactive Trace Gases In Situ (CiGas) are involved in the EU project CLIMB-FOREST studying alternative forestry in the entire EU into the future, mitigating climate change, while preserving biodiversity and ecosystem services at the same time.
At least 11 forestry owners and wood product companies will collaborate on the choices for the future of resillient tree types and forest management.
Selected ACTRIS in-situ stations (Hyltemossa, Norunda, Hyytiälä, Melpitz, Kosetice, Barcelona and others yet to be considered) are a part of this research to quantify directly or indirectly the climate effects of terpenoids, smelling so good in the forest and aerosol particles.
ACTRIS support has been fundamental to gathering data and enhancing process understanding of carbon uptake, sinks, and other factors impacting climate at intensively researched forest field site infrastructures.
Collected data allowed for performing pan-European modelling of scenarios, and the environmental and climate impact of alternative pathways for European forestry and to ensure adaptation to new management strategies and forest preservation in geographically representative locations in Europe..
Figure 8: Scheme of the forest-climate interactions