Abstract

PastIn the early twentieth century, forestry was one of the most important sectors in Norway and an agitated discussion about the perceived decline of forest resources due to over-exploitation was ongoing. To base the discussion on facts, the young state of Norway established Landsskogtakseringen – the world’s first National Forest Inventory (NFI). Field work started in 1919 and was carried out by county. Trees were recorded on 10 m wide strips with 1–5 km interspaces. Site quality and land cover categories were recorded along each strip. Results for the first county were published in 1920, and by 1930 most forests below the coniferous tree line were inventoried. The 2nd to 5th inventories followed in the years 1937–1986. As of 1954, temporary sample plot clusters on a 3 km × 3 km grid were used as sampling units.PresentThe current NFI grid was implemented in the 6th NFI from 1986 to 1993, when permanent plots on a 3 km × 3 km grid were established below the coniferous tree line. As of the 7th inventory in 1994, the NFI is continuous, and 1/5 of the plots are measured annually. All trees with a diameter ≥ 5 cm are recorded on circular, 250 m2 plots. The NFI grid was expanded in 2005 to cover alpine regions with 3 km × 9 km and 9 km × 9 km grids. In 2012, the NFI grid within forest reserves was doubled along the cardinal directions. Clustered temporary plots are used periodically to facilitate county-level estimates. As of today, more than 120 variables are recorded in the NFI including bilberry cover, drainage status, deadwood, and forest health. Land-use changes are monitored and trees outside forests are recorded.FutureConsiderable research efforts towards the integration of remote sensing technologies enable the publication of the Norwegian Forest Resource Map since 2015, which is also used for small area estimation at the municipality level. On the analysis side, capacity and software for long term growth and yield prognosis are being developed. Furthermore, we foresee the inclusion of further variables for monitoring ecosystem services, and an increasing demand for mapped information. The relatively simple NFI design has proven to be a robust choice for satisfying steadily increasing information needs and concurrently providing consistent time series.

Highlights

  • Statistics on forest resources and their future development are pivotal to making informed decisions in times of a changing environment

  • The fear of forest decline due to acid rain in the 1980s was among the reasons for the implementation of the National Forest Inventory (NFI) in West Germany - despite the availability of detailed local forest management inventories (Kleinn et al 2020 in press)

  • Incentives in the form of development aid and information requirements resulting from mitigation of climate change (REDD+) resulted in the establishment of NFIs in a number of developing countries (e.g. Tomppo et al 2014; Tewari and Kleinn 2015)

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Summary

Introduction

Statistics on forest resources and their future development are pivotal to making informed decisions in times of a changing environment. NFIs have gradually developed to include many other ecosystem services and often are landscape inventories covering the land-based resources of a country. The Norwegian NFI, like many others, is for example used to estimate the areas and changes among the land use categories like forest, grassland, croplands, wetlands, and settlements that are required for reporting under the Climate Convention (UN 1992). The first Norwegian NFI already mapped other land resources than forest such as grassland, cropland, and mires. The second Norwegian NFI even provided reliable estimates for municipalities which, besides the war years, was the reason for its long duration from 1937 to 1956. Municipal-level inventories based on sample plots additional to the national grid were common until the mid-1980s (Tomter 2019, p. 186)

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