Abstract

Tree planting has been widely touted as an inexpensive way to meet multiple international environmental goals for mitigating climate change, reversing landscape degradation and restoring biodiversity restoration. The Bonn Challenge and New York Declaration on Forests, motivated by widespread deforestation and forest degradation, call for restoring 350 million ha by 2030 by relying on forest landscape restoration (FLR) processes. Because the 173 million ha commitments made by 63 nations, regions and companies are not legally binding, expectations of what FLR means lacks consensus. The frequent disconnect between top-level aspirations and on-the-ground implementation results in limited data on FLR activities. Additionally, some countries have made landscape-scale restoration outside of the Bonn Challenge. We compared and contrasted the theory and practice of FLR and compiled information from databases of projects and initiatives and case studies. We present the main FLR initiatives happening across regional groups; in many regions, the potential need/opportunity for forest restoration exceeds the FLR activities underway. Multiple objectives can be met by manipulating vegetation (increasing structural complexity, changing species composition and restoring natural disturbances). Livelihood interventions are context-specific but include collecting or raising non-timber forest products, employment and community forests; other interventions address tenure and governance.

Highlights

  • Plant a tree and save the world! This is an over-simplified version of the widely expressed goals of planting a trillion trees or trees on a billion hectares

  • Tree planting has been widely touted as an inexpensive way to meet multiple international environmental goals for mitigating climate change, reversing landscape degradation and restoring biodiversity restoration

  • We present the main forest landscape restoration (FLR) initiatives happening across regional groups; in many regions, the potential need/ opportunity for forest restoration exceeds the FLR activities underway

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Summary

Introduction

Plant a tree and save the world! This is an over-simplified version of the widely expressed goals of planting a trillion trees or trees on a billion hectares (ha). In 2000, a group of 30 social and natural scientists came together to define FLR as ‘a planned process that aims to regain ecological integrity and enhance human wellbeing in deforested or degraded landscapes’ [16,42,45]. This definition, together with associated research work and guidance [42,73,74,75], was to be the cornerstone of both WWF and IUCN’s work on forest restoration in the decades. In 2011, IUCN joined forces with the German government to launch the Bonn Challenge on FLR, an attempt to achieve widespread political commitments towards the goal of restoring 150 million ha of forested landscapes by 2020; this was expanded by the New York Declaration on Forests to 350 million ha by 2030

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