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Restoration of beech and silver fir forests in the Toscan Marches Appennines (RESILFOR)
Start date: Jan 1, 2010, End date: Sep 30, 2014 PROJECT  FINISHED 

Background In the Italian Apennines (Mediterranean area), climate change is causing particularly extreme, sudden and intense phenomena, suggesting a likely alteration in precipitation rates in the future, with atmospheric humidity reductions and a decrease in annual and summer rainfall. This could cause selective pressure – leading to genetic erosion in a very short timeframe - on the most sensitive ecosystems and species located at high altitudes, such as beech and silver fir forests (Apennine beech forests with Taxus and Ilex, and Apennine beech forests with Abies alba and beech forests with Abies nebrodensis), which are often isolated and have limited critical mass. These species have reproduction mechanisms and dynamics of genetic structure that will not enable them to react promptly to this fast phenomenon, leading to a high risk of loosing or compromising the existence of key elements of forest diversity in these areas. Objectives The general objective of the project is to safeguard mountain habitats with beech-silver fir Apennine forest and beech-yew forest, through restoration of the forest ecosystems by low impact techniques, focusing on sites where temperature increases and rainfall reduction problems are not foreseen in the short run. Specific objectives include: Halting the loss of area of beech-silver fir Apennine forests because of genetic segregation of Abies alba relict populations, and to recent climate change that puts the species at risk of extinction; Consolidating in original locations beech-yew forest habitats that are strictly linked to beech-silver fir Appennine forest habitat; Consolidating animal populations (Salamandrina tergiditata, Bombina variegata) living in these habitats, favouring the preservation of ecological niche and reproductive sites.
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