Forest Resources Assessment - WP 56


GLOBAL ECOLOGICAL ZONING FOR THE GLOBAL FOREST RESOURCES ASSESSMENT 2000

FINAL REPORT





Rome, 2001




The Forest Resources Assessment Programme

Forests are crucial for the well-being of humanity. They provide foundations for life on earth through ecological functions, by regulating the climate and water resources and by serving as habitats for plants and animals. Forests also furnish a wide range of essential goods such as wood, food, fodder and medicines, in addition to opportunities for recreation, spiritual renewal and other services.

Today, forests are under pressure from expanding human populations, which frequently leads to the conversion or degradation of forests into unsustainable forms of land use. When forests are lost or severely degraded, their capacity to function as regulators of the environment is also lost, increasing flood and erosion hazards, reducing soil fertility and contributing to the loss of plant and animal life. As a result, the sustainable provision of goods and services from forests is jeopardized.

FAO, at the request of the member nations and the world community, regularly monitors the world’s forests through the Forest Resources Assessment Programme. The next report, the Global Forest Resources Assessment 2000 (FRA 2000), will review the forest situation by the end of the millennium. FRA 2000 will include country-level information based on existing forest inventory data, regional investigations of land-cover change processes and a number of global studies focusing on the interaction between people and forests. The FRA 2000 report will be made public and distributed on the World Wide Web in the year 2000.

The Forest Resources Assessment Programme is organized under the Forest Resources Division (FOR) at FAO headquarters in Rome. Contact persons are:

Robert Davis FRA Programme Coordinator [email protected]

Peter Holmgren FRA Project Director [email protected]

or use the e-mail address: [email protected]

DISCLAIMER

The Forest Resources Assessment (FRA) Working Paper Series is designed to reflect the activities and progress of the FRA Programme of FAO. Working Papers are not authoritative information sources – they do not reflect the official position of FAO and should not be used for official purposes. Please refer to the FAO forestry website (www.fao.org/fo) for access to official information.

The FRA Working Paper Series provides an important forum for the rapid release of preliminary FRA 2000 findings needed for validation and to facilitate the final development of an official quality-controlled FRA 2000 information set. Should users find any errors in the documents or have comments for improving their quality they should contact either Robert Davis or Peter Holmgren at [email protected].


Contents


Acknowledgements

Definitions

Abstract

PART I: CLASSIFICATION FRAMEWORK

1 Introduction

2 FAO Requirements

3 Concept and classification
3.1 Approach and principles of the FAO Ecological Zoning
3.2 Cambridge expert consultation
3.3 FAO Global Ecological Zone classification system
3.4 Characteristics of global Ecological Zones

PART II : DEVELOPMENT OF THE MAP AND RESULTS

1 Methodology
1.1 Use of regional source maps and expertise
1.2 Conceptual and thematic issues
1.3 Map production and technical Issues
1.4 Implementation

2 Results
2.1 North and Central America


2.2 Europe
2.3 Northern Asia (Asian part of the former Soviet Union)
2.4 Other non-tropical Asia

2.5 South America, Africa and Tropical Asia
2.6 Oceania

2.7 Compilation of the global GEZ map

Appendix II-1: Source maps used for the delineation of FAO GEZ

Appendix II-2: Legend of the General Map of the Natural Vegetation of Europe

Appendix II-3: Geographic divisions of China's main forests (Zheng-de Zhu, 1992)

Appendix II-4: Ecofloristic zone classification framework (LET, 2000)

PART III: REGIONAL DESCRIPTIONS

1 Introduction

2 North – and Central America

2.1 POLAR DOMAIN (P)

2.2 BOREAL DOMAIN
2.2.1 Boreal tundra woodland (Bb)
2.2.2 Boreal coniferous forest (Ba)
2.2.3 Boreal mountain systems (BM)

2.3 TEMPERATE DOMAIN
2.3.1 Temperate oceanic forest (TeDo)
2.3.2 Temperate continental forest (TeDc)
2.3.3 Temperate steppe (TeBSk)
2.3.4 Temperate desert (TeBWk)
2.3.5 Temperate mountain systems (TeM)

2.4 SUBTROPICAL DOMAIN
2.4.1 Subtropical humid forest (SCf)
2.4.2 Subtropical dry forest (SCs)
2.4.3 Subtropical steppe (SBSh)
2.4.4 Subtropical desert (SBWh)
2.4.5 Subtropical mountain systems (SM)

2.5 TROPICAL DOMAIN
2.5.1 Tropical rain forest (TAr)
2.5.2 Tropical moist deciduous forest (TAwa)
2.5.3 Tropical dry forest (TAwb)
2.5.4 Tropical shrubland (TBSh)
2.5.5 Tropical mountain systems (TM)

3 South America

3.1 TROPICAL DOMAIN
3.1.1 Tropical rain forest (TAr)
3.1.2 Tropical moist deciduous forest (TAwa)
3.1.3 Tropical dry forest (TAwb)
3.1.4 Tropical shrubland (TBSh)
3.1.5 Tropical desert (TBWh)
3.1.6 Tropical mountain systems (TM)

3.2 SUBTROPICAL DOMAIN
3.2.1 Subtropical humid forest (SCf)
3.2.2 Subtropical dry forest (SCs)
3.2.3 Subtropical steppe (SBSh)
3.2.4 Subtropical mountain systems (SM)

3.3 TEMPERATE DOMAIN
3.3.1 Temperate oceanic forest (TeDo)
3.3.2 Temperate steppe (TeBSk)
3.3.3 Temperate mountain systems (TeM)

4 Africa

4.1 TROPICAL DOMAIN
4.1.1 Tropical rain forest (TAr)
4.1.2 Tropical moist deciduous forest (TAwa)
4.1.3 Tropical dry forest (TAwb)
4.1.4 Tropical shrubland (TBSh)
4.1.5 Tropical desert (TBWh)
4.1.6 Tropical mountain systems (TM)

4.2 SUBTROPICAL DOMAIN
4.2.1 Subtropical humid forest (SCf)
4.2.2 Subtropical dry forest (SCs)
4.2.3 Subtropical steppe (SBSh)
4.2.4 Subtropical mountain systems (SM)

5 Asia

5.1 TROPICAL DOMAIN
5.1.1 Tropical rain forest (TAr)
5.1.2 Tropical moist deciduous forest (TAwa)
5.1.3 Tropical dry forest (TAwb)
5.1.4 Tropical shrubland (TBSh)
5.1.5 Tropical desert (TBWh)
5.1.6 Tropical mountain systems (TM)

5.2 SUBTROPICAL DOMAIN
5.2.1 Subtropical humid forest (SCf)
5.2.2 Subtropical dry forest (SCs)
5.2.3 Subtropical steppe (SBSh)
5.2.4 Subtropical desert (SBWh)
5.2.5 Subtropical mountain systems (SM)

5.3 TEMPERATE DOMAIN
5.3.1 Temperate continental forest (TeC)
5.3.2 Temperate steppe (TeBSk)
5.3.3 Temperate desert (TeBWk)
5.3.4 Temperate mountain systems (TeM)

5.4 BOREAL DOMAIN
5.4.1 Boreal coniferous forest (Ba)

6 Europe

6.1 SUBTROPICAL DOMAIN
6.1.1 Subtropical dry forest (SCs)
6.1.2 Subtropical mountain systems (SM)

6.2 TEMPERATE DOMAIN
6.2.1Temperate oceanic forest (TeDo)
6.2.2 Temperate continental forest (TeDc)
6.2.3 Temperate steppe (TeBSk)
6.2.4 Temperate desert (TeBWk)
6.2.5 Temperate mountain systems (TeM)

6.3 BOREAL DOMAIN
6.3.1 Boreal coniferous forest (Ba)
6.3.2 Boreal tundra woodland (Bb)
6.3.3 Boreal mountain systems (BM)

6.4 POLAR DOMAIN (P)

7 Asian part of the former Soviet Union (Northern Asia)

7.1 POLAR DOMAIN (P)

7.2 BOREAL DOMAIN
7.2.1 Boreal tundra woodland (Bb)
7.2.2 Boreal coniferous forest (Ba)
7.2.3 Boreal mountain systems (BM)

7.3 TEMPERATE DOMAIN
7.3.1 Temperate continental forest (TeDc)
7.3.2 Temperate steppe (TeBSk)
7.3.3 Temperate desert (TeBWk)
7.3.4 Temperate mountain systems (TeM)

8 Oceania

8.1 TROPICAL DOMAIN
8.1.1 Tropical rain forest (TAr)
8.1.2 Tropical moist deciduous forest (TAwa)
8.1.3 Tropical dry forest (TAwb)
8.1.4 Tropical shrubland (TBSh)

8.2 SUBTROPICAL DOMAIN
8.2.1 Subtropical humid forest (SCf)
8.2.2 Subtropical dry forest (SCs)
8.2.3 Subtropical steppe (SBSh)
8.2.4 Subtropical desert (SBWh)

8.3 TEMPERATE DOMAIN
8.3.1 Temperate oceanic forest (TeDo)

Appendix III-1: Distribution of Global Ecological Zones

FRA Working Papers

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