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Preserve native trees, deadwood and flatwood.

Habitat Function Type of work
Forest
Living environment
Thinning

In order to maintain biodiversity and ensure ecological coherence, forest management shall maintain the structural elements of habitats (e.g. trees from the previous felling period, old-growth trees and stumps, flatwoods, hardwoods, hollow trees, trees with burn marks, shrub species and species of trees that are not very common in the forest), also taking into account their potential impact on forest health, timber quality, ecosystem condition and human safety.

Description of the action

Preserve native trees (trees of the previous forest generation), old-growth trees, snags, flatwoods, hardwoods. Also trees with cavities and hardwoods to the extent that they do not impede the growth of the target species.

Why?

Many species need dead and dying trees to survive. It is estimated that up to a quarter of forest fauna is associated with dead wood. These are mostly wood decomposing species, which are essential in nature, otherwise dead trees would accumulate in layers. They are also used by birds and other animal species as hollow predators.