Harmonising, improving and using social and recreational data in National Forest Inventories across Europe

Key message
National Forest Inventories (NFIs) hold promise for monitoring and valuing of non-productive forest functions, including social and recreational services. European countries use a range of methods to collect social and recreational information within their NFI methodologies. Data collected frequently included general and recreation-specific infrastructure, but innovative approaches are also used to monitor recreational use and social abuse.

Abstract
Context Social and recreational indicators are increasingly valued in efforts to measure the non-productive value of forests in Europe. National Forest Inventories (NFIs) can be used to estimate recreational and social usage of forest land at a national level and relate this use to other biophysical, spatial and topographical features. Nonetheless, there is little information concerning the extent.
Aims The study aims to identify the coverage of social and recreational data present in European NFIs including the types of data recorded as part of the NFI methodologies across European countries. It also aims to examine contrasting methods used to record social and recreational data and present recommendations for ways forward for countries to integrate these into NFI practice.
Methods A pan-European questionnaire was designed and distributed to 35 counties as part of the EU-funded project Distributed, Integrated and Harmonised Forest Information for Bioeconomy Outlooks (DIABOLO). The questionnaire probed countries on all social and recreational data that was included within NFIs. Qualitative response data was analysed and recoded to measure the extent of social and recreational data recoded in European NFIs both as a function of the number of variable categories per country and the number of countries recording particular variables.
Results Thirty-one countries reported at least one social or recreational variable over 12 categories of data. The most frequently recorded variables included ownership, general transport infrastructure and recreation-specific infrastructure. Countries collecting data over many different categories included Switzerland, Great Britain, Czech Republic, Luxemburg and Denmark.
Conclusion The study proposes a specific set of indicators, based upon countries with well-developed social and recreational data in their NFIs, which could be used by other countries, and report on the extent to which these are currently collected across Europe. It discusses results and makes a series of recommendations concerning priorities for the inclusion of social and recreational data in European NFIs.

Keywords
Social data, Recreational use, National Forest Inventory, Indicators

Publication
Atkinson, M.A., Edwards, D.M., Jensen, F.S. et al. Harmonising, improving and using social and recreational data in National Forest Inventories across Europe. Annals of Forest Science 77, 76 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1007/s13595-020-00952-2

For the read-only version of the full text:
https://rdcu.be/b50qW

Data availability
The datasets generated during and/or analysed during the current study are available in the Open Science Foundation repository. DIABOLO Task 3.2.2. Development and harmonization of social indicators. [Dataset]. https://doi.org/10.17605/OSF.IO/DMSQG

Handling Editors
Tuula Packalen and Klemens Schadauer (Guest Editors)

Topical Collection
This article is part of the Topical Collection “Forest information for bioeconomy outlooks at European level

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