Litcius/Paper detail

Human adaptation to climate change in the context of forests: A systematic review

A. Paige Fischer, Mohammad Aminur Rahman Shah, Alcade C. Segnon, Custódio Matavel, Philip Antwi-Agyei, Yuanyuan Shang, Maegan Muir, Rachel Kaufmann

2023Climate Risk Management13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

We assessed how people adapt to climate change in the context of forests through a systematic review of the international empirical research literature. We found that drought, precipitation variability, extreme precipitation and flooding, and extreme heat were the climatic stressors to which responses were most frequently documented. Individuals and households received the most research attention, followed by national government, civil society, and local government. Europe and North America were the geographic foci of more research than other regions. Behavioral responses were more reported than technical and infrastructural responses and institutional responses. Within these types of responses, actors used a wide variety of practices such as replanting, altering species composition, and adopting or changing technology. Adaptation efforts in early planning and advanced implementation received some attention, but early implementation and expanding implementation were most reported. While connections between responses and risk reduction were discussed, there is limited evidence of risk reduction. Our review contributes to the scholarly and practical understanding of how people adapt to climate change in the context of forests. The review also identifies opportunities for future research on adaptation to other climatic stressors, such as wildfires and tree pests and pathogens, adaptation in other geographic areas, especially Oceania, and adaptation by actors beyond the individual and household level and through institutional adaptation efforts.

Topics & Concepts

Climate changeContext (archaeology)StressorAdaptation (eye)Environmental resource managementClimate change adaptationGovernment (linguistics)Environmental planningVariety (cybernetics)Empirical researchGeographyNatural resource economicsPolitical scienceEcologyPsychologyEnvironmental scienceEconomicsBiologyEpistemologyLinguisticsNeuroscienceArtificial intelligencePhilosophyArchaeologyComputer scienceClinical psychologyFire effects on ecosystemsSpecies Distribution and Climate ChangeForest Management and Policy