We need more woodland for people to enjoy, for nature, to sustain our timber security and to help reduce the impact of climate change. We need more trees in urban areas for health, well-being and environmental benefits. However the simple act of planting or establishing a tree is not quite so simple as it first appears! What is the right tree for the right site? What are evidenced-based scientific, technical and social challenges and barriers to success?
Underpinning these activities is the need for knowledge of tree biology and ecology, irrespective whether trees are established in urban, rural or wild landscapes. Creating canopy is not just about planting trees as new nature-based solutions are emerging that help us create new tree and woodland habitats through natural colonisation and regeneration. At the present time we are not establishing enough tree and woodland canopy to meeting targets for NetZero emissions and there is uncertainty about the form and structure of tree and woodland canopy cover into the future. Science and technology play a vital role in establishing trees and woodlands.
This event has two phases. Firstly a two-day conference will shine a light on new and emerging priorities, latest research and technical advances related to creating canopy. Second on day 3 we will host a workshop co-organised by the FraxNet Network. Delegates are invited to join for two or three days, either in-person or virtually.
· Urban Canopies – merging engineering with nature solutions?
· Natural processes – colonisation and natural regeneration to increase taxonomic and functional diversity
· What grows with what? Tree and woodland establishment in agroforestry systems
· Planting new productive woodlands – biology, genetics and ecology
· A climate of change – genotype and species choices for the future
Douglass Jacobs, Regeneration and Restoration Silviculture Laboratory, Purdue University, USA
Estrella Luna-Diaz, BIFoR, University of Birmingham, UK
Manuel Esperon-Rodriguez, Hawkesbury Institute for the Environment, Western Sydney University, Australia
Jo Bradwell, Norbury Park Estate and JABBS Foundation
Kieran Doick, Forest Research
Bianca Ambrose-Oji, Forest Research
Invited Speaker for FraxNet meeting
Michelle Cleary, Senior Lecturer in Forest Pathology, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
Ruth Mitchell, Biodiversity and Ecosystems Group Lead, James Hutton Institute
Jennifer Koch, Research Biologist, USDA
DEFRA and SFT Travel grants
The UK Government ‘Department of the Environment and Rural Affairs’ (DEFRA) and the Scottish Foresty Trust is supporting the attendance of early career professionals by providing grants to cover travel and accommodation costs. There is a £2000 available which will be shared amongst eliigble applicants. AAB Early Career Professionals are current students or anyone within 5 years of finishing full-time education.
Please download the application form and return within one month of the meeting. Successful applications will need to write a short report that reflects on their experience at the meeting.
DOWNLOAD APPLICATION FORM (doc)