Eva Ritter
Aalborg University
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Featured researches published by Eva Ritter.
Plant and Soil | 2003
Eva Ritter; Lars Vesterdal; Per Gundersen
In many European countries, surplus agricultural production and ecological problems due to intensive soil cultivation have increased the interest in afforestation of arable soils. Many environmental consequences which might rise from this alternative land-use are only known from forest establishment on less intensively managed or marginal soils. The present study deals with changes in soil properties following afforestation of nutrient-rich arable soils. A chronosequence study was carried out comprising seven Norway spruce (Picea abies (Karst.) L.) and seven oak (Quercus robur L.) stands established from 1969 to 1997 on former horticultural and agricultural soils in the vicinity of Copenhagen, Denmark. For comparison, a permanent pasture and a ca. 200-year-old mixed deciduous forest were included. This paper reports on changes in pH values, base saturation (BSeff), exchangeable calcium, soil N pools (Nmin contents), and C/N ratios in the Ap-horizon (0–25 cm) and the accumulated forest floor. The results suggest that afforestation slowly modifies soil properties of former arable soils. Land-use history seems to influence soil properties more than the selected tree species. An effect of tree species was only found in the forest floor parameters. Soil acidification was the most apparent change along the chronosequence in terms of a pH decrease from 6 to 4 in the upper 5 cm soil. Forest floor pH varied only slightly around 5. Nitrogen storage in the Ap-horizon remained almost constant at 5.5 Mg N ha−1. This was less than in the mineral soil of the ca. 200-year-old forest. In the permanent pasture, N storage was somewhat higher in 0–15 cm depth than in afforested stands of comparable age. Nitrogen storage in the forest floor of the 0–30-year-old stands increased in connection with the build-up of forest floor mass. The increase was approximately five times greater under spruce than oak. Mineral soil C/N ratios ranged from 10 to 15 in all stands and tended to increase in older stands only in 0–5 cm depth. Forest floor C/N ratios were higher in spruce stands (26.4) as compared to oak stands (22.7). All stands except the youngest within a single tree species had comparable C/N ratios.
Small-scale Forestry | 2007
Áine Ní Dhubháin; Rossitsa Cobanova; Heimo Karppinen; Diana Mizaraite; Eva Ritter; Bill Slee; Sarah Wall
There are many factors that determine what forestry activities forest owners carry out in their forest properties and that influence whether forest owners engage in entrepreneurial activity. This paper explores whether the values and objectives of forest owners influence their forestry behaviour and their engagement in entrepreneurial activity. This is done through a review of the literature on private forest owners’ typologies based on owners’ objectives. The review reveals that typologies typically divide forest owners into two main groups. The primary objective of the first group of owners is production (of wood and non-wood goods and services) usually, although not exclusively, so as to generate economic activity. The primary objective of the second group is consumption (of wood and non-wood goods and services). There is a tacit assumption in the studies reviewed that goals and objectives do influence forestry behaviour but few studies have actually assessed whether this is the case. The general finding is that forest owners whose objectives are timber production and who are business-oriented are more likely to manage and harvest their stands. No research focusing on the link between owners’ objective and wider entrepreneurial activity in forests was found.
Environment, Development and Sustainability | 2013
Eva Ritter; Dainis Dauksta
The relationship between human beings and forests has been important for the development of society. It is based on various productive, ecological, social and cultural functions of forests. The cultural functions, including the spiritual and symbolic role of forests, are often not addressed with the same attention as the other functions. The aim of this paper is to put a stronger emphasis on the fact that the acknowledgement of cultural bonds is needed in the discussion of sustainable development. Forest should not only be considered as a technical means to solve environmental and economic problems. To achieve a deeper understanding of the dependency of society on forests, it is necessary to recognise the role of forests in our consciousness of being human. Giving a historical overview about the cultural bonds between people and forests, the first part of the paper puts focus on non-productive aspects in human–forest relationships. Through history, forest values have changed and new functions have emerged. Industrialisation and urbanisation have contributed to an alienation from nature and weakened the connection of humans to forests. The consequences of these changes for the development of society and its environment are discussed in the second part of the paper. Finally, it is elaborated how the awareness of the cultural bonds can be strengthened in the population and especially in forest management; a management which should relate to cultural, emotional and aesthetical aspects, in addition to economic, ecological and social functions, and lead towards a sustainable relationship between forests and society.
Journal of Environmental Assessment Policy and Management | 2015
Sanne Vammen Larsen; Anne Merrild Hansen; Ivar Lyhne; Sara Bjørn Aaen; Eva Ritter; Helle Nielsen
Social impact assessment (SIA) is applied worldwide to assess social impacts of plans and projects. In Europe, directives on environmental assessment (EA) require attention to social impacts, however, there is a need to investigate the implementation in practise. To this end, we study three Danish cases, which are characterised by debates and conflicts on social issues. Analysis of the EA statements shows inclusion of a broad range of social impacts. However, the EAs do not fully match the concerns of the public, and social impacts are not always analysed in depth, mitigation measures are not suggested or are postponed and the geographical distribution of impacts assessed is biased towards including negative local impacts. We discuss the scope and handling of social impacts, and possible implications. Based on this, we conclude with the view that EA might do the job of handling social impacts in Europe, if practise is improved.
Archive | 2011
Eva Ritter
The relationship of people to landscapes is not exclusively defined by cultural and social links. It is also related to the visual perception of a place and the appreciation of certain landscape characteristics. Vegetation patterns in landscapes are affected not only by climatic and environmental conditions but also by the cultural impact of land use and the management of trees and forests.
Archive | 2011
Eva Ritter; Dainis Dauksta
The diversity of the relationship of people to forests can be illustrated in various ways. This diversity can be seen on the level of experience and perception of forest landscapes, the sense of place and belonging, with respect to the use and legal regulation of forest resources and in the role of forests in the understanding of ourselves. Forests affect us through their mere presence, their materiality and physical properties, but we are also connected through emotional, spiritual and visceral bonds to forests and trees. Changes in attitudes and conditions for people’s relationship to forests occur through time; and contradictions can be found in different values that are represented by forests. The life of people and the presence of forests in landscapes are characterised by a mutual dependency, and the development of one is followed by the change and adaptation of the other. If modern Europe is to build a new sustainable culture utilising its forest resources then forests would need to be both highly productive and capable of supplying all other forest functions expected by society.
Environmental Science & Technology | 2013
Eva Ritter; Michele De Rosa; Andreas Falk; Per Christensen; Søren Løkke
he interest in wood as building material is experiencing arenaissance, a development spurred by the concern aboutthe global climate and the limit of natural resources. Asopposed to other building materials, wood is a renewableresource. Wood structures of long-term durability can counter-act increasing CO
Forest Ecology and Management | 2002
Lars Vesterdal; Eva Ritter; Per Gundersen
Forest Ecology and Management | 2005
Eva Ritter; Lise Dalsgaard; Katrina S. Einhorn
Plant and Soil | 2007
Eva Ritter