Advancing the quantification of land-use intensity in forests: the ForMIX index combining tree species composition, tree removal, deadwood availability, and stand maturity
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Many forests have a long history of human land use, which relates to species communities and ecosystem processes, making robust and quantitative measures of land-use intensity in forests desirable. We here introduce the ForMIX (Forest Management IndeX), a compound index combining altered tree species composition, tree removal, deadwood availability and stand maturity, which are each calculated as the deviation from expectations in a natural old-growth forest reference. By relating to resources and niches directly affected by forest land use, the compound index and its components allow for mechanistic inference on the consequences of land use in forests. Using basic forest inventory data from 150 sites distributed over three regions of Germany, we demonstrate the properties of ForMIX, which differentiates well among forest types and silvicultural systems and is robust to decisions regarding reference values and components. Reference values used in ForMIX are dynamic, may shift with ongoing climate change and may require refinement for different geographic regions. ForMIX advances the quantification of land-use intensity in forests by being biologically meaningful, being usable and comparable across forest types, being derivable from standard forest inventory data, and by being easy to apply, understand and interpret.