Mediterranean cork oak forests provide essential ecosystem services but face increasing threats from climate change, ecosystem simplification, and oak decline. Ensuring their long-term sustainability requires governance approaches that integrate regional planning frameworks with international certification standards. This study presents a pioneering case of public cork oak forest management in Alà dei Sardi, Sardinia (Italy), where municipal forest planning was aligned with national and regional regulations and further enhanced through Forest Stewardship Council® (FSC®) certification. The FSC system offers internationally recognized standards and the Ecosystem Services Procedure (FSC-PRO-30-006 v2-1) to verify responsible forest management and quantify key ecosystem benefits. The Alà dei Sardi forest is the first publicly owned municipal cork oak forest to achieve FSC Forest Management certification, with demonstrated positive impacts of its management activities on biodiversity conservation, carbon sequestration and storage, water protection, soil conservation, and recreational services. The certification process integrated management planning, stakeholder engagement, monitoring, and adaptive interventions, showing that public institutions can combine legal frameworks with voluntary standards to enhance ecological performance, accountability, and socio-economic value. This case illustrates a potentially scalable and replicable model for sustainable forest governance, linking territorial planning with market-based mechanisms, and provides a practical example of governance for resilient and multifunctional forest systems.
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Salvatore Seddaiu
Giuseppino Pira
Giovanni Piras
Forests
Sardegna Ricerche (Italy)
Sardegna Agricoltura
ATS Sardegna (Italy)
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Seddaiu et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69e07cc02f7e8953b7cbddfa — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/f17040479
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