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기후변화를 고려한 잣나무의 미래 적지적수 변화 예측Anticipation of the Future Suitable Cultivation Areas for Korean Pines in Korean Peninsula with Climate Change

Other Titles
Anticipation of the Future Suitable Cultivation Areas for Korean Pines in Korean Peninsula with Climate Change
Authors
최재용이상훈이상혁
Issue Date
Feb-2015
Publisher
한국환경복원기술학회
Keywords
SDM; RCP; Maxent; Biodiversity Bioclim; Korean pine
Citation
한국환경복원기술학회지, v.18, no.1, pp.103 - 113
Indexed
KCI
Journal Title
한국환경복원기술학회지
Volume
18
Number
1
Start Page
103
End Page
113
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/hanyang/handle/2021.sw.hanyang/157838
DOI
10.13087/kosert.2015.18.1.103
ISSN
1229-3032
Abstract
Korean pines(Pinus koraiensis) are one of the major plantation species in the Republic of Korea and their natural habitats range from Japan and China to Siberia. The seed of Korean pines, pine nuts, are well know for good food reserves. Due to the global changes which drive the Korean peninsula into the semi-tropical climate, current plantations and natural habitats of Korean pines are faced with the change in the environmental conditions to some extent. To anticipate suitable sites for Korean pines in the future, the location of Korean pines were extracted from the ‘Map of suitable trees on a site’ that provides the map of suitable trees on a site considering tree species for timber and special uses, and then MaxEnt modelling was used for generating a prediction map on the basis of statistical analysis. As a result, the order of predicted suitable sites were Kangwon-do, Kyungsangbuk-do and Chungcheongbuk-do provinces and sites with high elevation within those provinces were considered most suitable in common. The prediction map of suitable sites for Korean pines presented that suitable sites in the future decreased by 72.2% by 2050’s and almost disappeared with a decrease of 92.1% by 2070’s on a nationwide scale. In relation to the major production regions of pine nuts in South Korea - Gapyung gun and Yangpyung gun, Kyunggi province and Hongcheon gun, Kangwon province, suitable sites within their areas were predicted to increase by 2050’s but become extinct in South Korea by 2070’s. To establish a long-term countermeasures against the improvement on forest productivity quality in terms of managing national food security, the result from this study can be considered as a firm basis of predicting plantation suitability. Also, it can be used to predict the changes in supply of forest products and thereby market values in accordance with climate change scenarios.
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GRADUATE SCHOOL OF URBAN STUDIES (DEPARTMENT OF URBAN AND REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT)
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