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- Third National Forest Inventory
- Germany, the land of forests – forest area unchanged
- The forest habitat – more biological diversity in the forests
- Spruce, pine, beech, oak – the most common tree species
- Forest damage led to rethinking – climate change faces us with new challenges
- Increase in older forests
- Rise in numbers of deciduous trees
- Forests more diversely structured
- Naturalness of the tree species composition is somewhat improved
- More deadwood found than ten years ago
- Specially protected biotopes on five percent of the forest area
- Invasive plants in the forest are currently of little significance
- Biotope trees – stepping stones for biological diversity
- Conservation status of large-area forest habitat types protected under the Fauna-Flora-Habitats Directive
- Spruce, pine, beech, oak – the most common tree species
- The forest resources – timber stock at record high
- The forests as climate protectors – still a carbon sink
- Surveying the forest
- Background information
- Overexploitation of the forests – no thank you!
- Historic development of the forested area
- What exactly is a forest?
- Is access to private forests permitted?
- Statistical certainty
- Area covered by beech tree species or beech forest cover type
- What is a mixed forest?
- One-layered or multi-layered forest
- How do we record forest naturalness?
- Quo vadis, spruce?
- Forest bind CO2
- Overexploitation of the forests – no thank you!
- Results database
- Service