Abstract
It is generally believed that forest cover in North Korea has undergone a substantial decrease since 1980, while in South Korea, forest cover has remained relatively static during that same period of time. The United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) Forest Resources Assessments—based on the reported forest inventories from North and South Korea—suggest a major forest cover decrease in North Korea, but only a slight decrease in South Korea during the last 30 years. In this study, we seek to check and validate those assessments by comparing them to independently derived forest cover maps compiled for three time intervals between 1990 and 2010, as well as to provide a spatially explicit view of forest cover change in the Korean Peninsula since the 1990s. We extracted tree cover data for the Korean Peninsula from existing global datasets derived from satellite imagery. Our estimates, while qualitatively supporting the FAO results, show that North Korea has lost a large number of densely forested areas, and thus in this sense has suffered heavier forest loss than the FAO assessment suggests. Given the limited time interval studied in our assessment, the overall forest loss from North Korea during the whole span of time since 1980 may have been even heavier than in our estimate. For South Korea, our results indicate that the forest cover has remained relatively stable at the national level, but that important variability in forest cover evolution exists at the regional level: While the northern and western provinces show an overall decrease in forested areas, large areas in the southeastern part of the country have increased their forest cover.
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Acknowledgments
The authors want to acknowledge the “Developing strategies for sustainable North Korea forest rehabilitation” program supported by the Korea Forest Service, Republic of Korea. We also thank the two anonymous reviewers whose comments greatly helped to improve this manuscript.
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Engler, R., Teplyakov, V. & Adams, J.M. An Assessment of Forest Cover Trends in South and North Korea, From 1980 to 2010. Environmental Management 53, 194–201 (2014). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00267-013-0201-y
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00267-013-0201-y