Mountain
ecosystems are essential for regulating our climate and water cycles. Increasingly,
however, they are threatened by land abandonment, intensification of
agriculture, infrastructure development, unsustainable exploitation and climate
change. Eighth in the series of '10 messages
for 2010', the EEA's new assessment on mountain ecosystems indicates that managing
mountains sustainably relies on effective policies and actions at regional and
local levels.
Mountain ecosystems
cover 36 % of the continent (29 % of the European Union). Around 40 % of this area
is forested. Compared with lowlands, the variation in altitudes, temperatures
and precipitation have resulted in a richer variety of plant and animal species
in mountains.
Key pressures and policies
- Intensified agriculture and land abandonment: in lower altitudes, non-intensive traditional farming has created and maintains
semi-natural habitats, supporting a wide range of grassland species. More than
half of Europe's High Nature Value farmland, typically
associated with low-intensity agriculture and grazing, is found in mountain
areas. Any change to agricultural intensity threatens such habitats and
species. Land abandonment occurs across the EU and threatens ecosystems such as
grasslands, which are highly dependent on human management.
- Climate change: average temperatures increased
by approximately 2 degrees in the Alps between
the late 19th century and early 21st centuries. This is
twice the average rate in the Northern hemisphere and has caused a significant
decrease in glacier volume. Higher temperatures also mean less snow and more
rain in the winter, resulting in more runoff in winter and less in spring and
summer. Where they are able to move uphill or northwards, flora and fauna can
retain the bioclimatic conditions to which they are adapted. For mountain plant
species, however, migration is obviously more difficult and more than half could
face extinction by 2100.
- Infrastructure development: construction
of highways and motorways increases the fragmentation in mountain areas, isolating
and limiting the movement of many species. In certain locations, the
development of skiing infrastructure can make soil more vulnerable to water
erosion.
- Unsustainable exploitation: Fuel wood harvesting and timber trade
in the Caucasus mountains irreversibly reduce
both biodiversity and the goods and services on which local people depend.
Hunting and poaching of rare and endangered species in the Carpathians have reduced
populations, threatening their long-term viability. Mass tourism often favours the introduction of invasive alien
species.
- Policy frameworks: international and regional
agreements and processes, including the Convention on Biological Diversity and
the Alpine Convention, indicate that there is adequate recognition at the
European level of the need for international cooperation. It is important to
consider which policies have been successful at regional and local levels.
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