The urgency of implementing large-scale tree planting is prompting the release of funding into inadequately assessed projects that will most likely have negligible sequestration benefits and cause potential human and ecological harm.
– Stevens (Reference Stevens2020)Massive public and private investments in tree planting are being made in attempts to sequester carbon, support human livelihoods and conserve biodiversity (Mansourian et al. Reference Mansourian, Kleymann, Passardi, Winter, Derkyi and Diederichsen2022). As the above quote attests, however, tree planting is often done poorly. From a social perspective, the requirements of the different institutions and actors involved, including especially the needs of local communities, are not always properly considered (Edwards et al. Reference Edwards, Cerullo, Chomba, Worthington, Balmford, Chazdon and Harrison2021). Meanwhile, from an ecological perspective, problems include the use of an insufficient diversity of tree species, which leads to monocultures and causes environmental damage, and the reliance upon genetically unadapted and physiologically poor seeds and seedlings, which means tree establishment is low and the growth of trees is slow (Graudal et al. Reference Graudal, Lillesø, Dawson, Abiyu, Roshetko and Nyoka2021). This unsatisfactory state of affairs is despite knowledge being available on how to do things better, but the context for improving practice is often complex, and a number of measures are needed to bridge the knowledge–action gap. Here we discuss just one of the measures that we consider to be important for improvement, which is related to the ‘sourcing’ of tree planting material for planting projects. We suggest that in circumstances where potential planters of trees apply for funding from investors to undertake tree planting, they should have to explain clearly the trees they intend to plant and how they are going to source the necessary seeds and seedlings of these trees. Our view, supported by a survey of the global tree planting community, is that investors should make the receipt of funds for planting conditional on an adequate explanation on these points. Our contention is that doing so will help drive better tree seed and seedling sourcing practices widely, and that this will support further tree planting investments and, ultimately, greater impact.
Current efforts to improve tree seed and seedling sourcing are insufficient
Considerable efforts have been made in the last decade to develop knowledge resources that support good planting practices during landscape restoration, and these resources include specific guidance on how to go about effective seed and seedling sourcing (see, e.g., quality criteria as defined by Pedrini & Dixon Reference Pedrini and Dixon2020, Di Sacco et al. Reference Di Sacco, Hardwick, Blakesley, Brancalion, Breman and Cecilio Rebola2021). Some of our own work has been directed towards this end. We have, for example, developed online decision-support tools that advise on what trees to plant where, why and how (Kindt et al. Reference Kindt, Dawson, Graudal and Jamnadass2021); we have shown how these decisions can cater for climate change (Kindt et al. Reference Kindt, Graudal, Jamnadass, Pedercini, McMullin and Hendre2023); and we have brought together guidelines for developing ‘tree seed and seedling systems’ (Lillesø et al. Reference Lillesø, Harwood, Derero, Graudal, Roshetko and Kindt2018, Reference Lillesø, Dawson, Graudal and Jamnadass2021, PATSPO 2023). While these efforts are necessary for improving access to high-quality tree planting material, they are clearly not in themselves sufficient, as most tree planting initiatives in their reporting continue to focus on the ‘quantity’ of trees planted rather than their ‘quality’, and the lack of planting of a diversity of well-adapted populations of native tree species in particular has been noted (Graudal et al. Reference Graudal, Lillesø, Dawson, Abiyu, Roshetko and Nyoka2021). What, then, is still going wrong in the tree seed and seedling sourcing process? And how might current problems be addressed?
An explanation of tree seed and seedling sourcing should be a fundamental element of tree planting project design
In our view, one of the persistent reasons why a diversity of tree species and genotypes well matched to planting sites is not used in tree planting is that public and private investors that fund planting do not provide sufficient incentives to planters to engage in better tree seed and seedling sourcing practices. To improve this situation, investors could target incentives to a number of points in the tree planting process, but in our opinion an obvious opportunity, not yet fully leveraged, is to incentivise good tree seed and seedling sourcing at the initial project proposal design stage. In cases where potential planters of trees apply for funding from investors through a project proposal application form, investors could ask for information in this form on how prospective tree planters are going to go about sourcing the tree seeds and seedlings that they are intending to plant, assuming that they are successful in achieving funding. A sufficient explanation would be a ‘green light’ to proceed through this step of the proposal evaluation (to move on to consider the merits or otherwise of the rest of the proposal), while an inadequate description would be a ‘red light’ that would preclude project funding or at least lead to further dialogue between the investor and the funding applicant on the sourcing process.
We initially discussed with relevant stakeholders whether this approach to condition tree planting funding would be implementable during a 2020 Global Landscapes Forum online event hosted by CIFOR-ICRAF called ‘Can Tree Planting Save Our Planet?’ (https://www.globallandscapesforum.org/publication/event-report-digital-forum-can-tree-planting-save-our-planet/). Based on initial positive indications from this event, we followed up with an online survey of the views of the global tree planting community. Some of our findings, published here formally for the first time, are provided in Fig. 1. In total, 173 respondents from 53 different nations completed our survey (Fig. 1a), of which 14 self-identified as ‘funders’ of tree planting, 69 as ‘researchers’ and 90 as ‘planters’. Of these respondents, a substantial majority (>80%) considered it good in principle for planters to have to explain how they will carry out tree seed and seedling sourcing when they apply for funds to carry out tree planting (Fig. 1b). When ‘funder’ respondents were asked what support they would need to evaluate the sourcing approaches provided by prospective planters, they ranked training in what constitutes good sourcing practice, in specific circumstances, as most important (from among five possible response options; see Fig. 1c). In order to be able to effectively assess sourcing approaches, ‘funder’ and ‘researcher’ respondents ranked expected tree performance and/or expected matching to planting site (these together constituted a single possible response option) as the most important information on sourcing that prospective planters should provide (Fig. 1d). Survey respondents ranked practical guidelines on how to source tree seeds as the most useful support that could be provided to planting funding applicants to enable them to develop high-quality sourcing approaches (Fig. 1e). The most important ‘downside’ of asking funding applicants to focus on higher-quality tree seed and seedling sourcing was indicated by survey respondents to be the higher cost of such provision (Fig. 1f).
Moving forward to practice
The findings of our survey supported our initial view that asking prospective tree planters about how they plan to source tree seeds and seedlings in planting funding applications provides a potential pathway to improve tree seed and seedling sourcing for planting programmes. This should, by extension, provide an opportunity to increase the overall effectiveness of tree planting, so that the local custodians of trees in landscapes, who suffer most when tree seed and seedling sourcing is done poorly (Cernansky Reference Cernansky2021), receive the greatest possible benefits. We therefore recommend that it should in general be mandatory for prospective planters to include planting material sourcing information in the initial funding application process.
Our survey also revealed important messages that need to be communicated to prospective tree planters when they are designing their tree seed and seedling sourcing approaches to be able to complete the proposed revised funding application template. Survey respondents indicated the increased cost of high-quality sourcing as a concern, so it is important to stress the great gains for livelihoods and the environment that can be achieved when more attention is given to sourcing; these gains are generally far greater than any extra costs involved (Pedercini et al. Reference Pedercini, Dawson, Lillesø, Moestrup, Nørgaard and Abiyu2022).
Turning our concept into action will not be straightforward. It will require close work with tree planting investors whose funding application templates will need to be redesigned, as well as the training of funders in the evaluation of tree seed and seedling sourcing approaches, considering known problems and potential solutions in tree seed and seedling supply (Lillesø et al. Reference Lillesø, Dawson, Graudal and Jamnadass2021). To facilitate implementation of the approach, we suggest building a partnership platform between investors, planters and researchers to specifically monitor the costs involved and the benefits achieved for a series of case studies. We are currently working to this end.
Supplementary material
To view supplementary material for this article, please visit https://doi.org/10.1017/S0376892923000188
Acknowledgements
We thank all survey respondents and the Society for Ecological Restoration, especially Stephanie Frischie, for helping us to contact potential survey participants.
Financial support
The authors gratefully acknowledge the support of CGIAR funding partners through the CGIAR Research Program on Forests, Trees and Agroforestry (2011–2021; https://www.cgiar.org/funders/). We specifically acknowledge: Norway’s International Climate and Forest Initiative for support to the Provision of Adequate Tree Seed Portfolio in Ethiopia (PATSPO) project; European Union support to the Reversing Land Degradation in Africa by Scaling-up Evergreen Agriculture (Regreening Africa) project; and Green Climate Fund Readiness Programme support to the Readiness-Climate Appropriate Portfolios of Tree Diversity (R-CAPTD) project in Burkina Faso.
Competing interests
The authors declare none.
Ethical standards
None.