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REPUBLIC OF TURKEY Ministry of Environment and Forestry General Directorate of Forestry (GDF)

REPUBLIC OF TURKEY Ministry of Environment and Forestry General Directorate of Forestry (GDF). Forest and Water : Turkey Experience. İsmail BELEN Deputy General Director. 3-5 May 2011, Istanbul. Republic of TURKEY. Total Area: 77.9 Million Ha. Population : 72 Million

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REPUBLIC OF TURKEY Ministry of Environment and Forestry General Directorate of Forestry (GDF)

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  1. REPUBLIC OF TURKEY Ministry of Environment and Forestry General Directorate of Forestry (GDF) ForestandWater: TurkeyExperience İsmail BELEN Deputy General Director 3-5 May 2011, Istanbul

  2. Republic of TURKEY • Total Area: 77.9 Million Ha. • Population: 72 Million • AverageAltitude: 1132 m. • Climate; ContinentalinnerParts, • Sub-tropical in MediterraneanRegion

  3. TURKEY WEATHER MAP

  4. GEOGRAPHIC SITUATION • Turkey is taken place on earth’s highlands land characteristics of the country; • High, very high, and precipice land…….% 47,5 • Undulating land……………………… % 40,1 • Plain land………………………………..%12,4 • The land of Turkey is largely mountainous area 7 different geographical regions • Hydrologically divided into 25 drainage basins

  5. FOREST RESOURCES • Total: 21.2 Million Ha. (%27,2 of Total Country Area) • State-ownedForests %99 • 12000 Plant • %95 of Forests are Natural & Semi-Natural • Species (3000 of them Endemic) 2

  6. EFFECTS OF FOREST ON WATER RESOURCES • Forests; • Optimize river flow and prevent both floods and droughts at least at the small scale • Assist to prevent surface erosion , avalanches, storms, landslides and debris filling riverbeds (soil protect function) • Act as a natural filter for water, decreasing the concentration of pollutants and detrimental contaminants in surface and ground water • Play an crucial role on the biodiversity of water ecosystem

  7. Source of Life : “Water” Source of QualityWater : “Forests”

  8. There are large amounts of flowing water springs. Turkey contains 2 million ha. in 135 wetlands, which are internationally important. This variable conditions bring a wide variety of fauna as well. • There are 80.000 species around the country. When sub-species are taken into account this number leads to 100.000. • Turkey has about 12.000 plant species and over 3.000 of them are endemic.

  9. Approximately 186 km3 of this water flows in rivers as surface water. • The renewable water potential is estimated to be 234 km3/year and almost half of it has potential for development. • In terms of technical and economical criteria, total usable quantity of water resources is about 110 km3.

  10. Annually, the forestareas receive 35 per cent of rainfall • Average annual rainfall in forestlandandotherwoodedland- otherlandare 826 and 570mm/m2 respectively • Annual precipitation varies between 220 mm to 2.500 mm with an average of 642,6 mm and this corresponds to an average annual precipitation of 501 km3.

  11. ANNUAL PRECIPITATION Geographical distribution of mean annual precipitation (Sensoy, S. et al, 2008)

  12. According to CORINE 2006, which documented land use patterns in the country; • 96% of Turkey is natural lands, which includes 42,35% agricultural lands and 54% forests and semi natural areas. • Other land cover distribution percentages are; water bodies 1,64%, artificial areas 1,61% and wetlands 0,36 % respectively.

  13. Functional Forest Management Plans since 2006 • Hydrologic Function; %16 of Forests • Erosion Control; %11 of Forests FOREST MANAGEMENT Hydrologicfunction Erosioncontrol

  14. Watershed rehabilitation works in 1950s were introduced with the aim of decreasing the damages of floods and overflows and thereby providing safety for current dams. • First implementations in the upper watersheds were reduction of soil erosion, facilities and afforestation works regulating water flow regime. Ministry of Environment and Forestry is carrying on some projects related to Integrated Watershed Management. These are; • Eastern Anatolia Watershed Rehabilitation Project • AnatoliaWatershedRehabilitation Project • Çoruh River Watershed Rehabilitation Project

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  16. WATERSHED MANAGEMENT 2

  17. WATERSHED MANAGEMENT ACTIVITIES 2

  18. Changes in precipitation and also temperature lead to changes in runoff and water availability. It seems that the semi-arid areas like the Mediterranean Region, will suffer a decrease in water resources due to climate change. Regarding the report of IPCC (2007), in southern Europe, climate change is projected to worsen conditions (high temperatures and drought), and to reduce water availability, hydropower potential, summer tourism and, in general, crop productivity..

  19. Forest productivity is expected to decrease in the Mediterranean Regions and the vegetative cover would experience drastic decline. The sustainable management of forests in arid and semi-arid areas needs to be implemented more carefully. • As Turkey has mostly arid and semi-arid areas, the role of forests in the water cycle is very much debated.

  20. Turkey is identified as a key partner country by FAO, which took the lead in the different events on “forests and water”. Those events are also the key steps of developing an international forests and water agenda. Some of these are; • “The 5th World Water Forum” in Istanbul, 2009 (33,058 participants from 192 countries), • “The Workshop on Forests and Water”, in Antalya, 2009 (participants from 30 countries and international organizations aiming to facilitate implementation of the commitments in the Warsaw Resolution on Forests and Water),

  21. “The Forests and Water Side Event”, XIII. World Forestry Congress in Buenos Aires, 2009 (presentation), • “Forests and Water in the Context of Climate Change”, World Forest Week - COFO 2010, in Rome, 2010 (panelist), • Forthcoming meeting in Turkey • “28th Session of the EFC Working Party on the Management of Mountain Watersheds”, in Kastamonu, 12-16th September 2011. The topic of the 28th Session of the Working Party is "water for forests, forests for water"

  22. COLLABORATION OF THE F&W SECTORS • Ministry of EnvironmentandForestry (GDF and GDSHW) • General Directorate of Provincial Bank, Municipalities • BWMA, Universities, NGOs General Directorate of Environmental Management

  23. CONCLUSION • Main Problem; Erosion and Rural Poverty • Need for “Integrated Mountain Management Strategy” • Responsible Agency to Ensure SSM • Participation of All Stakeholders is Essential 2

  24. Thank You for Your Attention İsmail BELEN DeputyGeneral Director ismailbelen@ogm.gov.tr 3-5 May 2011, Istanbul

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