Among the goals of efficient management, guaranteeing tree recruitment should be prominent. Wherever grazing proves to be a major limiting factor for seedling survival, livestock should be banned from some regeneration areas in
the forest. Reafforestation projects, establishing or expanding local nurseries for the production of high quality seeds and seedlings of native species (NAST, 2010), could also be promoted with the aim of increasing the forest cover. To thoroughly assess all these issues, further field-based research investigating the interaction between vegetation and environmental factors, as modified by anthropogenic interference, is highly recommended. The establishment of permanent research plots for long-term monitoring of the effects of environmental and human-induced factors on silvo-pastoral systems should be strongly encouraged, taking into account the possible DAPT ic50 impacts of the on-going climate change in the area (NAST, 2010, Nepal, Dasatinib 2013 and McDowell et al., 2013). Sustainable forest management of national parks with increasing human pressure from tourism activities
is currently a real challenge for land managers and scientists. In these protected areas the simplification of the forest structure is often more important than deforestation. This reduction of structural diversity, often called forest degradation, is in fact less obvious than deforestation, and for this reason more difficult to detect and manage. Research studies on the main causes and impacts of forest overexploitation should be promoted in other sensitive areas in order to contribute to increasing forest resilience and reversing the process
of environmental degradation. Forest degradation at Sagarmatha National Park has mostly resulted from the intensive thinning and overexploitation of small size rhododendron trees from the most accessible sites. Increased trekking tourism intensified shrub removal (especially Juniperus wallichiana) and exploitation for firewood, but the establishment of the SNP in 1976 delocalized human pressure to the Pharak forests that recently (2002) became the Buffer Zone of the SNP. In the absence of a sustainable land use policy Glutamate dehydrogenase tourism can be a major driver of forest degradation. This issue is observed globally in many other protected areas where trekking tourism is responsible for socio-cultural changes that indirectly affect the traditional use of natural resources. Nowadays unregulated logging is one of the main causes of the lower diversity and density measured in the BZ, the current use of forest-related resources thus appears largely unsustainable and needs to be planned. A sustainable management of forest resources at SNP is imperative and should integrate different management actions (e.g. reafforestation projects, adaptive silvicultural practices and regulating livestock grazing), at the same time implementing a greater use of alternative energy sources.