Thank you for the hint!

It looks like wood:lost=dead_wood is meant to be used as a subtag to natural=wood or landuse=forest. Which means, it is not similar to lifecycle tagging but kind of orthogonal to it.

There is an issue with this sort of tagging, and that is the question whether a dead forest still constitutes as a forest. To illustrate:

Why lifecycle-prefix tagging is superior

The ruins of a church can be tagged in different ways:

  1. With lifecycle prefix: ruins:building=church
  2. With subtag: building=church + ruins=yes
  3. As tag value: building=ruins (+ ruins=church)

Option 1 is better because option 2 and 3 require additional software support to recognize an object tagged as such as not actually still a church building. A ruin of a church is simply not a church (anymore).

Implication on dead forest

Similarily, natural=wood + wood:lost=dead_wood, as a subtag of natural=wood requires additional software support to recognize that there is no more forest, as if it is a property of the forest that it is gone.

From the viewpoint of someone having went hiking there, it kind of strikes me as wrong to treat it as a property of forest, because everything that makes it a forest, is gone. Sure, life finds a way, and it’s not as if the area will be devoid of life from now on, but for all intents and purposes, it’s not a forest anymore, instead, something else. Maybe in 5 years, it will be natural=scrub or natural=heath, but not now. Now, it is more like man_made=clearcut only that it hasn’t been clear-cut.