- Standardsignatur638
- TitelEuropean Journal of Forest Research 2023, 142(4)
- ErscheinungsortBerlin
- Verlag
- Erscheinungsjahr2023
- Seiten709-963
- Materiale-journal
- Digitales Dokument
- Datensatznummer40004224
- Quelle
- AbstractCould timber winching operations be cleaner? An evaluation of two options in terms of residual stand damage, soil disturbance and operational efficiency; Stand density, climate and biodiversity jointly regulate the multifunctionality of natural forest ecosystems in northeast China; A multi-trait assessment of selected provenances of Scots pine following 50 years of growth on a provenance experiment in Central Poland, in the light of climate change; Modelling the influence of thinning intensity and frequency on the future provision of ecosystem services in Mediterranean mountain pine forests; Structure and dynamics of old-growth Pinus nigra stands in Southeast Europe; Fossil-fuel consumption and CO2eq emissions of cut-to-length industrial roundwood logging operations in Finland; Tree mortality in mature temperate forests of central Mexico: a spatial approach; Predicting the distribution of European Hop Hornbeam: application of MaxEnt algorithm and climatic suitability models; Emulating natural disturbances with trial management in Scotland: effects of burning, mowing and cattle on habitat measures important for capercaillie Tetrao urogallus; Bark stripping damage by red deer (Cervus elaphus L.): assessing the spatial distribution on the stand level using generalised additive models; Rainfall exclusion changes the sapwood of eucalyptus wood in humid and dry sites; Analysing highly biodiverse tropical dry forests for improved conservation; Morphological, physiological, and biochemical responses of Pistacia atlantica seedlings to elevated CO2 concentration and drought stress; Scots pine responses to drought investigated with eddy covariance and sap flow methods; Forest roads regulate native and exotic species diversity and adjacent soil properties in Lawachara National Park, Bangladesh; Correction: Forest gaps accelerate the degradation of cellulose and lignin in decaying logs in a subalpine forest.
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