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Eini C. Lowell, Eric C. Turnblom, Jeff M. Comnick and CL Huang
Douglas-fir, the most important timber species in the Pacific Northwest, US (PNW), has high stiffness and strength. Growing it in plantations on short rotations since the 1980s has led to concerns about the impact of juvenile/mature wood proportion on wo...
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Sam W. Wood, Timothy J. Wardlaw, Elizabeth C. Pryde and Susan C. Baker
Fire and timber harvesting can diminish the extent of older forests in the near term. The amount and configuration of mature and regenerating forest in the landscape (landscape structure) influences habitat suitability for mature-forest-associated specie...
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Ariel E. Lugo and Heather E. Erickson
Tropical and subtropical dry forest life zones support forests with lower stature and species richness than do tropical and subtropical life zones with greater water availability. The number of naturalized species that can thrive and mix with native spec...
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Miranda T. Curzon, Susan C. Baker, Christel C. Kern, Brian J. Palik and Anthony W. D?Amato
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Wei Cui and Xiao-Xian Zheng
The classical environmental control model assumes that species diversity is primarily determined by environmental conditions (e.g., microclimate and soil) on the local scale. This assumption has been challenged by the neutral theory that assumes that the...
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M.S. Patricio,L.F. Nunes,E.L. Pereira
Pág. 259 - 271
This research aimed to: estimate the inputs of litterfall; model the decomposition process and assess the rates of litter decay and turnover; study the litter decomposition process and dynamics of nutrients in old chestnut high forests. This study aimed ...
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