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Tuija Vähäkuopus, Tommi Kauppila, Jari Mäkinen, Antti E. K. Ojala and Samu E. Valpola
Human land-use activities, especially in the peatlands, are under consideration as the mitigation and lowering of CO2 emissions from land-use practices is needed to address climate change. In Finland, approximately one third of the land surface is covere...
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Jurij Diaci, Dusan Rozenbergar, Gal Fidej and Thomas A. Nagel
Forest managers are often required to restore forest stands following natural disturbances, a situation that may become more common and more challenging under global change. In parts of Central Europe, particularly in mountain regions dominated by mixed ...
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Todd Redding,Suzan Lapp,Jason Leach
This extension note summarizes the key findings of the chapter entitled "A synthesis of the effects of natural disturbance and post-disturbance management on streamflow, stream temperature, suspended sediment, and aquatic invertebrate populations" of FOR...
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Don Gayton,Pedro Lara Almuedo
Biodiversity is a key component of forested ecosystems. It should be preserved not only for its own sake, but because biodiverse ecosystems are resilient and better able to respond to changing conditions. This extension note is a condensed version of a f...
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Alan Wiensczyk
Introduction to JEM 13(1).
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Kathie Swift,Shikun Ran
Natural and human-induced disturbance such as wildfire, insect and disease outbreak, windthrow, and forest harvesting are important drivers for forest renewal, post-disturbance stand structure, and ecosystem function. Each disturbance or combination of d...
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Philip J. Burton
A massive insect outbreak in the public forests of central British Columbia (Canada) poses a serious challenge for sustainable forest management planning. Tree mortality caused by natural disturbances has always been a part of wild and managed forests, b...
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