Search results for "woody"

showing 10 items of 86 documents

Soil feedback does not explain mowing effects on vegetation structure in a semi-natural grassland

2009

Due to its ability to create aboveground conditions that favour plant diversity, mowing is often used to preserve the high conservation value of semi-natural species-rich grasslands. However, mowing can also affect belowground conditions. By decreasing plant carbon supply to soil, mowing can suppress the activity of soil decomposers, diminish plant nutrient availability and thus create a feedback on plant growth. In this study, we first documented the effects of three-year mowing on plant community structure in a species-rich grassland. We found that mowing decreased the total areal cover of woody plants and increased the total cover of leguminous forbs. At the species level, mowing further…

2. Zero hunger0106 biological sciencesgeographygeography.geographical_feature_categorybiologyEcologyfungiPrunella vulgarisfood and beveragesSoil classificationPlant communityVegetation15. Life on landbiology.organism_classification010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesDecomposerGrasslandAgronomyEnvironmental scienceForbEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics010606 plant biology & botanyNature and Landscape ConservationWoody plantActa Oecologica
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Annual pollen traps reveal the complexity of climatic control on pollen productivity in Europe and the Caucasus

2010

Annual PAR (pollen accumulation rates; grains cm−2 year−1) were studied with modified Tauber traps situated in ten regions, in Poland (Roztocze), the Czech Republic (two regions in Krkonoše, two in Šumava), Switzerland (4 regions in the Alps), and Georgia (Lagodekhi). The time-series are 10–16 years long, all ending in 2007. We calculated correlations between pollen data and climate. Pollen data are PAR summarized per region (4–7 traps selected per region) for each pollen type (9–14 per region) using log-transformed, detrended medians. Climate data are monthly temperature and precipitation measured at nearby stations, and their averages over all possible 2- to 6-month windows falling within…

570010506 paleontologyArcheology010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesEarth Sciences; Archaeology; Anthropology; Climate Change ; Biogeosciences; PaleontologyClimate changePlant Science580 Plants (Botany)medicine.disease_cause01 natural sciencesPollenmedicineAlnus viridisCyperaceae0105 earth and related environmental sciencesbiologyEcologyPalaeontologyPaleontology15. Life on landSeasonalitybiology.organism_classificationmedicine.diseaseGeographyProductivity (ecology)Pollen monitoring; Annual pollen accumulation; Influx; Climate; Europe; Caucasus13. Climate actionPhysical geographyLarchWoody plantVegetation History and Archaeobotany
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Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi positively affect growth of Ailanthus altissima (Mill.) Swingle seedlings and show a strong association with this invasi…

2015

Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) may promote plant invasion by enhancing plant performance and competitiveness. However, only a small number of studies have considered the interactions between local soil microbial communities and invasive plants, and even fewer have focused on alien trees. Ailanthus altissima is a serious problem in the Mediterranean Basin, where it has invaded many habitats. We investigated the symbiosis between A. altissima and indigenous AMF in two invaded, ecologically different Mediterranean woodlands. Mycorrhizal infection was high at both sites (> 60% of the root fragments were mycorrhizal), indicating that A. altissima roots may be infected by AMF under different …

Ailanthus altissimaSettore AGR/05 - Assestamento Forestale E SelvicolturaEcologybiologySoil biologyfungiPlant ScienceSettore BIO/19 - Microbiologia Generalebiology.organism_classificationMediterranean BasinPlant ecologyPropaguleSymbiosisSeedlingBotanyinvasive tree species mycorrhizae plant-microbes interactions seedling growth soil biotaEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsWoody plantThe Journal of the Torrey Botanical Society
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The effects of forest management on wood-inhabiting fungi occupying dead wood of different diameter fractions

2014

Forest management has caused severe ecological degradation throughout the Globe. One of its most prominent consequences is the drastic change in dead wood profile and consequently in the dead wood dependent biota. Wood-inhabiting fungi are, considering ecosystem functions, the most important species group utilizing dead wood, because they take care of majority of the decaying process. The earlier research focusing on the effects of forest management on wood-inhabiting fungi has strongly focused on large dead wood pieces (i.e. coarse woody debris, CWD), even though it has been shown that a major part of fungal diversity utilizes (also) small dead wood pieces (i.e. [very] fine woody debris, […

AphyllophoralesbiologyEcologyForest managementTaigaRare speciesta1183ta1172ForestryBiotaManagement Monitoring Policy and Lawbiology.organism_classificationta4112BorealEcosystemCoarse woody debrisNature and Landscape ConservationForest Ecology and Management
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First Report of Armillaria mellea on a Fern from Italy

2019

Several perennial species of rhizomatous herbaceous ferns are cultivated as ornamental foliage plants. During late summer 1999, in a garden at the foot of Mount Etna, eastern Sicily (Italy), we noted a fern hedge showing patches of withered or stunted plants. The fern was identified as Cyrtomium falcatum (L.f.) C. Presl. (=Polystichum falcatum (L.f.) Diels), a house holly fern or Japanese holly fern, which is an ornamental fern native to East and South Asia. Other woody plants in the immediate vicinity had died over the last few years, including apricot and cedar trees whose stumps had not been removed. A close examination of uprooted ferns revealed the presence of creamy white fan-shaped …

ArmillariaBotanyOrnamental plantPolystichumCyrtomium falcatumPlant ScienceFernArmillaria melleaHerbaceous plantBiologybiology.organism_classificationAgronomy and Crop ScienceWoody plantPlant Disease
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Obtaining the three-dimensional structure of tree orchards from remote 2D terrestrial LIDAR scanning

2009

In recent years, LIDAR (light detection and ranging) sensors have been widely used to measure environmental parameters such as the structural characteristics of trees, crops and forests. Knowledge of the structural characteristics of plants has a high scientific value due to their influence in many biophysical processes including, photosynthesis, growth, CO2-sequestration and evapotranspiration, playing a key role in the exchange of matter and energy between plants and the atmosphere, and affecting terrestrial, above-ground, carbon storage. In this work, we report the use of a 2D LIDAR scanner in agriculture to obtain three-dimensional (3D) structural characteristics of plants. LIDAR allows…

Atmospheric ScienceGlobal and Planetary ChangeCorrelation coefficientForestryVegetationOptical radarRadar òpticTree volumeFotogrametria aèriaArbresTerrestrial LIDARTree (data structure)Lidar:Enginyeria agroalimentària::Ciències forestals [Àrees temàtiques de la UPC]Evapotranspiration3D Plant structureEnvironmental scienceOrchardLeaf area indexAgronomy and Crop ScienceLaser measurementsRemote sensingWoody plant
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Effects of forest restoration treatments on the abundance of bark beetles in Norway spruce forests of southern Finland

2009

Abstract Restoration of protected areas in boreal forests frequently includes creating substantial volumes of dead wood. While this benefits a wide range of dead wood dependent invertebrate species, some of these are regarded as forest pests. Therefore, the risk of elevated levels of tree mortality in surrounding commercial forests must be considered. In a large-scale field experiment in southern Finland, we studied the effects of restoration treatments on the abundance of bark beetles within and in the vicinity of restored areas, in particular focusing on Ips typographus and Pityogenes chalcographus . The treatments applied to managed Norway spruce forests were controlled burning and parti…

Bark beetlebiologyEcologyTaigaForestryPicea abiesManagement Monitoring Policy and Lawbiology.organism_classificationcomplex mixturesForest restorationvisual_artCurculionidaevisual_art.visual_art_mediumBarkRestoration ecologyNature and Landscape ConservationWoody plantForest Ecology and Management
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Unmanned aerial system imagery and photogrammetric canopy height data in area-based estimation of forest variables

2015

In this paper we examine the feasibility of data from unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV)-borne aerial imagery in stand-level forest inventory. As airborne sensor platforms, UAVs offer advantages cost and flexibility over traditional manned aircraft in forest remote sensing applications in small areas, but they lack range and endurance in larger areas. On the other hand, advances in the processing of digital stereo photography make it possible to produce three-dimensional (3D) forest canopy data on the basis of images acquired using simple lightweight digital camera sensors. In this study, an aerial image orthomosaic and 3D photogrammetric canopy height data were derived from the images acquired …

CanopyAerial surveyUAVta1172ComputingMethodologies_IMAGEPROCESSINGANDCOMPUTERVISIONta1171ComputerApplications_COMPUTERSINOTHERSYSTEMSphotogrammetric surface modelBasal areaAerial photographyaerial imagerylcsh:Forestryforest inventorycanopy height modelRemote sensingta113Forest inventoryEcological ModelingForestryta4112unmanned aerial systemAerial imageryPhotogrammetrylcsh:SD1-669.5Environmental scienceWoody plantSilva fennica
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Applying a framework for landscape planning under climate change for the conservation of biodiversity in the Finnish boreal forest

2015

Conservation strategies are often established without consideration of the impact of climate change. However, this impact is expected to threaten species and ecosystem persistence and to have dramatic effects towards the end of the 21st century. Landscape suitability for species under climate change is determined by several interacting factors including dispersal and human land use. Designing effective conservation strategies at regional scales to improve landscape suitability requires measuring the vulnerabilities of specific regions to climate change and determining their conservation capacities. Although methods for defining vulnerability categories are available, methods for doing this …

Conservation of Natural ResourcesConservation strategyconservation strategyClimate ChangeForest managementVulnerabilityBiodiversityforest managementClimate changeClimate change adaptationModels BiologicalTreesemission scenariosEcosystem modelForest gap modelSystematic conservation planningTaigaForest ecosystem modelEnvironmental ChemistryIntact forest landscapeFinlandclimate change adaptationWoody debrisGeneral Environmental ScienceGlobal and Planetary ChangeEcologyLand useForest managementbusiness.industryEnvironmental resource managementmetsänkäsittelyforest gap modelBiodiversity15. Life on landta4112climate vulnerabilityGeographyClimate vulnerabilityLandscape conservation capacity13. Climate actionEmission scenariosta1181landscape conservation capacitybusinessLandscape planningforest ecosystem model
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Ecological Efficiency of Voluntary Conservation of Boreal-Forest Biodiversity

2008

Current networks of protected areas are biased in many countries toward landscapes of low productivity. Voluntary conservation incentives have been suggested as a socially acceptable way to supplement existing networks with more productive, privately owned areas of high priority for nature conservation. The limited resources committed to nature conservation demand cost-efficiency. Efficiency, however, depends not only on costs incurred to society from alternative ways of maintaining biodiversity but also on ecological values that can be captured. We examined the ecological efficiency of the new market-based voluntary program to preserve forest habitats on private land in southwestern Finlan…

Conservation of Natural ResourcesTime FactorsLichensEcologyArctic RegionsNatural resource economicsmedia_common.quotation_subjectBiodiversityEcological efficiencyBiodiversityTreesNegotiationIncentiveHabitatEnvironmental protectionBusinessCoarse woody debrisProtected areaProductivityFinlandEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsNature and Landscape Conservationmedia_commonConservation Biology
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