نتایج جستجو برای: forest dieback

تعداد نتایج: 107101  

Journal: :Journal of environmental quality 2005
Christian Huber

During the past decade bark beetle (Ips typographus) attacks killed nearly all of the Norway spruce [Picea abies (L.) Karst.] stands in the unmanaged zone in the highlands of the Bavarian Forest National Park. This study was conducted to predict if and how long the catastrophic event might cause elevated nitrate NO3(-) concentration in seepage water, and if the presence of ground vegetation may...

2017
Philip Martin Adrian C Newton Elena Cantarello Paul M Evans

Positive feedbacks in drivers of degradation can cause threshold responses in natural ecosystems. Though threshold responses have received much attention in studies of aquatic ecosystems, they have been neglected in terrestrial systems, such as forests, where the long time-scales required for monitoring have impeded research. In this study we explored the role of positive feedbacks in a tempera...

2008
Zhaofei Fan John M. Kabrick Stephen R. Shifley

Oak decline and related mortality have periodically plagued upland oak-hickory forests, particularly oak species in the red oak group, across the Ozark Highlands of Missouri, Arkansas and Oklahoma since the late 1970s. Advanced tree age and periodic drought, as well as Armillaria root fungi and oak borer attack are believed to contribute to oak decline and mortality. Declining trees first show ...

2009
C. D. Allen Craig D. Allen

Unasylva 231/232, Vol. 60, 2009 Forests, which today cover 30 percent of the world’s land surface (FAO, 2006), are being rapidly and directly transformed in many areas by the impacts of expanding human populations and economies. Less evident are the pervasive effects of ongoing climatic changes on the condition and status of forests around the world. Recent examples of drought and heat-related ...

2011
Bradley Evans Tom J. Lyons Paul A. Barber Christine Stone Giles Hardy

Remote sensing of vegetation condition using high resolution digital multispectral imagery (DMSI) is an option for land managers interested in quantifying the distribution and extent of dieback in native forest. Crown condition is assessed as reference to the physical structure and foliage (i.e. density, transparency, extent and in-crown distribution) of a tree crown. At 20 sites in the Yalgoru...

2011
Michael Michaelian Edward H Hogg Ronald J Hall Eric Arsenault

Drought-induced, regional-scale dieback of forests has emerged as a global concern that is expected to escalate under model projections of climate change. Since 2000, drought of unusual severity, extent, and duration has affected large areas of western North America, leading to regional-scale dieback of forests in the southwestern US. We report on drought impacts on forests in a region farther ...

2010
Eric M. White Ralph J. Alig Robert G. Haight

Across the globe and in the U.S., it is anticipated that forest resources in rural and urban settings will be affected by climate-change induced impacts to forest growing conditions, including CO 2 fertilization and disturbance regimes. These changing forest conditions are projected to trace through to changes in management regimes, production practices, and, potentially, the uses of timberland...

2011
Renata Pernar

Features of Spatial Snag Distribution in a Beech-Fir Forest With the participation of about 65% in the total growing stock of conifers, silver fir is the most important andthe best represented conifer species in Croatia. The increasing share of sanitary felling in the annual felling plansdemands that special attention be paid to the health status of fir forests and the quantity of unpla...

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