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  • Articles  (10,828)
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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2021-10-28
    Description: We examine the emerging forest bioeconomy as an integrated multi-product industrial ecosystem, where the traditional pulp mills allocate the use of side streams to independent biochemical companies manufacturing bioproducts in the vicinity of the pulp mills. Biochemical companies benefit from the proximity by receiving wood-based side streams at lower costs and pulp mills from having a new source of revenue from selling side streams. We focus on the economic interaction between the pulp mill and the biochemical company, and study the impacts on the use of wood and profits under perfect and imperfect competition. We demonstrate that the new industrial ecosystem uses more wood than traditional pulp mills, but, depending on the side stream, it may promote cascading use of wood-based side streams.
    Print ISSN: 0045-5067
    Electronic ISSN: 1208-6037
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2021-10-27
    Description: Light detection and ranging (LiDAR) is used to estimate tree, stand, and forest characteristics across large geographic areas. In the province of Nova Scotia, an enhanced forest inventory (EFI) was developed to provide high-resolution spatial forest inventory estimates across the landscape. For various forest attributes, independent LiDAR-based relationships were built leading to mathematical and biological inconsistency among forest attribute estimates. A systems approach, composed of allometric equations describing the relationships between volume per unit area, Lorey’s average height, basal area, quadratic mean diameter, and density, is developed to address these inconsistencies. Previous results showed that applying the systems approach provided reasonable and compatible estimates and eliminated inconsistency issues among forest attributes. This study evaluates application of the systems approach applied to eastern Nova Scotia using field data from a network of permanent sample plots and recent LiDAR acquisitions. The independent EFI estimates had inconsistencies of greater than 100% for basal area and implied stand-level form factor. These inconsistencies were eliminated using the systems approach. Results show that the systems approach can be scaled to larger landscape areas and that long-term field data can be leveraged to fit the allometric systems producing mathematically and biologically consistent estimates.
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    Electronic ISSN: 1208-6037
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2021-10-21
    Description: Abstract: We measured differences in %C, %N,  13C and  15N of plant functional types 17 (PFTs) between burned and unburned ground surfaces soon after a wildfire on a north-18 facing slope in interior Alaska. The C and N were measured for 16 species and 19 Sphagnum litter.  13C differed among the PFTs and was low for trees and shrubs, 20 suggesting that woody stems slowed C dynamics or showed low water use efficiency. 21  15N concentrations suggested that the herbaceous plants depended less on the 22 mycorrhizal associations that became weak on the burned surfaces. The shrub leaves 23 showed the lowest  15N of PFTs and showed higher  15N on the burned surface, showing 24 that N transfer from the soils to the leaves in the shrubs was slowed by the wildfire. 25 Mosses showed the highest C/N ratio. Sphagnum litter decomposed faster on the burned 26 surface, and %N and  15N in the litter increased from the second to third year on both 27 burned and unburned surfaces, while %C changed little. In conclusion, the responses to 28 the wildfire differed among the PFTs as characterized by their C and N dynamics. 29 30 Key words: Burned and unburned ground surface, carbon (C) and nitrogen (N), Alaskan 31 taiga, plant functional type, stable isotope
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    Electronic ISSN: 1208-6037
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2021-10-01
    Description: Models of relationships among forest inventory sampling efficiency and cluster plot configuration variables inform decisions by inventory planners. However, relationships vary under different spatial heterogeneity scenarios. To improve understanding of how spatial patterns of forests affect these relationships, we implemented a factorial experiment by simulating forest pattern at both the landscape and stand scales. We sampled these simulated forests with a variety of cluster plot configurations, calculated coefficient of variation (CV) of trees per hectare for each replicate, and tested the relationships among CV and the heterogeneity and cluster plot configuration factors within a linear mixed model framework. Both landscape- and stand-scale pattern aggregation had a significant relationship with CV. Changing cluster plot configuration factors did little to change the overall CV when using larger subplots but had some important effects when using smaller subplots. These impacts were stronger in the more uniform landscapes. Results were opposite for stand-scale heterogeneity; changing plot configuration in areas with aggregated patterns had a stronger impact than it did in areas with more uniform patterns. Results of this study reveal the importance of accounting for spatial pattern at multiple scales when making cluster configuration choices if the goal is statistical efficiency.
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    Electronic ISSN: 1208-6037
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2021-10-01
    Description: We assessed natural regeneration of longleaf pine (Pinus palustris Mill.) using the data collected from the Escambia Experimental Forest in southern Alabama. Fifteen years after the regeneration control, natural regeneration of longleaf pine remained patchy across a wide range of site and stand conditions; slightly more than half of all plots contained regeneration, but the density of seedlings and saplings varied significantly. The abundance of seedlings ≤1-year-old was positively related to stand age and time since last fire, but negatively related to overstory basal area. The abundance of seedlings and saplings was positively related to stand age, but negatively related to time since last fire and overstory basal area. The probability of achieving at least 15 000 seedlings·ha–1 that are older than 1 year but less than 1 m tall and at least 1250 saplings·ha–1 that are over 1 m tall was, respectively, positively related to the ratio of time since last fire to overstory basal area and the ratio of quadratic mean diameter to site index. A longer fire interval (〉 2 to 3 years) should be adopted to naturally regenerate longleaf. We did not find clear zones of exclusion present in natural regeneration even though overstory trees, seedlings, and saplings tended to be repulsive spatially and 〉80% grass stage seedlings and saplings occurred outside tree crowns.
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    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2021-10-01
    Description: Diameter at breast height (DBH) distributions offer valuable information for operational and strategic forest management decisions. We predicted DBH distributions using Norwegian national forest inventory and airborne laser scanning data and compared the predictive performances of linear mixed-effects (PPM), generalized linear-mixed (GLM), and k nearest-neighbor (NN) models. While GLM resulted in smaller prediction errors than PPM, both were clearly outperformed by NN. We therefore studied the ability of the NN model to improve the precision of stem frequency estimates by DBH classes in the 8.7 Mha study area using a model-assisted (MA) estimator suitable for systematic sampling. MA estimates yielded greater than or approximately equal efficiencies as direct estimates using field data only. The relative efficiencies (REs) associated with the MA estimates ranged between 0.95–1.47 and 0.96–1.67 for 2 and 6 cm DBH class widths, respectively, when dominant tree species were assumed to be known. The use of a predicted tree species map, instead of the observed information, decreased the REs by up to 10%.
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    Electronic ISSN: 1208-6037
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2021-10-01
    Description: The maintenance of genetic diversity across seed orchard generations is an important management objective. Here, we used Pinus tabuliformis Carrière as a model to explore the extent of genetic diversity across the species’ breeding activities through their corresponding seed orchard generations. We utilized a large number of simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers selected from P. tabuliformis transcriptomic data, and then assessed the effect of marker number on genetic diversity and genetic relationships of individuals across orchard generations. In total, we designed 125 SSR markers, of which 39 were polymorphic and used in the present study. The genetic diversity and genetic distance parameters tended to increase with an increase in loci number and a stable trend was reached at 24 SSRs. The selected optimal 24 SSR markers were further used to assess the genetic diversity across seed orchard generations, and a decreasing trend was detected with the advancement of orchard’s generations. Genetic distance analysis indicated that individuals in the 2nd generation orchard were more closely related compared with those of the 1st generation and the 1.5 generation. This study provided valuable information on the effect of selection and breeding on genetic diversity and highlighted its role for effective seed orchard management.
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    Electronic ISSN: 1208-6037
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2021-10-01
    Description: Forest disturbance is usually described by effects on trees, and small disturbances to forest understory are seldom studied. Nevertheless, effective analyses of succession need to consider both stand-replacing and subsequent “secondary” disturbances in both the canopy and understory. We estimated the characteristics of 13 types of secondary disturbances in old-growth forest understory, as well as change in the canopy cover, after the deposition of tephra (aerially transported volcanic ejecta) in 1980 from Mount St. Helens, Washington. We sampled 100 plots (1 m2) at each of four sites for vegetation change and types of disturbance at 10 different times from 1980 to 2010; we sampled the tree canopy above each plot in 1980 and 2016. The number of canopy gaps increased by 23% and mean gap dimension increased by 68% over 36 years, mostly from the loss of Abies amabilis (Douglas ex Loudon) Douglas ex Forbes. Secondary disturbance in understory affected 1.4% of stand area per year. The areas affected by soil disturbance and effects of woody litter were similar. Erosion, greater in deep than in shallow tephra, peaked in 1981, whereas most litter-caused disturbances increased after 2000. Less frequent litter-based disturbances covered greater area. Our results differ from conclusions about nonvolcanic understory disturbances. Secondary disturbances are variable, need more study, and are likely to affect many other systems.
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    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2021-10-01
    Description: Populations of many tree species exhibit synchronous and highly temporally variable seed crops across years. This is called mast seeding, and there are two predominant hypotheses for this pattern of reproduction: pollination efficiency and seed-predator satiation. Mast seeding studies typically involve records of population-level reproduction, with less information on the characteristics of reproductive structures. Here, we use data across 6 years (2012–2017), spanning a range of population-level cone conditions, to characterize (i) white spruce (Picea glauca (Moench) Voss) cone lengths and seeds per cone, and (ii) levels of seed predation. We quantified population-level cone production and collected 1399 cones from a total of 38 trees in the Huron Mountains, Michigan, USA. Linear mixed models showed that mean and minimum cone lengths varied significantly across years; both being longest during the greatest cone production year. Larger cones had more seeds and the slopes of the relationships as well as the intercepts varied significantly across years. Generalized linear mixed models and Akaike’s information criterion model selection showed that cones with insect predation damage was greatest when population-level reproduction was the lowest, with a mean proportion of cones damaged 0.82 in that year. Our findings show that white spruce cone characteristics and losses to insect seed predation vary temporally, and follow expectations based on mast seeding hypotheses.
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    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2021-10-01
    Description: Atmospheric aerosols can influence energy allocation, environmental factors, and thus, canopy photosynthesis. However, the regulations of aerosols on ecosystem productivity are not well understood. Here, we applied the optical properties of aerosols to quantify the effects of aerosol type and concentration on the environmental factors and associated gross primary productivity (GPP) of a poplar (Populus euramericana) plantation during the months of June to August from 2014 to 2016 in Beijing, China. As aerosol optical depth (AOD) increased from 0 to 2.5, total photosynthetically active radiation (PAR) decreased by 29%, while the diffuse PAR increased by 39%. Although there was no significant impact of aerosols on air temperature (p 〉 0.05), aerosols decreased vapor pressure deficit by more than 40%. We found that the plantation GPP changed exponentially with AOD, indicating that aerosols elevated GPP by about 37% under severe aerosol pollution (AOD ≥ 1) compared with background aerosol (AOD 〈 0.4). Aerosols type also had a significant effect on GPP. We concluded that aerosols could increase the GPP of the poplar plantation, and the promotion effect of aerosols on poplar plantation would not be significantly reduced until AOD was
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    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
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