Catálogo de publicaciones - revistas
Agroforestry Systems
Resumen/Descripción – provisto por la editorial en inglés
Agroforestry Systems is an international scientific journal that publishes results of novel, high impact original research, critical reviews and short communications on any aspect of agroforestry. The journal particularly encourages contributions that demonstrate the role of agroforestry in providing commodity as well non-commodity benefits such as ecosystem services. Papers dealing with both biophysical and socioeconomic aspects are welcome. These include results of investigations of a fundamental or applied nature dealing with integrated systems involving trees and crops and/or livestock. Manuscripts that are purely descriptive in nature or confirmatory in nature of well-established findings, and with limited international scope are discouraged. To be acceptable for publication, the information presented must be relevant to a context wider than the specific location where the study was undertaken, and provide new insight or make a significant contribution to the agroforestry knowledge base.Palabras clave – provistas por la editorial
Science-Life Sciences-Agroforestry
Disponibilidad
Institución detectada | Período | Navegá | Descargá | Solicitá |
---|---|---|---|---|
No detectada | desde abr. 1997 / hasta dic. 2023 | SpringerLink |
Información
Tipo de recurso:
revistas
ISSN impreso
0167-4366
ISSN electrónico
1572-9680
País de edición
Australia
Fecha de publicación
1982-
Cobertura temática
Tabla de contenidos
Vegetation-utilization pattern and performance of small ruminants in woodlands with altering heights of non-pine plants
Shailes Bhattrai; Uma Karki; Sanjok Poudel; Bidur Paneru; Nevershi Ellis
Palabras clave: Agronomy and Crop Science; Forestry.
Pp. 505-516
Soil quality and growth of southern pines in silvopastures and woodlands integrated with small ruminants
Uma Karki; Bidur Paneru; Anand Tiwari; Nevershi Ellis; Shailes Bhattrai; Lila Karki; Sanjok Poudel
Palabras clave: Agronomy and Crop Science; Forestry.
Pp. 517-526
Impacts of different grazing approaches on woodland ecosystem properties
Diane Mayerfeld; Eric Kruger; Rhonda Gildersleeve; Mark Rickenbach
Palabras clave: Agronomy and Crop Science; Forestry.
Pp. 527-540
Is livestock producers’ interest in silvopasture related to their operational perspectives or characteristics?
Philadelphia Wilkens; John F. Munsell; John H. Fike; Gabriel J. Pent; Gregory E. Frey
Palabras clave: Agronomy and Crop Science; Forestry.
Pp. 541-551
Thinning forests or planting fields? Producer preferences for establishing silvopasture
Philadelphia Wilkens; John F. Munsell; John H. Fike; Gabriel J. Pent; Gregory E. Frey; Benjamin J. Addlestone; Adam K. Downing
Palabras clave: Agronomy and Crop Science; Forestry.
Pp. 553-564
Initial performance of red mulberry (Morus rubra L.) under a light gradient: an overlooked alternative livestock forage?
Ryan Dibala; Shibu Jose; Michael Gold; Robert Kallenbach; Benjamin Knapp
Palabras clave: Agronomy and Crop Science; Forestry.
Pp. 565-576
Effects of the silvopastoralism with sheep in the regeneration and survival of Abies hickelii (Flous and Gaussen)
Marisela Aparicio-Lechuga; Alejandro Lara-Bueno; Dante Arturo Rodríguez-Trejo; Miguel Uribe-Gómez; Guadalupe Montserrat Valencia-Trejo; Rufino López-Ordaz
Palabras clave: Agronomy and Crop Science; Forestry.
Pp. 577-587
Silvopastoral and conventional management of extensive livestock and the diversity of bats in fragments of tropical dry forest in Córdoba, Colombia
Jesús Ballesteros-Correa; Jairo Pérez-Torres
<jats:title>Abstract</jats:title><jats:p>The establishment of extensive livestock systems in the Colombian Caribbean Region has historically generated a strong loss of the tropical dry forest (TDF) with negative effects on biodiversity. Currently, the implementation of silvopastoral systems (SPS) has been proposed with strategy to curb the loss of biodiversity caused by the conventional management system (CS). The objective was to evaluate the effect of SPS and CS of extensive livestock on the assemblage of bats associated with fragments of TDF. During a continuous year and a sampling effort of 30,240 h-net/night, the structure and composition of bat assemblage between SPS and CS were compared. 2788 bats belonging to six families, 23 genera, and 39 species were captured. The <jats:italic>Phyllostomidae</jats:italic> family presented the highest species richness (<jats:italic>S</jats:italic> = 30), with the greatest abundance in the <jats:italic>Stenodermatinae</jats:italic> subfamily (n = 1543). Bat assemblage in the SPS fragments was more equitable; and the relative abundance per species, per genera, and per foraging guilds was also significantly higher. The capture success showed significant variations between the climatic seasons (dry and rainy). The rate of species turnover was higher in the CS fragments. The species <jats:italic>Artibeus planirostris, Artibeus lituratus, Carollia perspicillata, Carollia castanea, Phyllostomus discolor, Dermanura phaeotis, Uroderma convexum, Glossophaga soricina, C. brevicauda,</jats:italic> and <jats:italic>Sturnira lilium</jats:italic> accounted for 92% of the captures. In conclusion, frugivorous bats were more abundant in the SPS, type of extensive livestock management that can generate greater temporal stability of bat assemblage. This research provides the first scientific evidence of the positive effect of silvopastoral management on the diversity of bats in tropical dry forest areas of the Colombian Caribbean region.</jats:p>
Palabras clave: Agronomy and Crop Science; Forestry.
Pp. 589-601
Impact of short-rotation willow as riparian land-use practice on soil organic carbon fractions and composition from two contiguous wetland systems in the prairie pothole region
Shayeb Shahariar; Derek Peak; Raju Soolanayakanahally; Angela Bedard-Haughn
Palabras clave: Agronomy and Crop Science; Forestry.
Pp. 603-622