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Forest Ecology and Management

Resumen/Descripción – provisto por la editorial en inglés
Forest Ecology and Management publishes scientific articles linking forest ecology with forest management, focusing on the application of biological, ecological and social knowledge to the management and conservation of plantations and natural forests. The scope of the journal includes all forest ecosystems of the world.

A refereeing process ensures the quality and international interest of the manuscripts accepted for publication. The journal encourages communication between scientists in disparate fields who share a common interest in ecology and forest management, bridging the gap between research workers and forest managers.

We encourage submission of papers that will have the strongest interest and value to the Journal's international readership. Some key features of papers with strong interest include:
1. Clear connections between the ecology and management of forests;
2. Novel ideas or approaches to important challenges in forest ecology and management;
3. Studies that address a population of interest beyond the scale of single research sites (see the editorial), Three key points in the design of forest experiments, Forest Ecology and Management 255 (2008) 2022-2023);
4. Review Articles on timely, important topics. Authors are encouraged to contact one of the editors to discuss the potential suitability of a review manuscript.

The Journal receives more submissions than we can publish, so authors should demonstrate a clear link with forest ecology and management. For example, papers dealing with remote sensing are acceptable with a strong link between ecology and management, but not if the main thrust is technological and methodological. Similarly, papers dealing with molecular biology and genetics may be more appropriate in specialized journals, depending on their emphasis.

Some papers are rejected because they do not fit within the aims and scope detailed above. Some examples include:
1. Papers in which the primary focus is, for example, entomology or pathology or soil science or remote sensing, but where the links to forest ecology and management are not clear or strongly developed;
2. Model-based investigations that do not include a substantial field-based validation component;
3. Local or regional studies of diversity aimed at the development of conservation policies;
4. The effects of forestry practices that do not include a strong ecological component (for example, the effects of weed control or fertilizer application on yield);
5. Social or economic or policy studies (we recommend 'Forest Policy and Economics': http://www.journals.elsevier.com/forest-policy-and-economics); urban forestry (we recommend Urban Forestry and Urban Greening (http://www.journals.elsevier.com/urban-forestry-and-urban-greening), and agroforestry studies.
6. Application of routine forest inventory approaches to assess standing biomass or content of carbon and nutrients at the stand scale.

Please bookmark this page as: http://www.elsevier.com/locate/foreco

For more information/suggestions/comments please contact AuthorSupport@elsevier.com
Palabras clave – provistas por la editorial

No disponibles.

Disponibilidad
Institución detectada Período Navegá Descargá Solicitá
No detectada desde ene. 1976 / hasta dic. 2023 ScienceDirect

Información

Tipo de recurso:

revistas

ISSN impreso

0378-1127

ISSN electrónico

1872-7042

Editor responsable

Elsevier

País de edición

Países Bajos

Fecha de publicación

Tabla de contenidos

Plasticity of yield and nitrogen removal in 56 Populus deltoides×P. nigra genotypes over two rotations of short-rotation coppice

Julien Toillon; Erwin Dallé; Guillaume Bodineau; Alain Berthelot; Jean-Charles Bastien; Franck Brignolas; Nicolas Marron

Palabras clave: Forestry; Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law; Nature and Landscape Conservation.

Pp. 55-65

Improving biomass estimation in a Populus short rotation coppice plantation

Nerea Oliveira; Roque Rodríguez-Soalleiro; María José Hernández; Isabel Cañellas; Hortensia Sixto; César Pérez-Cruzado

Pp. 194-206

Recovery of species composition over 46 years in a logged Australian tropical forest following different intensity silvicultural treatments

Jing Hu; John Herbohn; Robin L. Chazdon; Jack Baynes; Jarrah Wills; John Meadows; Md. Shawkat I. Sohel

Palabras clave: Forestry; Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law; Nature and Landscape Conservation.

Pp. 660-666

Assessing terrestrial laser scanning for developing non-destructive biomass allometry

Atticus E.L. Stovall; Kristina J. Anderson-Teixeira; Herman H. Shugart

Palabras clave: Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law; Nature and Landscape Conservation; Forestry.

Pp. 217-229

Is the introduction of novel exotic forest tree species a rational response to rapid environmental change? – A British perspective

Richard Ennos; Joan CottrellORCID; Jeanette Hall; David O'BrienORCID

Palabras clave: Forestry; Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law; Nature and Landscape Conservation.

Pp. 718-728

Response of black-water floodplain (igapó) forests to flood pulse regulation in a dammed Amazonian river

Guilherme de Sousa LoboORCID; Florian Wittmann; Maria Teresa Fernandez Piedade

Pp. 110-118

Beyond species richness and biomass: Impact of selective logging and silvicultural treatments on the functional composition of a neotropical forest

Benjamin YguelORCID; Camille PiponiotORCID; Ariane MirabelORCID; Aurelie Dourdain; Bruno Hérault; Sylvie Gourlet-Fleury; Pierre-Michel ForgetORCID; Colin Fontaine

Palabras clave: Forestry; Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law; Nature and Landscape Conservation.

Pp. 528-534

Carbon emissions and potential emissions reductions from low-intensity selective logging in southwestern Amazonia

Rosa C. Goodman; Matias Harman Aramburu; Trisha Gopalakrishna; Francis E. Putz; Nelson Gutiérrez; Jose Luis Mena Alvarez; Naikoa Aguilar-Amuchastegui; Peter W. Ellis

Palabras clave: Forestry; Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law; Nature and Landscape Conservation.

Pp. 18-27

Land restoration by tree planting in the tropics and subtropics improves soil infiltration, but some critical gaps still hinder conclusive results

Sergio E. Lozano-Baez; Miguel Cooper; Paula MeliORCID; Silvio F.B. Ferraz; Ricardo Ribeiro Rodrigues; Thomas J. Sauer

Palabras clave: Forestry; Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law; Nature and Landscape Conservation.

Pp. 89-95

What drives ponderosa pine regeneration following wildfire in the western United States?

Julie E. Korb; Paula J. Fornwalt; Camille S. Stevens-Rumann

Palabras clave: Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law; Nature and Landscape Conservation; Forestry.

Pp. 117663