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of 6
pro vyhledávání: '"Ross J. Phillips"'
Publikováno v:
Forest Ecology and Management. 304:80-88
Prescribed burning is a common management tool for upland hardwood forests, with wildlife habitat improvement an often cited goal. Fire management for wildlife conservation requires understanding how species respond to burning at different frequencie
Publikováno v:
Forest Science. 59:322-334
The fire-oak hypothesis asserts that the current lack of fire is a reason behind the widespread oak (Quercus spp.) regeneration difficulties of eastern North America, and use of prescribed burning can help solve this problem. We performed a meta-anal
Autor:
Todd A. Hutchinson, Thomas A. Waldrop, Daniel A. Yaussy, Ross J. Phillips, Ralph E. J. Boerner, Lucy Brudnak
Publikováno v:
Forest Ecology and Management. 255:3117-3129
Prescribed fire and mechanical treatments were tested at the two hardwood sites of the National Fire and Fire Surrogate Study (southern and central Appalachian regions) for impacts to stand structure. After two fires and one mechanical treatment, no
Autor:
Aimee Livings Tomcho, Thomas A. Waldrop, Joseph Tomcho, Dean M. Simon, Ross J. Phillips, Cathryn H. Greenberg, J. Drew Lanham
Publikováno v:
Journal of Wildlife Management. 71:1906-1916
We compared the effects of 3 fuel reduction techniques and a control on breeding birds during 2001–2005 using 50-m point counts. Four experimental units, each >14 ha, were contained within each of 3 replicate blocks at the Green River Game Land, Po
Publikováno v:
Pedobiologia. 47:466-470
This study documents the occurrence of an aggressive invasive earthworm species in undisturbed forest soils of the southern Appalachian Mountains of northern Georgia, USA. Earthworms were sorted from samples collected in pitfall traps that had been s
Publikováno v:
A Goal-Oriented Approach to Forest Landscape Restoration ISBN: 9789400753372
Fire-adapted ecosystems have degraded over the past 100 years as fuel accumulation and changes in species composition have resulted from fire suppression and altered disturbance regimes. Species that are dependent on or adapted to fire are in decline
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_________::53d8b9a92107ef3690abd858a09e5f52
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-5338-9_9
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-5338-9_9