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Tempering threats to temperate forests
Science, 2015C. I. Millar and N. L. Stephenson (“Temperate forest health in an era of emerging megadisturbance,” Review, 21 August, p. [823][1]) review the increasing susceptibility of temperate forests to stresses such as increasing droughts, insect outbreaks, and more frequent and intense fires (“
Donald, Waller +3 more
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, 2020
Symptoms of forest decline, apparently due to climate change, have become evident in the last 10 years on the Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt and northwestern temperate forest of Mexico, particularly a...
C. Sáenz-Romero +12 more
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Symptoms of forest decline, apparently due to climate change, have become evident in the last 10 years on the Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt and northwestern temperate forest of Mexico, particularly a...
C. Sáenz-Romero +12 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
The Journal of Ecology, 1992
Preface. List of Contributors. I. GENERAL ASPECTS. 1. Introduction (E. Rohrig). Definitions. Geographical distribution. References. 2. Climatic conditions (E. Rohrig). General climatic characteristics. Climate diagrams. References. 3. Floral composition and its evolutionary development (E. Rohrig). References. 4. Seasonality (E. Rohrig). Leaf shedding.
G. F. Peterken, E. Rohrig, B. Ulrich
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Preface. List of Contributors. I. GENERAL ASPECTS. 1. Introduction (E. Rohrig). Definitions. Geographical distribution. References. 2. Climatic conditions (E. Rohrig). General climatic characteristics. Climate diagrams. References. 3. Floral composition and its evolutionary development (E. Rohrig). References. 4. Seasonality (E. Rohrig). Leaf shedding.
G. F. Peterken, E. Rohrig, B. Ulrich
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2006
Temperate forests cover more than 20 million km of the Earth’s surface, including forest types such as boreal conifer forests, the mixed deciduous forests of the United States, Europe, western Asia, China and Japan, and the evergreen rain forests of Chile, New Zealand, and Tasmania. In the Northern Hemisphere, dominant tree genera are typically members
Adrian Newton, Alan Watson Featherstone
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Temperate forests cover more than 20 million km of the Earth’s surface, including forest types such as boreal conifer forests, the mixed deciduous forests of the United States, Europe, western Asia, China and Japan, and the evergreen rain forests of Chile, New Zealand, and Tasmania. In the Northern Hemisphere, dominant tree genera are typically members
Adrian Newton, Alan Watson Featherstone
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Soil organic matter formation and loss are mediated by root exudates in a temperate forest
Nature Geoscience, 2022N. Chari, B. Taylor
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2016
Temperate conifer forests are geographically and taxonomically diverse, occurring on five continents (North America, Europe, Asia, South America, and Africa). They contain some of the most iconic forests and tree species on the planet. Superlative examples include the rainforests of Douglas-fir, Sitka spruce, red cedar, and hemlock in the US Pacific ...
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Temperate conifer forests are geographically and taxonomically diverse, occurring on five continents (North America, Europe, Asia, South America, and Africa). They contain some of the most iconic forests and tree species on the planet. Superlative examples include the rainforests of Douglas-fir, Sitka spruce, red cedar, and hemlock in the US Pacific ...
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2012
Given the global distribution of human populations and their coincidence with temperate deciduous forests, it is likely that when most people consider the term “forest,” what comes to mind most frequently is the temperate deciduous forest biome. Although not to the level of their tropical counterparts, temperate deciduous forests typically display high
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Given the global distribution of human populations and their coincidence with temperate deciduous forests, it is likely that when most people consider the term “forest,” what comes to mind most frequently is the temperate deciduous forest biome. Although not to the level of their tropical counterparts, temperate deciduous forests typically display high
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Climatic sensitivity of temperate forests
Environmental Pollution, 1994Climatic change and associated global changes are of major interest to foresters, both in terms of forest ecology and of future forest production. Predicting the likely effects of global change on forests is extremely difficult due to the critical lack of information on regional changes in meteorological factors relevant to forests.
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