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Your search keyword '"Destructive sampling"' showing total 258 results

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258 results on '"Destructive sampling"'

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1. Late-rotation nitrogen fertilization of Douglas-fir: growth response and fibre properties

2. Rapid, nondestructive estimation of forest understory biomass using a handheld laser rangefinder.

3. Nutrient ratios, foliar vector analysis, and nutrient use efficiency of four conifer stands growing under contrasting competing vegetation control treatments in the Pacific Northwest of the United States.

4. Challenges in estimating forest biomass: use of allometric equations for three boreal tree species.

5. Effects of early respacing on physico-mechanical properties of naturally regenerated Picea sitchensis in Great Britain.

6. Evaluation of mobile laser scanning acquisition scenarios for automated wood volume estimation in a temperate hardwood forest using quantitative structural models.

7. Late-rotation nitrogen fertilization of Douglas-fir: growth response and fibre properties.

8. Species-specific and generalized allometric equations for improving aboveground biomass estimations of 33 understory woody species in northeastern China forest ecosystems.

9. New aboveground biomass equations by components for small black spruce in peatland ecosystems of Western Canada.

10. A framework for modeling the dynamics of first-order branches and spatial distribution of knots in loblolly pine trees.

11. Wood density and stocks of coarse woody debris in a northwestern Amazonian landscape.

12. The influence of thinning and tree size on the sapwood area / leaf area ratio in coigue.

13. Estimating forest canopy bulk density using six indirect methods.

14. Hitchhiker planting: mixed-species container stock planting as a novel tool to increase plant diversity on industrially disturbed sites.

15. Planting methods influence revegetation success of native species in an arid environment.

16. Insights about wood density in Atlantic Forest ecosystems: spatial variability and alternative measurement

17. Biogeochemical responses to multiyear above-canopy applications of nitrogen at a jack pine (Pinus banksiana) forest in northern Alberta, Canada.

18. Translocating seed sources to new geoclimatic environments has limited effect on lumber quality of eastern Canadian white spruce.

19. Overlooked sources of methane emissions from trees: branches and wounds.

20. Rapid, nondestructive estimation of forest understory biomass using a handheld laser rangefinder

21. Additional biomass estimation alternatives: nonlinear two- and three-stage least squares and full information maximum likelihood for slash pine.

22. Differences in wood anatomy and chemistry of a Eucalyptus urophylla clone explained by site climate conditions.

23. Models to predict whole-disk specific gravity and moisture content in planted longleaf pine from cutover and old field sites.

24. Modelling specific gravity and diameter inside bark of western hemlock and Sitka spruce growing in southeast Alaska.

25. Best of both worlds: hybrids of two commercially important pines (Pinus contorta × Pinus banksiana) combine increased growth potential and high drought tolerance.

26. Biomass models for three species with different growth forms and geographic distribution in the Brazilian Atlantic forest.

27. Fine-scale altitudinal gradients influence the relationships between structural attributes and aboveground biomass in Central Africa.

28. Modeling the number of the first- and second-order branches within the live tree crown of Korean larch plantations in Northeast China.

29. Climate and size of previous cone crops contribute to large-scale synchronous cone production in balsam fir.

30. Wood density variation in naturally regenerated stands of Pinus ponderosa in northern Arizona, USA.

31. Generalized additive models reveal among-stand variation in live tree biomass equations.

32. Non-uniform growth dynamics of a dominant boreal tree species (Picea mariana) in the face of rapid climate change.

33. What factors should be accounted for when developing a generalized taper function for black wattle trees?

34. Real-time monitoring of deadwood moisture in forests: lessons learned from an intensive case study.

35. Augmenting size models for Pinus strobiformis seedlings using dimensional estimates from unmanned aircraft systems.

36. Incorporating stand density effects in modeling the taper of red pine plantations.

37. Effects of overstory competition on canopy recruitment patterns of naturally regenerated longleaf pine on two site types.

38. Boreal old-growth forest structural diversity challenges aerial photographic survey accuracy.

39. Tree species diversity and composition relationship to biomass, understory community, and crown architecture in intensively managed plantations of the coastal Pacific Northwest, USA.

40. Analysis of stand density effects on the stem form of Norway spruce trees and volume miscalculation by traditional form factor equations using terrestrial laser scanning (TLS).

41. Estimating individual-tree aboveground biomass of tree species in the western U.S.A.

42. White ash (Fraxinus americana) survival in the core of the emerald ash borer (Agrilus planipennis) invasion.

43. Generalized stem taper and tree volume equations applied to eucalyptus of varying genetics in Brazil.

44. Different vital rates of Engelmann spruce and subalpine fir explain discordance in understory and overstory dominance.

45. Effects of solar heating on the moisture dynamics of forest floor litter in humid environments: composition, structure, and position matter.

46. Applications of the United States Forest Inventory and Analysis dataset: a review and future directions.

47. Effect of vegetation control, harvest intensity, and soil disturbance on 20-year jack pine stand development.

48. Variation in stem form and risk of four commercially important hardwood species in the Acadian Forest: implications for potential sawlog volume and tree classification systems.

49. Species comparison of the physical properties of loblolly and slash pine wood and bark.

50. Climate, location, and growth relationships with wood stiffness at the site, tree, and ring levels in white spruce ( Picea glauca) in the Boreal Plains ecozone1.

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