24 results on '"Mues, Volker"'
Search Results
2. Operational assessment of aboveground tree volume and biomass by terrestrial laser scanning
- Author
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Olschofsky, Konstantin, Mues, Volker, and Köhl, Michael
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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3. Land Use Spatial Optimization for Sustainable Wood Utilization at the Regional Level: A Case Study from Vietnam
- Author
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Nguyen Dang Cuong, Köhl Michael, and Mues Volker
- Subjects
Acacia mangium ,profit optimization ,timber demand ,linear programming ,Plant ecology ,QK900-989 - Abstract
Forest landscape restoration is a widely accepted approach to sustainable forest management. In addition to revitalizing degraded sites, forest landscape restoration can increase the supply of sustainable timber and thereby reduce logging in natural forests. The current study presents a spatial land use optimization model and utilizes a linear programming algorithm that integrates timber production and timber processing chains to meet timber demand trade-offs and timber supply. The objective is to maximize yield and profit from forest plantations under volatile timber demands. The model was parameterized for a case study in Thai Nguyen Province, Vietnam, where most forest plantations grow Acacia mangium (A. mangium). Data were obtained from field surveys on tree growth, as well as from questionnaires to collect social-economic information and determine the timber demand of local wood processing mills. The integration of land use and wood utilization approaches reduces the amount of land needed to maintain a sustainable timber supply and simultaneously leads to higher yields and profits from forest plantations. This forest management solution combines economic and timber yield aspects and promotes measures focused on economic sustainability and land resource efficiency.
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- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Detection of temporal trends in atmospheric deposition of inorganic nitrogen and sulphate to forests in Europe
- Author
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Waldner, Peter, Marchetto, Aldo, Thimonier, Anne, Schmitt, Maria, Rogora, Michela, Granke, Oliver, Mues, Volker, Hansen, Karin, Pihl Karlsson, Gunilla, Žlindra, Daniel, Clarke, Nicholas, Verstraeten, Arne, Lazdins, Andis, Schimming, Claus, Iacoban, Carmen, Lindroos, Antti-Jussi, Vanguelova, Elena, Benham, Sue, Meesenburg, Henning, Nicolas, Manuel, Kowalska, Anna, Apuhtin, Vladislav, Napa, Ulle, Lachmanová, Zora, Kristoefel, Ferdinand, Bleeker, Albert, Ingerslev, Morten, Vesterdal, Lars, Molina, Juan, Fischer, Uwe, Seidling, Walter, Jonard, Mathieu, O'Dea, Philip, Johnson, James, Fischer, Richard, and Lorenz, Martin
- Published
- 2014
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- View/download PDF
5. Modeling the CO2-effects of forest management and wood usage on a regional basis
- Author
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Knauf, Marcus, Köhl, Michael, Mues, Volker, Olschofsky, Konstantin, and Frühwald, Arno
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Land Use Spatial Optimization for Sustainable Wood Utilization at the Regional Level: A Case Study from Vietnam
- Author
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Köhl Michael, Mues Volker, and Nguyen Dang Cuong
- Subjects
040101 forestry ,timber demand ,biology ,Land use ,Agroforestry ,020209 energy ,Sustainable forest management ,Forest management ,Resource efficiency ,Forestry ,linear programming ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,02 engineering and technology ,lcsh:QK900-989 ,biology.organism_classification ,Profit (economics) ,Wood processing ,Acacia mangium ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,lcsh:Plant ecology ,0401 agriculture, forestry, and fisheries ,Production (economics) ,Business ,profit, optimization - Abstract
Forest landscape restoration is a widely accepted approach to sustainable forest management. In addition to revitalizing degraded sites, forest landscape restoration can increase the supply of sustainable timber and thereby reduce logging in natural forests. The current study presents a spatial land use optimization model and utilizes a linear programming algorithm that integrates timber production and timber processing chains to meet timber demand trade-offs and timber supply. The objective is to maximize yield and profit from forest plantations under volatile timber demands. The model was parameterized for a case study in Thai Nguyen Province, Vietnam, where most forest plantations grow Acacia mangium (A. mangium). Data were obtained from field surveys on tree growth, as well as from questionnaires to collect social-economic information and determine the timber demand of local wood processing mills. The integration of land use and wood utilization approaches reduces the amount of land needed to maintain a sustainable timber supply and simultaneously leads to higher yields and profits from forest plantations. This forest management solution combines economic and timber yield aspects and promotes measures focused on economic sustainability and land resource efficiency.
- Published
- 2021
7. Monitoring of atmospheric deposition in European forests and an overview on its implication on forest condition
- Author
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Fischer, Richard, Mues, Volker, Ulrich, Erwin, Becher, Georg, and Lorenz, Martin
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. STATISTICAL AND GEOSTATISTICAL MODELLING OF PRELIMINARILY ADJUSTED DEFOLIATION ON AN EUROPEAN SCALE
- Author
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SEIDLING, WALTER and MUES, VOLKER
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Simulating effects of forest management on European forest carbon stocks and carbon balance
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Härkönen, Sana, Mäkelä-Carter, Aniki, Berninger, F., Achten, Wouter, Chirici, G., Hasenauer, Hubert, Marchetti, Marco, Merganic, J, Merganicova, K, Mohren, Frits, Moreno, Adam, Mues, Volker, Mura, M, Mura, Mateo, Neumann, Mathias, and Svoboda, M
- Subjects
Mécanique agricole et forestière ,Environnement et pollution ,Aménagement forestier - Abstract
info:eu-repo/semantics/published
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- 2014
10. Forest condition in Europe: 2010 technical report of ICP Forests
- Author
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Fischer, Richard, Lorenz, Martin, Granke, Oliver, Mues, Volker, Iost, Susanne, van Dobben, H., Reinds, Gert J., and de Vries, Wim
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ddc:630 - Published
- 2010
11. Forest Focus Monitoring Database System - Validation Methodology 2008
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HIEDERER Roland, DURRANT Tracy, GRANKE Oliver, LAMBOTTE Michel, LORENZ Martin, MIGNON Bertrand, and MUES Volker
- Abstract
Forest Focus (Regulation (EC) No 2152/2003) is a Community scheme for harmonized, broadbased, comprehensive and long-term monitoring of European forest ecosystems. Under this scheme the monitoring of air pollution effects on forests is carried out by participating countries on the basis of the systematic network of observation points (Level I) and of the network of observation plots for intensive and continuous monitoring (Level II). According to Article 15(1) of the Forest Focus Regulation Member States shall annually, through the designated authorities and agencies, forward to the Commission geo-referenced data gathered under the scheme, together with a report on them by means of computer telecommunications and/or electronic technology. For managing the data JRC has implemented a Forest Focus Monitoring Database System. This report presents the methodology used to validate Level II data. The procedures applied at the various stages of checking data Compliance, Conformity and Uniformity are described. The report also provides detailed information on the interpretation of data formats and the threshold values used in the Conformity range tests., JRC.H.7-Land management and natural hazards
- Published
- 2008
12. Forest condition in Europe: 2006 technical report of ICP Forests
- Author
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Lorenz, Martin, Fischer, Richard, Becher, Georg, Mues, Volker, Seidling, Walter, Kraft, Philipp, and Nagel, Hans-Dietrich
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ddc:630 - Published
- 2006
13. Climate variability drives recent tree mortality in Europe.
- Author
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Neumann, Mathias, Mues, Volker, Moreno, Adam, Hasenauer, Hubert, and Seidl, Rupert
- Subjects
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ECOLOGICAL disturbances , *FOREST declines , *PRIMARY productivity (Biology) , *REMOTE sensing , *TREE mortality - Abstract
Tree mortality is an important process in forest ecosystems, frequently hypothesized to be highly climate sensitive. Yet, tree death remains one of the least understood processes of forest dynamics. Recently, changes in tree mortality have been observed in forests around the globe, which could profoundly affect ecosystem functioning and services provisioning to society. We describe continental-scale patterns of recent tree mortality from the only consistent pan-European forest monitoring network, identifying recent mortality hotspots in southern and northern Europe. Analyzing 925,462 annual observations of 235,895 trees between 2000 and 2012, we determine the influence of climate variability and tree age on interannual variation in tree mortality using Cox proportional hazard models. Warm summers as well as high seasonal variability in precipitation increased the likelihood of tree death. However, our data also suggest that reduced cold-induced mortality could compensate increased mortality related to peak temperatures in a warming climate. Besides climate variability, age was an important driver of tree mortality, with individual mortality probability decreasing with age over the first century of a trees life. A considerable portion of the observed variation in tree mortality could be explained by satellite-derived net primary productivity, suggesting that widely available remote sensing products can be used as an early warning indicator of widespread tree mortality. Our findings advance the understanding of patterns of large-scale tree mortality by demonstrating the influence of seasonal and diurnal climate variation, and highlight the potential of state-of-the-art remote sensing to anticipate an increased likelihood of tree mortality in space and time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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- View/download PDF
14. Forest condition in Europe: 2005 technical report of ICP Forests
- Author
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Lorenz, Martin, Becher, Georg, Mues, Volker, Fischer, Richard, Becker, R., Calatayud, V., Dise, N., Krause, G. H. M., Sanz, M., and Ulrich, E.
- Subjects
ddc:630 - Published
- 2005
15. Forest condition in Europe: 2004 technical report of ICP Forests
- Author
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Lorenz, Martin, Becher, Georg, Mues, Volker, Fischer, Richard, Ulrich, E., Dobbertin, Matthias, and Stofer, S.
- Subjects
ddc:630 - Published
- 2004
16. Temporal development of crown condition of Picea abies: Two-step approach using statistical and geostatistical methods
- Author
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Mues, Volker and Fischer, Richard
- Subjects
ddc:630 - Abstract
The aim of the presented Internal Report 2001 is to analyse the temporal development of defoliation of Picea abies in Europe by means of the transnational Level I data set. Additional external deposition and meteorological data are used to describe the influence of single stress factors. Evaluations are conducted using multivariate linear models in a two step analysis. Step 1 evaluates variables that were available in annual or higher time resolution in relation to annual mean plot defoliation for the years 1994 to 2000. The regression coefficient for the interaction term 'year*plotid' is interpreted as plot-wise time trend. It is presented in maps and after a geostatistical analysis detecting spatial autocorrelation interpolated by the geostatistical method 'kriging'. Rooted mean squared errors (RMSE) are calculated for all plots. They give a sensitive measure for the discontinuity of defoliation development and serve as a conservative estimate for the accuracy of the linear models offering a tool for quality control when interpreting the time trends. Results of step 1 show significant influences of insects, age and country as well as their interaction terms on annual mean defoliation. Time trends were only significant for plots and countries, which shows that for Picea abies there is no significant mean European wide trend. Fungi gave implausible results, whereas summer precipitation showed insignificant but mostly plausible effects. Larger regions with deteriorating defoliation are observed in southern Sweden and Finland, in Estonia as well as in alpine regions of Switzerland, Austria, and Slovenia. Improving crown condition is observed in northern Scandinavia, Lithuania, southern Poland, and in Slovakia. The analysis of the RMSE reveals single plots with extreme defoliation values, these could however only be partly explained by information available from the Level I data base. The interpretation of time trends at these plots has to be conducted with care. Step 2 of the analysis is the explanation of plot-wise time trends and RMSE values by predictors of low temporal resolution. Preliminary results show that trends of defoliation are correlated with the difference in SOx deposition between 1998 and 1997, with water availability and base saturation. The promising results for sulphur deposition underline the necessity to include annual deposition values into step 1 of the analysis in the future. Site characteristics may show closer correlation when combined with meteorological data of higher time resolution. After discussion of the results in an editorial group the evaluations are foreseen to be extended and applied to other main tree species for a presentation in the Forest Condition Report of UN/ECE and EU in 2002.
- Published
- 2003
17. Evaluations of the international cross-calibration courses 2001 and 2002
- Author
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Mues, Volker and Seidling, Walter
- Subjects
ddc:630 - Published
- 2003
18. Creating a Regional MODIS Satellite-Driven Net Primary Production Dataset for European Forests.
- Author
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Neumann, Mathias, Moreno, Adam, Thurnher, Christopher, Mues, Volker, Härkönen, Sanna, Mura, Matteo, Bouriaud, Olivier, Lang, Mait, Cardellini, Giuseppe, Thivolle-Cazat, Alain, Bronisz, Karol, Merganic, Jan, Alberdi, Iciar, Astrup, Rasmus, Mohren, Frits, Maosheng Zhao, and Hasenauer, Hubert
- Subjects
PRIMARY productivity (Biology) ,FOREST ecology ,MODIS (Spectroradiometer) ,ARTIFICIAL satellites ,CARBON sequestration - Abstract
Net primary production (NPP) is an important ecological metric for studying forest ecosystems and their carbon sequestration, for assessing the potential supply of food or timber and quantifying the impacts of climate change on ecosystems. The global MODIS NPP dataset using the MOD17 algorithm provides valuable information for monitoring NPP at 1-km resolution. Since coarse-resolution global climate data are used, the global dataset may contain uncertainties for Europe. We used a 1-km daily gridded European climate data set with the MOD17 algorithm to create the regional NPP dataset MODIS EURO. For evaluation of this new dataset, we compare MODIS EURO with terrestrial driven NPP from analyzing and harmonizing forest inventory data (NFI) from 196,434 plots in 12 European countries as well as the global MODIS NPP dataset for the years 2000 to 2012. Comparing these three NPP datasets, we found that the global MODIS NPP dataset differs from NFI NPP by 26%, while MODIS EURO only differs by 7%. MODIS EURO also agrees with NFI NPP across scales (from continental, regional to country) and gradients (elevation, location, tree age, dominant species, etc.). The agreement is particularly good for elevation, dominant species or tree height. This suggests that using improved climate data allows the MOD17 algorithm to provide realistic NPP estimates for Europe. Local discrepancies between MODIS EURO and NFI NPP can be related to differences in stand density due to forest management and the national carbon estimation methods. With this study, we provide a consistent, temporally continuous and spatially explicit productivity dataset for the years 2000 to 2012 on a 1-km resolution, which can be used to assess climate change impacts on ecosystems or the potential biomass supply of the European forests for an increasing bio-based economy. MODIS EURO data are made freely available at ftp://palantir.boku.ac.at/Public/MODIS_EURO. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Comparison of carbon estimation methods for European forests.
- Author
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Neumann, Mathias, Moreno, Adam, Mues, Volker, Härkönen, Sanna, Mura, Matteo, Bouriaud, Olivier, Lang, Mait, Achten, Wouter M.J., Thivolle-Cazat, Alain, Bronisz, Karol, Merganič, Ján, Decuyper, Mathieu, Alberdi, Iciar, Astrup, Rasmus, Mohren, Frits, and Hasenauer, Hubert
- Subjects
CARBON sequestration in forests ,FORESTS & forestry ,FOREST surveys ,PLANT species ,ESTIMATION theory ,COMPARATIVE studies ,DATA analysis - Abstract
National and international carbon reporting systems require information on carbon stocks of forests. For this purpose, terrestrial assessment systems such as forest inventory data in combination with carbon estimation methods are often used. In this study we analyze and compare terrestrial carbon estimation methods from 12 European countries. The country-specific methods are applied to five European tree species ( Fagus sylvatica L. , Quercus robur L. , Betula pendula Roth, Picea abies (L.) Karst. and Pinus sylvestris L.), using a standardized theoretically-generated tree dataset. We avoid any bias due to data collection and/or sample design by using this approach. We are then able to demonstrate the conceptual differences in the resulting carbon estimates with regard to the applied country-specific method. In our study we analyze (i) allometric biomass functions, (ii) biomass expansion factors in combination with volume functions and (iii) a combination of both. The results of the analysis show discrepancies in the resulting estimates for total tree carbon and for single tree compartments across the countries analyzed of up to 140 t carbon/ha. After grouping the country-specific approaches by European Forest regions, the deviation within the results in each region is smaller but still remains. This indicates that part of the observed differences can be attributed to varying growing conditions and tree properties throughout Europe. However, the large remaining error is caused by differences in the conceptual approach, different tree allometry, the sample material used for developing the biomass estimation models and the definition of the tree compartments. These issues are currently not addressed and require consideration for reliable and consistent carbon estimates throughout Europe. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Effects Evaluation and Risk Assessment of Air Pollutants Deposition at European Monitoring Sites of the ICP Forests.
- Author
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Fischer, Richard, Scheuschner, Thomas, Schlutow, Angela, Granke, Oliver, Mues, Volker, Olschofsky, Konstantin, and Nagel, Hans-Dieter
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Modeling the CO2-effects of forest management and wood usage on a regional basis.
- Author
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Knauf, Marcus, Köhl, Michael, Mues, Volker, Olschofsky, Konstantin, and Frühwald, Arno
- Subjects
FOREST management ,CARBON dioxide & the environment ,CARBON offsetting ,GREENHOUSE gases & the environment ,CLIMATE change mitigation ,INTERNATIONAL cooperation - Abstract
Background: At the 15
th Conference of Parties of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change, Copenhagen, 2009, harvested wood products were identified as an additional carbon pool. This modification eliminates inconsistencies in greenhouse gas reporting by recognizing the role of the forest and timber sector in the global carbon cycle. Any additional CO2 -effects related to wood usage are not considered by this modification. This results in a downward bias when the contribution of the forest and timber sector to climate change mitigation is assessed. The following article analyses the overall contribution to climate protection made by the forest management and wood utilization through CO2 -emissions reduction using an example from the German state of North Rhine-Westphalia. Based on long term study periods (2011 to 2050 and 2100, respectively). Various alternative scenarios for forest management and wood usage are presented. Results: In the mid- to long-term (2050 and 2100, respectively) the net climate protection function of scenarios with varying levels of wood usage is higher than in scenarios without any wood usage. This is not observed for all scenarios on short and mid term evaluations. The advantages of wood usage are evident although the simulations resulted in high values for forest storage in the C pools. Even the carbon sink effect due to temporal accumulation of deadwood during the period from 2011 to 2100 is out balanced by the potential of wood usage effects. Conclusions: A full assessment of the CO2 -effects of the forest management requires an assessment of the forest supplemented with an assessment of the effects of wood usage. CO2 -emission reductions through both fuel and material substitution as well as CO2 sink in wood products need to be considered. An integrated assessment of the climate protection function based on the analysis of the study's scenarios provides decision parameters for a strategic approach to climate protection with regard to forest management and wood use at regional and national levels. The short-term evaluation of subsystems can be misleading, rendering long-term evaluations (until 2100, or even longer) more effective. This is also consistent with the inherently long-term perspective of forest management decisions and measures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Reactions to geovisualization: an experience from a European project.
- Author
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Andrienko, Gennady, Andrienko, Natalia, Fischer, Richard, Mues, Volker, and Schuck, Andreas
- Subjects
GEOGRAPHIC information systems ,INFORMATION storage & retrieval systems ,FORESTS & forestry ,AGRICULTURE ,FORESTERS ,VISUALIZATION ,ELECTRONIC information resources ,ELECTRONIC data processing - Abstract
The paper is written jointly by two parties, computer scientists specializing in geovisualization and experts in forestry, who cooperated within a joint project. The authors tell a story about an attempt of the geovisualizers to introduce the foresters to the concept and principles of exploratory data analysis and to the use of visualization for systematic and comprehensive data exploration. This endeavor should be considered as an informal experiment rather than a rigorous scientific study. Unlike customary tests of the usability of specific tools and techniques, the geovisualizers did not give the forestry specialists a series of tasks to carry out by applying geovisualization tools and did not try to measure how well the foresters performed. The idea of the geovisualizers was to demonstrate the principles and power of exploratory data analysis to the foresters by example. For this purpose, the geovisualizers performed an exploration of a non‐trivial data set by themselves and reported the procedure, the principles, the techniques, and the findings to the foresters. The reaction of the foresters uncovered a range of fundamental issues that are relevant to geovisualization and information visualization research. The authors analyze these issues from their perspectives and formulate a set of questions which researchers in geovisualization should be asking. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. A climate-sensitive forest model for assessing impacts of forest management in Europe
- Author
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Härkönen, Sanna, Neumann, Mathias, Mues, Volker, Berninger, Frank, Bronisz, Karol, Cardellini, Giuseppe, Chirici, Gherardo, Hasenauer, Hubert, Koehl, Michael, Lang, Mait, Merganicova, Katarina, Mohren, Frits, Moiseyev, Aleksandrovič, Moreno, Adam, Mura, Matteo, Muys, Bart, Olschofsky, Konstantin, Del Perugia, Barbara, Rørstad, Per K., Solberg, Birger, Thivolle-Cazat, Alain, Trotsiuk, Volodymyr, and Mäkelä, Annikki
- Subjects
Forest planning ,NPP ,FORMIT ,Sustainability ,13. Climate action ,Timber harvests ,Bioenergy ,15. Life on land ,Disturbances ,Bioeconomy ,Scenario analysis ,Model - Abstract
FORMIT-M is a widely applicable, open-access, simple and flexible, climate-sensitive forest management simulator requiring only standard forest inventory data as input. It combines a process-based carbon balance approach with a strong inventory-based empirical component. The model has been linked to the global forest sector model EFI-GTM to secure consistency between timber cutting and demand, although prescribed harvest scenarios can also be used. Here we introduce the structure of the model and demonstrate its use with example simulations until the end of the 21st century in Europe, comparing different management scenarios in different regions under climate change. The model was consistent with country-level statistics of growing stock volumes (R2 = 0.938) and its projections of climate impact on growth agreed with other studies. The management changes had a greater impact on growing stocks, harvest potential and carbon balance than projected climate change, at least in the absence of increased disturbance rates., Environmental Modelling & Software, 115, ISSN:1364-8152, ISSN:1873-6726
24. Forest health status in Europe.
- Author
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Lorenz M and Mues V
- Subjects
- Ecosystem, Europe, Nitrates analysis, Quaternary Ammonium Compounds analysis, Sulfates analysis, Weather, Air Pollution, Environmental Monitoring, Trees
- Abstract
Forest health status in Europe is assessed by the International Cooperative Programme on Assessment and Monitoring of Air Pollution Effects on Forests (ICP Forests). Established by the Convention on Long-Range Transboundary Air Pollution (CLRTAP) under the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe (UNECE), the ICP Forests has been monitoring forest condition in close cooperation with the European Commission (EC) for 20 years. The present paper describes the latest results of the deposition measurements on permanent monitoring plots and of the extensive defoliation sample survey. The findings reveal marked spatial patterns in bulk and throughfall depositions of nitrate (N-NO3(-)), ammonium (N-NH4(+)), and sulfate (S-SO4(2-)), as well as an obvious decrease in bulk and throughfall deposition of sulfate. Latest analyses of defoliation data confirm previous results, indicating a high correlation with weather extremes.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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