41 results on '"Lõhmus, Asko"'
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2. Distribution of grouse and their predators in peatland forest landscapes: A case for ecological integrity
3. A synthesis of multi-taxa management experiments to guide forest biodiversity conservation in Europe
4. From tree-related microhabitats to ecosystem management: A tree-scale investigation in productive forests in Estonia
5. Restoring functional forested peatlands by combining ditch-blocking and partial cutting: An amphibian perspective
6. Breaking out from a restricted range: Alternative habitat models to assess population perspectives
7. Letter to the editor regarding Uri et al. (2022): The dynamics of the carbon storage and fluxes in Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris) chronosequence
8. What does FSC forest certification contribute to biodiversity conservation in relation to national legislation?
9. Handbook of field sampling for multi-taxon biodiversity studies in European forests
10. Development rates and persistence of the microhabitats initiated by disease and injuries in live trees: A review
11. Restoration dilemmas between future ecosystem and current species values: The concept and a practical approach in Estonian mires
12. Assessing long-term effectiveness of green-tree retention
13. Is shelterwood harvesting preferable over clear-cutting for sustaining dead-wood pools? The case of Estonian conifer forests
14. Assigning indicator taxa based on assemblage patterns: Beware of the effort and the objective!
15. Disentangling the effects of seminatural forestry on an ecosystem good: Bilberry (Vaccinium myrtillus) in Estonia
16. Deadwood-rich managed forests provide insights into the old-forest association of wood-inhabiting fungi
17. Brushwood removal from ditch banks attracts breeding frogs in drained forests
18. Habitat indicators for cavity-nesters: The polypore Phellinus pini in pine forests
19. Semi-naturally managed forests support diverse land snail assemblages in Estonia
20. Beyond a minimum substrate supply: Sustaining saproxylic beetles in semi-natural forest management
21. Surveying wood-inhabiting fungi: Most molecularly detected polypore species form fruit-bodies within short distances
22. ‘Old-forest fungi’ are not always what they seem: the case of Antrodia crassa
23. Fish assemblages in forest drainage ditches: Degraded small streams or novel habitats?
24. Ash dieback can rapidly eradicate isolated epiphyte populations in production forests: A case study
25. Intensive local surveys can complement rapid survey techniques to provide insights into the population size and ecology of lichenised fungi
26. The dying legacy of green-tree retention: Different habitat values for polypores and wood-inhabiting lichens
27. What do we lack in agri-environment schemes? The case of farmland birds in Estonia
28. Bird communities in hemiboreal old-growth forests: The roles of food supply, stand structure, and site type
29. Impacts of artificial drainage on amphibian breeding sites in hemiboreal forests
30. Tree cavities in forests – The broad distribution pattern of a keystone structure for biodiversity
31. Lichen communities on treefall mounds depend more on root-plate than stand characteristics
32. Stand structure of hemiboreal old-growth forests: Characteristic features, variation among site types, and a comparison with FSC-certified mature stands in Estonia
33. Epiphyte communities on the trunks of retention trees stabilise in 5 years after timber harvesting, but remain threatened due to tree loss
34. Factors of species-specific detectability in conservation assessments of poorly studied taxa: The case of polypore fungi
35. For what, when, and where is green-tree retention better than clear-cutting? A review of the biodiversity aspects
36. Substratum diversity explains landscape-scale co-variation in the species-richness of bryophytes and lichens
37. Tree cavities in riverine forests: What determines their occurrence and use by hole-nesting passerines?
38. Old-growth structural elements in a strict reserve and commercial forest landscape in Estonia
39. Nest quality limits the number of hole-nesting passerines in their natural cavity-rich habitat
40. Nesting of the black stork (Ciconia nigra) and white-tailed eagle (Haliaeetus albicilla) in relation to forest management
41. Do Ural owls (Strix uralensis) suffer from the lack of nest sites in managed forests?
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