373 results on '"land-use history"'
Search Results
352. Effects of Age and Distance on the Composition of Mixed Deciduous Forest Fragments in an Agricultural Landscape
353. Origin and Temporal Development of Macro-Scale Vegetation Patterns in the Cultural Landscape of Denmark
354. Long-Term Impacts of Agriculture on Soil Carbon and Nitrogen in New England Forests
355. Vegetation Development in a Southern Maine Pitch Pine-Scrub Oak Barren
356. Western Juniper Expansion on Adjacent Disturbed and Near-Relict Sites
357. The Origin of Present Forest Composition and Pattern in Southern Sweden
358. Soil Carbon and Nitrogen in a Pine-Oak Sand Plain in Central Massachusetts: Role of Vegetation and Land-Use History
359. Ecology and management of a forested landscape: fifty years on the Savannah River Site.
360. A Dendroecological Investigation of an Upland Oak-Dominated Forest within the Grand Prairie Region of Illinois
361. Forest History and the Development of Old-Growth Characteristics in Fragmented Boreal Forests
362. Changes in Nitrogen Cycling during the Past Century in a Northern Hardwood Forest
363. Influence of Historical, Geographical and Environmental Variables on Understorey Composition and Richness in Danish Forests
364. Effects of Environment and Land-Use History on Upland Forests of the Cary Arboretum, Hudson Valley, New York
365. Ecohydrological Changes in the Murray-Darling Basin. I. The Number of Trees Cleared Over Two Centuries
366. A Comparison of Rate of Succession Over 18 Yr in 10 Contrasting Old Fields
367. Assessing the Old-Growth Dependency of Two Saproxylic Beetle Species in the Southern Appalachian Mountains
368. Chronicling Landscape Transformation
369. Lack of herbaceous layer community recovery in postagricultural forests across three physiographic regions of New York1
370. Long-term impacts of deer exclosures on mixed-oak forest composition at the Valley Forge National Historical Park, Pennsylvania, USA1
371. Grassland management effects on soil bulk density
372. Old-field Succession in Western New York: The Progression of Forbs and Woody Species from Abandonment to Mature Forest
373. Why are acidophilic plants abundant in post-agricultural forests?1
Catalog
Books, media, physical & digital resources
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.