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Ernst Detlef Schulze

Researcher at Max Planck Society

Publications -  683
Citations -  75342

Ernst Detlef Schulze is an academic researcher from Max Planck Society. The author has contributed to research in topics: Biodiversity & Ecosystem. The author has an hindex of 133, co-authored 670 publications receiving 69504 citations. Previous affiliations of Ernst Detlef Schulze include University of Idaho & University of Utah.

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Sustainable forest management of Natura 2000 sites: a case study from a private forest in the Romanian Southern Carpathians

TL;DR: In this article, the authors analyzed a 500 ha privately owned forest within the Natura 2000 area and identified Habitat types and indicator species to measure environmental quality, and then considered a range of options that will result in sustainable forest management.
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Setting priorities for land management to mitigate climate change

TL;DR: Bottcher et al. as discussed by the authors evaluated land management options using real-life data of Thuringia, a region representative for central-western European conditions, and input from life cycle assessment, with a carbon tracking model.

Sind die deutschen Waldnaturschutzkonzepte adäquat für die Erhaltung der buchenwaldtypischen Flora und Fauna? Eine kritische Bewertung basierend auf der Herkunft der Waldarten des mitteleuropäischen Tief- und Hügellandes

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show that ausbreitungsstarke organismengruppen wie Pilze und Flechten, die zu der weiten Wanderung aus den eiszeitlichen refugien befähigt waren and die aufgrund der sehr späten massenausbretung der Biotopkontinuität and Habitattradition, bereits vorhandene ausbroitungshindernisse in bewirtschaftetem
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The use of forest inventory data for placing flight-interception traps in the forest canopy

TL;DR: The results show that forest inventory data are highly suitable to derive a priori trap placement strategies, even though these data are generally collected in only a small circle in each forest stand, and placing traps in the canopy centre largely avoids the problem of not being able to place traps at the desired height in the field.