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Gabriel Hemery

Researcher at April

Publications -  31
Citations -  897

Gabriel Hemery is an academic researcher from April. The author has contributed to research in topics: Juglans & Forest management. The author has an hindex of 16, co-authored 30 publications receiving 738 citations.

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Applications of the crown diameter–stem diameter relationship for different species of broadleaved trees

TL;DR: The relationship between crown diameters and stem diameters was investigated in this article, showing that the relationship is very close to being linear, with an r2 value higher than 0.8.
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Growing scattered broadleaved tree species in Europe in a changing climate: a review of risks and opportunities

TL;DR: Scattered broadleaved tree species such as ashes, black alder, wild service tree, wild cherry and wild cherry are important components of European forests and are likely to have less ability to reproduce or adapt to shifting climate space than more widespread species.
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Rethinking the history of common walnut (Juglans regia L.) in Europe: Its origins and human interactions.

TL;DR: The demographic history of walnut and its routes of dispersal across Europe are reconstructed by integrating fossil pollen, cultural, and historical data with population genetics, and approximate Bayesian analysis and it is concluded that human-mediated admixture between Anatolian and Balkan walnut germplasm started in the Early Bronze Age.
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Landscape genetics of Persian walnut (Juglans regia L.) across its Asian range

TL;DR: It is determined that patches of high genetic diversity still exist in the Caucasus and mountains of Central Asia where J. regia might have survived after Pleistocene glaciations and the relevance of the preservation of walnut genetic resources in the Asian range is claimed.
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Welfare and environmental benefits of integrating commercially viable free-range broiler chickens into newly planted woodland: A UK case study

TL;DR: In this paper, the commercial, welfare and environmental impacts of rearing small colonies of free-range chickens in newly planted woodland at two sites in the UK, during the first two years of the enterprise, were investigated.