Institution
Forest Research Institute
Facility•Dehra Dūn, India•
About: Forest Research Institute is a facility organization based out in Dehra Dūn, India. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Forest management. The organization has 5320 authors who have published 7625 publications receiving 185876 citations.
Topics: Population, Forest management, Picea abies, Forest ecology, Scots pine
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute1, Harvard University2, University of Buea3, Conservation International4, University of Georgia5, Missouri Botanical Garden6, University of the Philippines Diliman7, Forest Research Institute8, Oregon State University9, Pontificia Universidad Católica del Ecuador10
TL;DR: Tropical forests that appear similar in tree number, basal area, and the family taxonomy of canopy trees nonetheless differ in ecological structure in ways that may impact the ecology of pollinators, dispersers, and herbivores and might reflect fundamental differences in canopy tree regeneration.
Abstract: In large samples of trees ≥1 cm dbh (more than 1 million trees and 3000 species), in six lowland tropical forests on three continents, we assigned species with >30 individuals to one of six classes of stature at maturity (SAM). We then compared the proportional representation of understory trees (1–2 cm dbh) among these classes. The understory of the three Asian sites was predominantly composed of the saplings of large-canopy trees whereas the African and American sites were more richly stocked with trees of the smaller SAM classes. Differences in class representation were related to taxonomic families that were present exclusively in one continent or another. Families found in the Asian plots but not in the American plot (e.g., Dipterocarpaceae, Fagaceae) were predominantly species of the largest SAM classes, whereas families exclusive to the American plots (e.g., Melastomataceae sensu stricto, Piperaceae, and Malvaceae [Bombacacoidea]) were predominantly species of small classes. The African plot was si...
65 citations
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TL;DR: The new Phytophthora polonica is characterized by the moderate to slow growth rate of its colony in carrot agar at 20 degrees C, high optimal and maximum growth temperatures, formation of catenulate, often lateral, hyphal swellings, large chlamydospores in agar media and in soil extract.
Abstract: In a survey of Phytophthora associated with alder decline in Poland, several isolates of a homothallic Phytophthora sp, which could not be assigned to other taxa including Phytophthora alni subspecies, were consistently recovered from rhizosphere soil samples. Their morphology and pathogenicity, as well as sequence data for three nuclear regions (internal transcribed spacer rDNA, elongation factor-1α and β-tubulin) and a coding mitochondrial DNA region ( nadh1 ), were examined. The new Phytophthora species is characterized by the moderate to slow growth rate of its colony in carrot agar at 20°C, high optimal ( c . 30°C) and maximum ( c . 38°C) growth temperatures, formation of catenulate, often lateral, hyphal swellings, large chlamydospores in agar media and in soil extract, persistent, ovoid to ellipsoid nonpapillate sporangia and large oogonia with paragynous and sometimes amphigynous antheridia. Phytophthora polonica was slightly pathogenic to alder twigs and not pathogenic to trunks of several tree species. In a phylogenetic analysis using either Bayesian inference or maximum likelihood methods, P. polonica falls in clade 8 ‘sensu [Kroon (2004)][1]’ of Phytophthora .
[1]: #ref-31
65 citations
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TL;DR: The results suggest a much higher reduction in crop yield and much smaller economic gain of the Paulownia-wheat intercropping system than previous studies on the similar PaulownIA-wheats intercropped systems in China.
Abstract: Measurements of photosynthetically active radiation (PAR), leaf photosynthesis, canopy leaf area index (LAI) and crop yield were carried from flowering to maturity to study the effects of tree shading on crop yield in a Paulownia-wheat intercropping system in China. We found that the tree shading reduced the amount of incoming PAR within the intercropping system by 22%, 44% and 56% during flowering, grain-filling and maturing, respectively. The amount of PAR intercepted by the wheat crop inside the intercropping system was 34%, 55% and 68% less than the crop outside the intercropping system during flowering, grain-filling and maturing. Estimates of PAR-saturated leaf photosynthetic rate were not affected by tree shading, and the differences between the wheat yield inside the intercropping system and outside the intercropping system can be explained by the difference in the amount of PAR intercepted. Total grain numbers and grain dry weight per 1000 grains were linearly correlated with the amount of PAR intercepted during 7 days prior to anthesis and during anthesis and grain-filling, respectively. As compared with the wheat crop outside the intercropping system, grain numbers and grain dry weight were reduced by 36% and 25%, respectively. As a result wheat yield inside the intercropping system was 51% lower than that outside the intercropping system. Our results suggest a much higher reduction in crop yield and much smaller economic gain of the Paulownia-wheat intercropping system than previous studies on the similar Paulownia-wheat intercropping systems in China.
65 citations
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TL;DR: The fractile cut-points used to define abnormal lipid values had a profound influence on the diagnosis of FCHL, and no single ultracentrifugation variable could discriminate reliably affected family members from non-affected family members.
65 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors report several years of field studies on preventative silvicultural control of pine wilt disease (PWD) in 16 Korean districts that had newly infected stands.
65 citations
Authors
Showing all 5332 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Kari Alitalo | 174 | 817 | 114231 |
Jaakko Kaprio | 163 | 1532 | 126320 |
Glenn D. Prestwich | 88 | 690 | 42758 |
John K. Volkman | 78 | 212 | 21931 |
Petri T. Kovanen | 77 | 432 | 27171 |
Hailong Wang | 69 | 647 | 19652 |
Mika Ala-Korpela | 65 | 319 | 18048 |
Heikki Henttonen | 64 | 271 | 14536 |
Zhihong Xu | 57 | 438 | 11832 |
Kari Pulkki | 54 | 215 | 11166 |
Louis A. Schipper | 53 | 192 | 9224 |
Sang Young Lee | 53 | 271 | 9917 |
Young-Joon Ahn | 52 | 288 | 9121 |
Venkatesh Narayanamurti | 49 | 258 | 9399 |
Francis M. Kelliher | 49 | 124 | 8599 |