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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TL;DR: Of 5 severe abdominal symptoms assessed, bloating and fullness were most prevalent in patients with IBS-C, and linaclotide significantly improved all abdominal symptoms, global measures, and IBS/IBS-QOL in subpopulations of patients with severe abdominal Symptoms.
56 citations
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National University of Singapore1, University of Cambridge2, International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources3, Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute4, University of Vermont5, Harvard University6, Wildlife Conservation Society7, The Nature Conservancy8, Forest Research Institute9, Australian National University10, Fauna & Flora International11, Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources12, Tetra Tech13, Lancaster University14, University of East Anglia15, Environmental Law Institute16, University of California, Berkeley17
TL;DR: A horizon-scanning approach was used to assess the 40 emerging issues most affecting Myanmar's forests, including internal conflict, land-tenure insecurity, large-scale agricultural development, demise of state timber enterprises, shortfalls in government revenue and capacity, and opening of new deforestation frontiers with new roads, mines, and hydroelectric dams.
Abstract: Political and economic transitions have had substantial impacts on forest conservation. Where transitions are underway or anticipated, historical precedent and methods for systematically assessing future trends should be used to anticipate likely threats to forest conservation and design appropriate and prescient policy measures to counteract them. Myanmar is transitioning from an authoritarian, centralized state with a highly regulated economy to a more decentralized and economically liberal democracy and is working to end a long-running civil war. With these transitions in mind, we used a horizon-scanning approach to assess the 40 emerging issues most affecting Myanmar's forests, including internal conflict, land-tenure insecurity, large-scale agricultural development, demise of state timber enterprises, shortfalls in government revenue and capacity, and opening of new deforestation frontiers with new roads, mines, and hydroelectric dams. Averting these threats will require, for example, overhauling governance models, building capacity, improving infrastructure- and energy-project planning, and reforming land-tenure and environmental-protection laws. Although challenges to conservation in Myanmar are daunting, the political transition offers an opportunity for conservationists and researchers to help shape a future that enhances Myanmar's social, economic, and environmental potential while learning and applying lessons from other countries. Our approach and results are relevant to other countries undergoing similar transitions.
56 citations
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TL;DR: It is concluded that Taiwan is within the centre of origin of most Phytophthora taxa found, Pc A2 is an introduced invasive pathogen, and interspecific hybridizations play a major role in speciation and species radiations in diverse natural ecosystems.
Abstract: In 2013 a survey of Phytophthora diversity was performed in 25 natural and seminatural forest stands and 25 rivers in temperate montane and subtropical lowland regions of Taiwan. Using baiting assays, 10 described species and 17 previously unknown taxa of Phytophthora were isolated from 71.5% of the 144 rhizosphere soil samples from 33 of 40 tree species sampled in 24 forest stands, and from 19 rivers: P. capensis, P. citrophthora, P. plurivora, P. tropicalis, P. citricola VII, P. sp. × botryosa-like, P. sp. × meadii-like and P. sp. occultans-like from Clade 2; P. palmivora from Clade 4; P. castaneae and P. heveae from Clade 5; P. chlamydospora and P. sp. forestsoil-like from Clade 6; P. cinnamomi (Pc), P. parvispora, P. attenuata nom. prov., P. flexuosa nom. prov., P. formosa nom. prov., P. intricata nom. prov., P. × incrassata nom. prov. and P. × heterohybrida nom. prov. from Clade 7; P. sp. palustris and five new hybrid species from Clade 9. The A1 mating type of Pc was widespread in both montane and lowland forests and rarely associated with disease, whereas the A2 mating type was limited to lowland forests and in some cases causing severe dieback. Most other Phytophthora species were not associated with obvious disease symptoms. It is concluded that (i) Taiwan is within the centre of origin of most Phytophthora taxa found, (ii) Pc A2 is an introduced invasive pathogen, and (iii) interspecific hybridizations play a major role in speciation and species radiations in diverse natural ecosystems.
56 citations
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American Museum of Natural History1, University of Oxford2, Moscow State University3, Wroclaw University of Environmental and Life Sciences4, Forest Research Institute5, Cardiff University6, CABI7, Russian Academy of Sciences8, University of Copenhagen9, Staatliches Museum für Naturkunde Stuttgart10, Naturalis11, Masaryk University12, Silesian Museum13, Museum für Naturkunde14, University of Pécs15, Charles University in Prague16, University of Stavanger17, Geological Museum18, Royal Museum for Central Africa19, Research Institute for Nature and Forest20, Trinity College, Dublin21, Institut national de la recherche agronomique22, University of Debrecen23, Czech University of Life Sciences Prague24, Bishop Museum25, Sapienza University of Rome26, National University of Singapore27, California Department of Food and Agriculture28, Opole University29, National Museum of Natural History30, University of Eastern Finland31
TL;DR: There has been a steady growth in knowledge of European Diptera for the last two centuries, but there is a shift towards a larger fraction of the new species being found among the families of the nematoceran grade (lower Diptera), which due to a larger number of small-sized species may be considered as taxonomically more challenging.
Abstract: Fauna Europaea provides a public web-service with an index of scientific names (including important synonyms) of all extant multicellular European terrestrial and freshwater animals and their geographical distribution at the level of countries and major islands (east of the Urals and excluding the Caucasus region). The Fauna Europaea project comprises about 230,000 taxonomic names, including 130,000 accepted species and 14,000 accepted subspecies, which is much more than the originally projected number of 100,000 species. Fauna Europaea represents a huge effort by more than 400 contributing taxonomic specialists throughout Europe and is a unique (standard) reference suitable for many user communities in science, government, industry, nature conservation and education. The Diptera–Brachycera is one of the 58 Fauna Europaea major taxonomic groups, and data have been compiled by a network of 55 specialists.
Within the two-winged insects (Diptera), the Brachycera constitute a monophyletic group, which is generally given rank of suborder. The Brachycera may be classified into the probably paraphyletic 'lower brachyceran grade' and the monophyletic Eremoneura. The latter contains the Empidoidea, the Apystomyioidea with a single Nearctic species, and the Cyclorrhapha, which in turn is divided into the paraphyletic 'aschizan grade' and the monophyletic Schizophora. The latter is traditionally divided into the paraphyletic 'acalyptrate grade' and the monophyletic Calyptratae. Our knowledge of the European fauna of Diptera–Brachycera varies tremendously among families, from the reasonably well known hoverflies (Syrphidae) to the extremely poorly known scuttle flies (Phoridae). There has been a steady growth in our knowledge of European Diptera for the last two centuries, with no apparent slow down, but there is a shift towards a larger fraction of the new species being found among the families of the nematoceran grade (lower Diptera), which due to a larger number of small-sized species may be considered as taxonomically more challenging.
Most of Europe is highly industrialised and has a high human population density, and the more fertile habitats are extensively cultivated. This has undoubtedly increased the extinction risk for numerous species of brachyceran flies, yet with the recent re-discovery of Thyreophora cynophila (Panzer), there are no known cases of extinction at a European level. However, few national Red Lists have extensive information on Diptera.
For the Diptera–Brachycera, data from 96 families containing 11,751 species are included in this paper.
56 citations
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TL;DR: To understand the nematicidal mode of action of phytochemicals derived from plant essential oils against the pinewood nematode, 97 compounds were evaluated for their inhibitory effects on B. xylophilus acetylcholinesterases and coniferyl alcohol showed the strongest inhibition of BxACE-3 followed by (+)-α-pinene and cis-nerolidol.
56 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 |