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Institution

Forest Research Institute

FacilityDehra 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.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors used the Wilhelmy technique to determine the properties of wood surfaces, including adhesion, contact angle, wettability and acid base contributions of four North American wood species.
Abstract: Summary Thermodynamic work of adhesion, contact angle, wettability and acidbase contributions of the wetting of four North American wood species were determined using the Wilhelmy technique. The wetting angles with water varied from 60 ° for Sitka spruce to 74 ° for Douglas-fir. The wood surfaces had a strong acidic character since the greatest interactions for all the wood species occurred with formamide (basic probe) while lesser interactions were obtained with ethylene glycol (acidic probe). In addition, dispersive and polar surface free energies of wood, 7 d and 7 p respectively, were determined using Wu's simultaneous equations. In general, 75 to 80% of the total surface free energy of wood was due to dispersion forces. Specific wettabilities of wood and advancing contact angles in thirty various organic liquids were also evaluated.

96 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The importance of stand-replacing disturbances for biomass carbon turnover globally over 2001–2014 is quantified, and the return time varied from less than 50 years in heavily managed temperate ecosystems to over 1,000 years in tropical evergreen forests.
Abstract: Forest disturbances that lead to the replacement of whole tree stands are a cornerstone of forest dynamics, with drivers that include fire, windthrow, biotic outbreaks and harvest. The frequency of disturbances may change over the next century with impacts on the age, composition and biomass of forests. However, the disturbance return time, that is, the mean interval between disturbance events, remains poorly characterized across the world’s forested biomes, which hinders the quantification of the role of disturbances in the global carbon cycle. Here we present the global distribution of stand-replacing disturbance return times inferred from satellite-based observations of forest loss. Prescribing this distribution within a vegetation model with a detailed representation of stand structure, we quantify the importance of stand-replacing disturbances for biomass carbon turnover globally over 2001–2014. The return time varied from less than 50 years in heavily managed temperate ecosystems to over 1,000 years in tropical evergreen forests. Stand-replacing disturbances accounted for 12.3% (95% confidence interval, 11.4–13.7%) of the annual biomass carbon turnover due to tree mortality globally, and in 44% of the forested area, biomass stocks are strongly sensitive to changes in the disturbance return time. Relatively small shifts in disturbance regimes in these areas would substantially influence the forest carbon sink that currently limits climate change by offsetting emissions. Forest stand-replacing disturbances significantly affect the biomass stocks in about a half of forested area globally, according to analyses of global forest loss from satellite data, together with a dynamic vegetation model.

96 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors reconstructed the May-July Standardized Precipitation Index (SPI) for the land area of most of Turkey and some adjoining regions from tree rings for the period 1251-1998.
Abstract: May–July Standardized Precipitation Index (SPI) for the land area of most of Turkey and some adjoining regions are reconstructed from tree rings for the period 1251–1998. The reconstruction was developed from principal components analysis (PCA) of four Juniperus excelsa chronologies from southwestern and south-central Turkey and is based on reliable and replicable statistical relationships between climate and tree ring growth. The SPI reconstruction shows climate variability on both interannual and interdecadal time scales. The longest period of consecutive drought years in the reconstruction (SPI threshold ≤−1) is 2 yr. These occur in 1607–1608, 1675–1676, and 1907–1908. There are five wet events (SPI threshold ≥+1) of two consecutive years each (1330–1331, 1428–1429, 1503–1504, 1629–1630, and 1913–1914). A 5-yr moving average of the reconstructed SPI shows that two sustained drought periods occurred from the mid to late 1300s and the early to mid 1900s. Both episodes are characterized by low variability.

95 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Ceftaroline fosamil is a promising broad-spectrum agent for the treatment of cSSSIs because of its ability to bind to penicillin-binding protein (PBP) 2a with high affinity and inhibit the biochemical activity of PBP 2a more efficiently than other presently available β-lactams.
Abstract: Ceftaroline fosamil is a novel cephalosporin with broad-spectrum activity against Gram-positive pathogens, including methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) and multidrug-resistant Streptococcus pneumoniae, and common Gram-negative organisms. The activity of ceftaroline against MRSA is attributed to its ability to bind to penicillin-binding protein (PBP) 2a with high affinity and inhibit the biochemical activity of PBP 2a more efficiently than other presently available β-lactams. The activity of ceftaroline against MRSA and the β-haemolytic streptococci makes it an attractive monotherapy agent for the treatment of complicated skin and skin structure infections (cSSSIs). Recent profiling and surveillance studies have shown that ceftaroline is active against contemporary skin pathogens collected from US and European medical centres in 2008. The mean free drug %T > MIC (percentage of time the drug concentration remains above the MIC) needed for stasis ranged from 26% for S. aureus to 39% for S. pneumoniae in the murine thigh infection model. Pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic target attainment predictions for 600 mg of ceftaroline fosamil every 12 h showed that the mean %T > MICs for which plasma free-drug concentrations exceeded an MIC of 1 and 2 mg/L were 71% and 51% of the dosing interval, respectively. For a 40% T > MIC target, the predicted attainments for infections due to pathogens for which ceftaroline MICs were 1 or 2 mg/L were 100% and 90%, respectively. Clinical and microbiological successes of ceftaroline fosamil in treating cSSSIs were demonstrated in two Phase III clinical studies, in which 96.8% of all baseline cSSSI isolates from the microbiologically evaluable population were inhibited by ceftaroline at ≤ 2 mg/L. Ceftaroline fosamil is a promising broad-spectrum agent for the treatment of cSSSIs.

95 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the use of moss analyses to compare heavy-metal pollution in Germany, Poland, the Czech Republic and the Slovak Republic was presented in the form of coloured contour maps using the geographic information system (GIS) ARC-Info.

95 citations


Authors

Showing all 5332 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Kari Alitalo174817114231
Jaakko Kaprio1631532126320
Glenn D. Prestwich8869042758
John K. Volkman7821221931
Petri T. Kovanen7743227171
Hailong Wang6964719652
Mika Ala-Korpela6531918048
Heikki Henttonen6427114536
Zhihong Xu5743811832
Kari Pulkki5421511166
Louis A. Schipper531929224
Sang Young Lee532719917
Young-Joon Ahn522889121
Venkatesh Narayanamurti492589399
Francis M. Kelliher491248599
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20236
202226
2021504
2020503
2019440
2018381