Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Ecological_thinning> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 76 of
76
with 100 triples per page.
- Ecological_thinning abstract "Ecological thinning is a silvicultural technique used in forest management that involves cutting trees to improve functions of a forest other than timber production.Although thinning originated as a man-made forest management tool, aimed at increasing timber yields, the shift from production forests to multifunctional forests brought with it the cutting of trees to manipulate an ecosystem for various reasons, ranging from removing non-native species from a plot to removing poplars growing on a riverside beach aimed at recreational use.Since the 1970s, leaving the thinned trees on the forest floor has become an increasingly common policy: wood can be decomposed in a more natural fashion, playing an important role in increasing biodiversity by providing habitat to various invertebrates, birds and small mammals. Many fungi (e.g. Calocera viscosa) and mosses are saproxylic or epixylic as well (e.g. Marchantiophyta) – some moss species completing their entire life-cycle on a single log.Where trees are managed under a commercial regime, competition is reduced by removing adjacent stems that exhibit less favourable timber quality potential. When left in a natural state trees will \"self-thin\", but this process can be unreliable in some circumstances. Examples of this can be found in the Buxus - Ironbark forests and woodlands of Victoria (Australia) where a large proportion of trees are coppice, resultant from timber cutting in decades gone by.".
- Ecological_thinning thumbnail Brachythecium_rutabulum_on_Populus_x_canadensis.jpg?width=300.
- Ecological_thinning wikiPageExternalLink Updated%20BITT%20Poster%20-%20rev%20May%202006.pdf.
- Ecological_thinning wikiPageExternalLink stem_density_thinning_report.pdf.
- Ecological_thinning wikiPageExternalLink 1park_boxironbark.cfm.
- Ecological_thinning wikiPageExternalLink index.asp.
- Ecological_thinning wikiPageID "6365732".
- Ecological_thinning wikiPageLength "12295".
- Ecological_thinning wikiPageOutDegree "46".
- Ecological_thinning wikiPageRevisionID "661725948".
- Ecological_thinning wikiPageWikiLink Acclimatization.
- Ecological_thinning wikiPageWikiLink Adaptive_management.
- Ecological_thinning wikiPageWikiLink Australia.
- Ecological_thinning wikiPageWikiLink Biodiversity.
- Ecological_thinning wikiPageWikiLink Bird.
- Ecological_thinning wikiPageWikiLink Box–ironbark_forest.
- Ecological_thinning wikiPageWikiLink Buxus.
- Ecological_thinning wikiPageWikiLink Calocera_viscosa.
- Ecological_thinning wikiPageWikiLink Canopy_(biology).
- Ecological_thinning wikiPageWikiLink Category:Environmental_terminology.
- Ecological_thinning wikiPageWikiLink Category:Forest_ecology.
- Ecological_thinning wikiPageWikiLink Category:Forest_management.
- Ecological_thinning wikiPageWikiLink Category:Forestry_and_sustainability.
- Ecological_thinning wikiPageWikiLink Category:Habitat.
- Ecological_thinning wikiPageWikiLink Category:Sustainable_agriculture.
- Ecological_thinning wikiPageWikiLink Conservation_movement.
- Ecological_thinning wikiPageWikiLink Coppicing.
- Ecological_thinning wikiPageWikiLink Decomposition.
- Ecological_thinning wikiPageWikiLink Ecosystem.
- Ecological_thinning wikiPageWikiLink Epixylic.
- Ecological_thinning wikiPageWikiLink Forest_management.
- Ecological_thinning wikiPageWikiLink Fungus.
- Ecological_thinning wikiPageWikiLink Introduced_species.
- Ecological_thinning wikiPageWikiLink Invertebrate.
- Ecological_thinning wikiPageWikiLink Ironbark.
- Ecological_thinning wikiPageWikiLink Lumber.
- Ecological_thinning wikiPageWikiLink Mammal.
- Ecological_thinning wikiPageWikiLink Marchantiophyta.
- Ecological_thinning wikiPageWikiLink Moss.
- Ecological_thinning wikiPageWikiLink Photosynthesis.
- Ecological_thinning wikiPageWikiLink Picea_abies.
- Ecological_thinning wikiPageWikiLink Populus.
- Ecological_thinning wikiPageWikiLink Silviculture.
- Ecological_thinning wikiPageWikiLink Stoma.
- Ecological_thinning wikiPageWikiLink Thinning.
- Ecological_thinning wikiPageWikiLink Tree_hollow.
- Ecological_thinning wikiPageWikiLink United_States.
- Ecological_thinning wikiPageWikiLink Victoria_(Australia).
- Ecological_thinning wikiPageWikiLink Wildlife_conservation.
- Ecological_thinning wikiPageWikiLink Woodland.
- Ecological_thinning wikiPageWikiLink Xylophagy.
- Ecological_thinning wikiPageWikiLink File:Brachythecium_rutabulum_on_Populus_x_canadensis.jpg.
- Ecological_thinning wikiPageWikiLinkText "Ecological thinning".
- Ecological_thinning wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Forestry.
- Ecological_thinning wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Ecological_thinning subject Category:Environmental_terminology.
- Ecological_thinning subject Category:Forest_ecology.
- Ecological_thinning subject Category:Forest_management.
- Ecological_thinning subject Category:Forestry_and_sustainability.
- Ecological_thinning subject Category:Habitat.
- Ecological_thinning subject Category:Sustainable_agriculture.
- Ecological_thinning hypernym Technique.
- Ecological_thinning type TopicalConcept.
- Ecological_thinning type Habitat.
- Ecological_thinning type Redirect.
- Ecological_thinning type Science.
- Ecological_thinning type Subfield.
- Ecological_thinning type Technology.
- Ecological_thinning comment "Ecological thinning is a silvicultural technique used in forest management that involves cutting trees to improve functions of a forest other than timber production.Although thinning originated as a man-made forest management tool, aimed at increasing timber yields, the shift from production forests to multifunctional forests brought with it the cutting of trees to manipulate an ecosystem for various reasons, ranging from removing non-native species from a plot to removing poplars growing on a riverside beach aimed at recreational use.Since the 1970s, leaving the thinned trees on the forest floor has become an increasingly common policy: wood can be decomposed in a more natural fashion, playing an important role in increasing biodiversity by providing habitat to various invertebrates, birds and small mammals. ".
- Ecological_thinning label "Ecological thinning".
- Ecological_thinning sameAs Q5333260.
- Ecological_thinning sameAs m.0g2n2j.
- Ecological_thinning sameAs Q5333260.
- Ecological_thinning wasDerivedFrom Ecological_thinning?oldid=661725948.
- Ecological_thinning depiction Brachythecium_rutabulum_on_Populus_x_canadensis.jpg.
- Ecological_thinning isPrimaryTopicOf Ecological_thinning.