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The Indian Forester is a peer-reviewed scientific journal covering research in forestry. It is one of the oldest forestry journals still in existence in the world. [ 1 ] It was established in 1875 and is published by the Indian Council of Forestry Research and Education .
The Indian Forester: journal home: Indian Council of Forestry Research and Education: 1875–present English 12 issues per year International Journal of Forest Engineering: journal home: Taylor & Francis and Forest Products Society 1989–present English 3 issues per year Indian Journal of Forestry: journal home: Bishen Singh Mahendra Pal Singh ...
The Indian Forester; International Wood Products Journal; J. Journal of Forest Economics; Journal of Forestry; M. Montes (journal) N. New Zealand Journal of Forestry; P.
1912 - Madras Forest Academy, Coimbatore, Tamil Nadu, South India; 1913 - School of Forestry, University of Montana. Established by the 12th Legislature of Montana. [19] 1919 - Moscow Forest Engineering Institute, Russia's "first higher education institution for training forest engineers"; now Moscow State Forest University [4]
The origins of the Journal of Forestry go back to October 1902, when one of its predecessors, the Forestry Quarterly, was first published at the New York State College of Forestry at Cornell University, in Ithaca, New York, under the editorial advisement of Bernhard E. Fernow, John Gifford, and Walter Mulford. [3]
Alfred Wyndham Lushington CIE (22 September 1860 – 25 March 1920) [1] was an Anglo-Indian dendrologist born in Allahabad, India and who worked as a forest officer in the Madras Presidency. Publications
This led to the creation of the Bombay forest conservancy and Gibson was made conservator of forests. This was the first case of state management of forests in the world. [3] He wrote two valuable books on Indian flora: Bombay Flora, published in 1861; and Hand-book to the Forests of the Bombay Presidency, published in 1863. [4] [5]
As of 2010, the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations estimates India's forest cover to be about 68 million hectares, or 22% of the country's area [4] [5] The 2013 Forest Survey of India states its forest cover increased to 69.8 million hectares by 2012, per satellite measurements; this represents an increase of 5,871 square ...