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Scandinavian Journal of Forest Research: journal home: Taylor & Francis and Nordic Forest Research 1986–present English 8 issues per year Schweizerische Zeitschrift für Forstwesen: journal home: Swiss Forest Society 1850–present German and French; occasionally English and Italian 6 issues per year Scottish Forestry: journal home
Other important forestry products included wood pitch, tar, and potash, which were produced for export beginning in the Middle Ages. [5] Forestry work expanded to Norrland beginning in the early 19th century, and the resulting cleared areas became the site of small farms and pastures. Extensive logging resulted in the development of a sawmill ...
Uprooted tree stumps. Stump harvesting is not a new process. Records of tree stumps being dug out of the ground for wood fuel go back hundreds of years in Europe. It was practiced in the 1970s in Swedish forests before declining in popularity, but is being considered again there now that there is a greater need for fuel wood.
Several species of firs are found in Denmark: . Abies alba [1]; Abies amabilis; Abies balsamea; Abies borisii-regis (alba x cephalonica); Abies cephalonica; Abies concolor; Abies concolor var. lowiana
This category includes scientific journals in forestry and related applied or sub-fields. Journals may be international, regional or national in scope. Journals may be international, regional or national in scope.
The institute's goal is providing high quality research back practices, forest management knowledge, products, and services, for improving productivity meanwhile reduce costs, also leads the industry to become more sustainable; It also plays a role to increase country's competitiveness in forestry management and help Sweden as a country to ...
The Scandinavian coastal conifer forest is a terrestrial ecoregion as defined by WWF [1] and National Geographic. [2] The broad definition is based on climatic parameters and includes a long area along the western Norwegian coast from Lindesnes Municipality and north to approximately Senja Municipality (further north summers are too cool for pine in coastal areas); in essence areas along the ...
Ulmus glabra, the wych elm or Scots elm, has the widest range of the European elm species, from Ireland eastwards to the Ural Mountains, and from the Arctic Circle south to the mountains of the Peloponnese and Sicily, where the species reaches its southern limit in Europe; [2] it is also found in Iran.