Reprint

Forest Insects and Pathogens in a Changing Environment: Ecology, Monitoring & Genetics (IUFRO Joint Meeting of WP7.03.05 & 7.03.10)

Edited by
September 2019
158 pages
  • ISBN978-3-03921-511-9 (Paperback)
  • ISBN978-3-03921-512-6 (PDF)

This book is a reprint of the Special Issue Forest Insects and Pathogens in a Changing Environment: Ecology, Monitoring & Genetics (IUFRO Joint Meeting of WP7.03.05 & 7.03.10) that was published in

Biology & Life Sciences
Environmental & Earth Sciences
Summary

After the successful conclusion of the Joint Meeting of IUFRO’s 7.03.05 & 7.03.10 working parties and given the exciting and novel studies that have been presented in the framework of this meeting, we decided to present some of these studies in the current Special Issue of Forests. To make this issue more appealing and interesting to everyone in the field of Forest Protection, studies that cover a wide range of topics were selected, ranging from ecology and phylogeography to forest management and protection. More importantly, as these studies refer to pests and pathogens from different parts of the world, it is expected that the knowledge gained can be further used in the protection of natural environment worldwide.

Format
  • Paperback
License
© 2019 by the authors; CC BY-NC-ND license
Keywords
Buprestidae; Coraebus florentinus; Mediterranean forests; oak; Quercus; selective pruning; wood borer insects; forest health; mine reclamation; Forestry Reclamation Approach; Phytophthora; ink disease; American chestnut; Trypodendron laeve; Carpathian Mountains; Romania; distribution; Fraxinus excelsior; invasive pathogens; ash dieback; chlorophyll-a fluorescence; phenols; triterpenes; sterols; ammonium phosphite; disease management; biological control; chestnut blight; Cryphonectria parasitica; hypovirulence; silvicultural interventions; aggregated retention; clearcutting; coniferous forest; deciduous forest; functional group; Lepidoptera; multivariate analysis; Betula; birch; fungal phytopathogens; ITS; Japanese red pine pure forests; Cephalcia kunyushanica; stand type; stand characteristics; soil properties; black timber bark beetle; biological invasion; Xyleborini; ambrosia beetle; spread; occurrence; ethanol; forest management; Ips duplicatus; pathogen; vector; infection level; invasion; latitude; Ips sexdentatus; Scolytinae; mtDNA; phylogeography; flying ability; human-mediated transport