Forest Ecology and Management
Overview
Forest Ecology and Management is a reputable scientific journal that focuses on the study and understanding of forest ecosystems and their sustainable management. It publishes high-quality research articles, reviews, and case studies that contribute to the advancement of knowledge in areas such as forest dynamics, biodiversity conservation, forest restoration, and the ecological impacts of human activities. This journal serves as a valuable resource for researchers, practitioners, and policymakers involved in forest ecology and management worldwide.
Details
Details
Abbr.
For Ecol Manage
Start
1976
End
Continuing
Frequency
8 issues per year <, June 1983->
p-ISSN
0378-1127
Country
Netherlands
Language
English
Metrics
Metrics
h-index / Ranks: 659
206
SJR / Ranks: 2844
1197
CiteScore / Ranks: 2750
7.20
JIF / Ranks: 2561
3.7
Recent Articles
1.
Tubby K, Adamcikova K, Adamson K, Akiba M, Barnes I, Boron P, et al.
For Ecol Manage
. 2023 May;
536:120847.
PMID: 37193248
European forests are threatened by increasing numbers of invasive pests and pathogens. Over the past century, a foliar pathogen predominantly of spp., has expanded its range globally, and is increasing...
2.
Shaw D, Beedlow P, Lee E, Woodruff D, Meigs G, Calkins S, et al.
For Ecol Manage
. 2023 Mar;
525:1-27.
PMID: 36968296
Forest biological disturbance agents (BDAs) are insects, pathogens, and parasitic plants that affect tree decline, mortality, and forest ecosystems processes. BDAs are commonly thought to increase the likelihood and severity...
3.
Liziniewicz M, Berlin M, Solvin T, Hallingback H, Haapanen M, Ruotsalainen S, et al.
For Ecol Manage
. 2023 Jan;
528:120628.
PMID: 36650887
Norway spruce is a major industrial tree species in Fennoscandia and future productivity of the species must be secured by matching the variation in adaptation of the species with suitable...
4.
Zimova S, Dobor L, Hlasny T, Rammer W, Seidl R
For Ecol Manage
. 2022 Jun;
475:118408.
PMID: 35686290
Forest disturbance regimes are intensifying in many parts of the globe. In order to mitigate disturbance impacts a number of management responses have been proposed, yet their effectiveness in addressing...
5.
Seidl R, Albrich K, Erb K, Formayer H, Leidinger D, Leitinger G, et al.
For Ecol Manage
. 2022 Jun;
445:37-47.
PMID: 35645457
Forest ecosystems provide a wide variety of ecosystem services to society. In harsh mountain environments, the regulating services of forests are of particular importance. Managing mountain forests for regulating services...
6.
Braziunas K, Hansen W, Seidl R, Rammer W, Turner M
For Ecol Manage
. 2022 Jun;
430:460-471.
PMID: 35645456
High-severity, infrequent fires in forests shape landscape mosaics of stand age and structure for decades to centuries, and forest structure can vary substantially even among same-aged stands. This variability among...
7.
Roe J, Bayles Z
For Ecol Manage
. 2022 Mar;
486.
PMID: 35250156
Prescribed fire is an essential management practice in pyrogenic ecosystems, but fire can also be a significant disturbance and source of mortality for both target and non-target species. Seasonal periods...
8.
Rinaldi F, Jonsson R
For Ecol Manage
. 2020 Jul;
468:118186.
PMID: 32684662
Forests and their ecosystem services are subjected to uncertain factors, causing drastic changes in forest production and/or market conditions, the impacts of which cannot be precisely estimated beforehand. We introduce...
9.
Majasalmi T, Rautiainen M
For Ecol Manage
. 2020 Jun;
466:118100.
PMID: 32549649
Information on understory composition and its relationships with the overstory tree canopy, especially leaf area index (LAI), is crucially needed in, e.g., modeling land-atmosphere interactions and productivity of forests. There...
10.
Cornejo-Oviedo E, Voelker S, Mainwaring D, Maguire D, Meinzer F, Brooks J
For Ecol Manage
. 2019 Nov;
389:285-295.
PMID: 31666758
Many hectares of intensively managed Douglas-fir ( Mirb. Franco) stands in western North America are fertilized with nitrogen (N) to increase growth rates, but only about ⅔ of all stands...