Sweet chestnut has been for many centuries fundamental for the Italian mountainous economies, where this kind of forest was traditionally managed in short rotation to rapidly produce wood biomass. Due to the social and economic changes, which made such management scheme unprofitable especially on the steep and remote slopes, such practice has been mainly abandoned and most of chestnut forests became over-aged and very dense, causing an increase of localized slope instability. In this work the effect of over-aged chestnut coppice forests on shallow landslides was analysed by evaluating and comparing mechanical contribution to soil shear strength provided by root systems in differently managed chestnut stands. The study area is located in Val...
The role played by plant roots in reinforcing mechanically the soil is widely recognized and numerou...
The role of vegetation in preventing shallow soil mass movement is now fairly well understood, parti...
final pdf file in the open access journal Forests 10, 341, 2019. https://www.mdpi.com/1999-4907/10/...
Sweet chestnut has been fundamental for Italian mountainous economies for many centuries. This kind ...
Sweet chestnut dominates the Italian mountainous territories, and in particular the lowand mid- alti...
The abandonment of chestnut coppice management since the end of WWII has caused a general overaging ...
Chestnut forests represent an important environmental and landscape element in Europe, especially in...
In European mountain regions, forests play an important role in the mitigation of risk due to natura...
Forests can prevent and/or mitigate hydrogeomorphic hazards in mountainous landscapes. Their effect ...
Gap-oriented forestry is a subject that is gaining interest worldwide as a compromise between econom...
In areas with similar soil properties and geomorphological conditions, different land uses could pro...
In forestlands on steep slopes, where the shallow soil can be considered a non renewabl...
The growing demand for energy and raw materials, together with climate change and globalization, are...
The prescription of stand rotation according to site conditions and economic targets requires yield ...
Abstract: Decades of quantitative measurement indicate that roots can mechanically reinforce shallow...
The role played by plant roots in reinforcing mechanically the soil is widely recognized and numerou...
The role of vegetation in preventing shallow soil mass movement is now fairly well understood, parti...
final pdf file in the open access journal Forests 10, 341, 2019. https://www.mdpi.com/1999-4907/10/...
Sweet chestnut has been fundamental for Italian mountainous economies for many centuries. This kind ...
Sweet chestnut dominates the Italian mountainous territories, and in particular the lowand mid- alti...
The abandonment of chestnut coppice management since the end of WWII has caused a general overaging ...
Chestnut forests represent an important environmental and landscape element in Europe, especially in...
In European mountain regions, forests play an important role in the mitigation of risk due to natura...
Forests can prevent and/or mitigate hydrogeomorphic hazards in mountainous landscapes. Their effect ...
Gap-oriented forestry is a subject that is gaining interest worldwide as a compromise between econom...
In areas with similar soil properties and geomorphological conditions, different land uses could pro...
In forestlands on steep slopes, where the shallow soil can be considered a non renewabl...
The growing demand for energy and raw materials, together with climate change and globalization, are...
The prescription of stand rotation according to site conditions and economic targets requires yield ...
Abstract: Decades of quantitative measurement indicate that roots can mechanically reinforce shallow...
The role played by plant roots in reinforcing mechanically the soil is widely recognized and numerou...
The role of vegetation in preventing shallow soil mass movement is now fairly well understood, parti...
final pdf file in the open access journal Forests 10, 341, 2019. https://www.mdpi.com/1999-4907/10/...