Converting coppices into high forests with continuous cover has often been established during the last decades as a management goal in hilly and mountainous Mediterranean areas to attenuate the negative effects that frequent clearcutting may have on soil, landscape and biodiversity conservation. The silvicultural tool usually adopted for this purpose is the gradual thinning of sprouts during the long span of time required to complete the conversion, that also allows the owner to keep harvesting some wood. This research compared the effects of various thinning intensities (three treatments plus control) on the stand growth and structure of a beech coppice with standards. The optimal density after thinning was assessed by expressing mean tree...
Six plots have been drawn in an mixed aged coppice stand, 40 years after last coppicing; they repres...
Although beech stands are usually regenerated naturally, an area of up to 5,000 ha year−1 is artific...
In the mountain belt of the Marches region (Central Apennines, Italy), coppice management is applied...
Converting coppices into high forests with continuous cover has often been established during the la...
Converting beech coppices into high forest stands has been promoted in the last decades as a manage...
Keymessage: Selective thinning is a more viable method for beech coppice conversion to high forest w...
European beech (L.) forests have a long history of coppicing, but the majority of formerly managed c...
European beech (Fagus sylvatica) grows at the southern limit of its range in the mountain-Mediterran...
Beech forest coppice with-standards systems in the Marches Region (Central Italy) are characterized ...
In recent decades, the conservation of biodiversity has become one of the main areas under considera...
The aim of this study was to investigate the possible effects of coppice conversion to high forest o...
In the Mediterranean area, the most common management of beech forests relies on the shelterwood sys...
Aims: Silvicultural management plays a major role in shaping understory diversity through its action...
Six plots have been drawn in an mixed aged coppice stand, 40 years after last coppicing; they repres...
Although beech stands are usually regenerated naturally, an area of up to 5,000 ha year−1 is artific...
In the mountain belt of the Marches region (Central Apennines, Italy), coppice management is applied...
Converting coppices into high forests with continuous cover has often been established during the la...
Converting beech coppices into high forest stands has been promoted in the last decades as a manage...
Keymessage: Selective thinning is a more viable method for beech coppice conversion to high forest w...
European beech (L.) forests have a long history of coppicing, but the majority of formerly managed c...
European beech (Fagus sylvatica) grows at the southern limit of its range in the mountain-Mediterran...
Beech forest coppice with-standards systems in the Marches Region (Central Italy) are characterized ...
In recent decades, the conservation of biodiversity has become one of the main areas under considera...
The aim of this study was to investigate the possible effects of coppice conversion to high forest o...
In the Mediterranean area, the most common management of beech forests relies on the shelterwood sys...
Aims: Silvicultural management plays a major role in shaping understory diversity through its action...
Six plots have been drawn in an mixed aged coppice stand, 40 years after last coppicing; they repres...
Although beech stands are usually regenerated naturally, an area of up to 5,000 ha year−1 is artific...
In the mountain belt of the Marches region (Central Apennines, Italy), coppice management is applied...