Mapping Forest Landscape Patterns


Download Mapping Forest Landscape Patterns PDF/ePub or read online books in Mobi eBooks. Click Download or Read Online button to get Mapping Forest Landscape Patterns book now. This website allows unlimited access to, at the time of writing, more than 1.5 million titles, including hundreds of thousands of titles in various foreign languages.

Download

Mapping Forest Landscape Patterns


Mapping Forest Landscape Patterns

Author: Tarmo K. Remmel

language: en

Publisher: Springer

Release Date: 2017-09-07


DOWNLOAD





This book explores the concepts, premises, advancements, and challenges in quantifying natural forest landscape patterns through mapping techniques. After several decades of development and use, these tools can now be examined for their foundations, intentions, scope, advancements, and limitations. When applied to natural forest landscapes, mapping techniques must address concepts such as stochasticity, heterogeneity, scale dependence, non-Euclidean geometry, continuity, non-linearity, and parsimony, as well as be explicit about the intended degree of abstraction and assumptions. These studies focus on quantifying natural (i.e., non-human engineered) forest landscape patterns, because those patterns are not planned, are relatively complex, and pose the greatest challenges in cartography, and landscape representation for further interpretation and analysis.

Patterns and Processes in Forest Landscapes


Patterns and Processes in Forest Landscapes

Author: Raffaele Lafortezza

language: en

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

Release Date: 2008-08-30


DOWNLOAD





Increasing evidence suggests that the composition and spatial configuration – the pattern – of forest landscapes affect many ecological processes, including the movement and persistence of particular species, the susceptibility and spread of disturbances such as fires or pest outbreaks, and the redistribution of matter and nutrients. Understanding these issues is key to the successful management of complex, multifunctional forest landscapes, and landscape ecology, based on a foundation of island bio-geography and meta-population dynamic theories, provides the rationale to deal with this pattern-to-process interaction at different spatial and temporal scales. This carefully edited volume represents a stimulating addition to the international literature on landscape ecology and resource management. It provides key insights into some of the applicable landscape ecological theories that underlie forest management, with a specific focus on how forest management can benefit from landscape ecology, and how landscape ecology can be advanced by tackling challenging problems in forest (landscape) management. It also presents a series of case studies from Europe, Asia, North America, Africa and Australia exploring the issues of disturbance, diversity, management, and scale, and with a specific focus on how human intervention affects forest landscapes and, in turn, how landscapes influence humans and their culture. An important reference for advanced students and researchers in landscape ecology, conservation biology, forest ecology, natural resource management and ecology across multiple scales, the book will also appeal to researchers and practitioners in reserve design, ecological restoration, forest management, landscape planning and landscape architecture.

Spatial Modeling of Forest Landscape Change


Spatial Modeling of Forest Landscape Change

Author: David J. Mladenoff

language: en

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Release Date: 1999-08-26


DOWNLOAD





Key researchers present newly emerging approaches to computer simulation models of large, forest landscapes.