Main pests of pine forests in South East Europe

The health status of individual pine trees is characterized mainly based on defoliation, i.e. the relative foliar loss of a tree crown compared to that of a fully-leafed, healthy reference tree growing in the same stand and site conditions. Tree crown defoliation is a non-specific damage symptom, normally associated with a range of harmful factors, each of which can act separately or together. To determine the effects of single factors on the amount of damage and their importance is usually very difficult. It is usually impossible to separate the influence of climate change from other harmful factors (insects, pathogens, air pollution) affecting the health status in forest ecosystems.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Lakatos, F. ;Mirtchev, S.
Format: Brochure, flyer, fact-sheet biblioteca
Language:English
Published: FAO ; 2014
Online Access:https://openknowledge.fao.org/handle/20.500.14283/AU059E
http://www.fao.org/3/AU059E/au059e.pdf
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id dig-fao-it-20.500.14283-AU059E
record_format koha
spelling dig-fao-it-20.500.14283-AU059E2024-03-16T16:11:01Z Main pests of pine forests in South East Europe Main pests of pine forests in South East Europe GCP/KOS/005/FIN Lakatos, F. ;Mirtchev, S. The health status of individual pine trees is characterized mainly based on defoliation, i.e. the relative foliar loss of a tree crown compared to that of a fully-leafed, healthy reference tree growing in the same stand and site conditions. Tree crown defoliation is a non-specific damage symptom, normally associated with a range of harmful factors, each of which can act separately or together. To determine the effects of single factors on the amount of damage and their importance is usually very difficult. It is usually impossible to separate the influence of climate change from other harmful factors (insects, pathogens, air pollution) affecting the health status in forest ecosystems. 2023-04-27T11:52:50Z 2023-04-27T11:52:50Z 2014 2019-05-30T17:13:10.0000000Z Brochure, flyer, fact-sheet https://openknowledge.fao.org/handle/20.500.14283/AU059E http://www.fao.org/3/AU059E/au059e.pdf English FAO 1p. application/pdf Europe FAO ;
institution FAO IT
collection DSpace
country Italia
countrycode IT
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-fao-it
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Sur
libraryname David Lubin Memorial Library of FAO
language English
description The health status of individual pine trees is characterized mainly based on defoliation, i.e. the relative foliar loss of a tree crown compared to that of a fully-leafed, healthy reference tree growing in the same stand and site conditions. Tree crown defoliation is a non-specific damage symptom, normally associated with a range of harmful factors, each of which can act separately or together. To determine the effects of single factors on the amount of damage and their importance is usually very difficult. It is usually impossible to separate the influence of climate change from other harmful factors (insects, pathogens, air pollution) affecting the health status in forest ecosystems.
format Brochure, flyer, fact-sheet
author Lakatos, F. ;Mirtchev, S.
spellingShingle Lakatos, F. ;Mirtchev, S.
Main pests of pine forests in South East Europe
author_facet Lakatos, F. ;Mirtchev, S.
author_sort Lakatos, F. ;Mirtchev, S.
title Main pests of pine forests in South East Europe
title_short Main pests of pine forests in South East Europe
title_full Main pests of pine forests in South East Europe
title_fullStr Main pests of pine forests in South East Europe
title_full_unstemmed Main pests of pine forests in South East Europe
title_sort main pests of pine forests in south east europe
publisher FAO ;
publishDate 2014
url https://openknowledge.fao.org/handle/20.500.14283/AU059E
http://www.fao.org/3/AU059E/au059e.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT lakatosfmirtchevs mainpestsofpineforestsinsoutheasteurope
AT lakatosfmirtchevs gcpkos005fin
_version_ 1799261555702890496