Reprint

Impacts, Monitoring and Management of Forest Pests and Diseases

Edited by
March 2020
198 pages
  • ISBN978-3-03928-166-4 (Paperback)
  • ISBN978-3-03928-167-1 (PDF)

This book is a reprint of the Special Issue Impacts, Monitoring and Management of Forest Pests and Diseases that was published in

Biology & Life Sciences
Environmental & Earth Sciences
Summary
Forest pests have diverse negative impacts on forestry economy, ecosystem services, biodiversity, and sustainable ecosystem management. The first step towards effectively managing forest pests would be to monitor their occurrence and assess their impact on forest ecosystems. The monitoring results can provide basic information for effective management strategies. The data from monitoring programs can result in the development of new methods for monitoring, assessing impact, and developing management techniques. This special issue aims to share information to assist in the effective management of forest pests, by understanding the responses of forest pests to natural and anthropogenic changes, and discussing new studies on the monitoring, assessment, and management of forest pests. The fourteen papers included in this issue focus on monitoring, assessing, and managing forest pests, including one editorial providing an overall idea of the monitoring, assessment and management of forest pests, two articles reviewing long-term changes in forest pests and forests, four papers focusing on the monitoring of forest pests, three papers on the assessment of forest pests, and four papers on the management of forest pests. These papers provide a better understanding of the structures and processes in forest ecosystems and fundamental information for the effective management of forest pests.
Format
  • Paperback
License
© 2020 by the authors; CC BY-NC-ND license
Keywords
ash trees; biological control; Buprestidae; Encyrtidae; invasive species; Quercus ilex L.; Phytophthora cinnamomi; Phytophthora quercina; Phytophthora pseudocryptogea; qPCR; disease resistance; plant nutrition-disease relationship; eucalyptus disease; leaf spot; control; forestry models; climate change; forest management; abiotic and biotic disturbances; forest health; Tomicus brevipilosus; location preference; aggregation pheromones; attack pattern; aggressiveness; Cockchafer larvae; forestry; Scots pine damages; small soil pits; Acari; mite assemblages; litterbags; coniferous forests; admixture species; litter decay; Ricania shantungensis; CLIMAX; MaxEnt; SADIE; species distribution model; hazard rating; invasive species; surveillance; forest ecosystem management; prediction model; species distribution model; random forest; Matsucoccus thunbergianae; black pine bast scale; taxonomy; synonym; Hylodor; alpha-pinene; turpentine oil; ethanol; propylene-glycol; Norway spruce; antennal transcriptome; chemosensory genes; expression level; SNPs; invasive species; natural enemies; pine caterpillar; pine needle gall midge; pine wilt disease; climate change; forest ecosystem; forest pests; invasive species; monitoring