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2014-09-18

Scientific Summary 124 in IUFRO News Vol. 43, Issue 9, mid-September 2014

"Future concepts in uneven-aged silviculture for a changing world" was the theme of 9th IUFRO International Conference on Uneven-aged Silviculture held last June in Birmensdorf, Switzerland.


Interest and application in the subject of management of forests using uneven-aged silviculture is gaining importance worldwide. It is now recognized that this approach to management is possible with many species, on a wide range of sites wherever forests exist. 

The origin of uneven-aged silviculture was what we now regard as the classical examples from central Europe. This type of silviculture has evolved and developed throughout the world and there is now a dazzling array of different methods of application all of which stay true to the basic principle of sustainability.  

In a politically, economically and climatically changing world, uneven-aged silviculture is now confronted with new challenges and questions. These were addressed at the 9th IUFRO International Conference on Uneven-aged Silviculture on 17-19 June, 2014, at the Swiss Federal Institute for Forest, Snow, and Landscape Research WSL in Birmensdorf, Switzerland.


Download the full Scientific Summary:

Future Concepts in Uneven-Aged Silviculture for a Changing World

Report from the 9th IUFRO Conference on Uneven-aged Silviculture by Jim Guldin, Southern Research Station, USDA Forest Service, and Gary Kerr, UK Forestry Commission, Coordinator of IUFRO Research Group 1.05.00


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