Publications
NIBIOs employees contribute to several hundred scientific articles and research reports every year. You can browse or search in our collection which contains references and links to these publications as well as other research and dissemination activities. The collection is continously updated with new and historical material.
2012
Abstract
Norwegian goat milk production is based on summer grazing on diverse forest or alpine rangeland, and the quality of these pastures is important for milk quantity and quality. We used n-alkanes and long chained alcohols found in plant waxes as markers to estimate diet composition in goats grazing on a heterogeneous rangeland during two periods in summer; early (beginning of July) and late (end of August). Some of the goats were fitted with GPS collars that recorded their position. Preliminary results show a diverse diet, where ferns, sedges, blueberry (Vaccinium myrtillis) and birch (Betula pubescens) were preferred in early summer. In late summer the diet was particularly diverse, coinciding with a general decline in plant quality.
Abstract
No abstract has been registered
Authors
John Marshall BrydenAbstract
No abstract has been registered
Authors
Christian Guido Bruckner Charlotte Rehm Hans-Peter Grossart Peter, G. KrothAbstract
No abstract has been registered
Authors
Casper Claudi Rasmussen Erlend NybakkAbstract
This study examines the relationship between customer orientation, innovativeness, autonomy, risk taking, growth willingness and growth in low technology micro-firms. A survey was sent to 3000 CEOs in the Norwegian wood industry and resulted in 514 usable respondents. Customer orientation, innovativeness, risk taking, autonomy and growth were conceptualized and analyzed as first order constructs using confirmatory factor analysis and OLS regression. The findings showed that customer orientation, innovativeness and autonomy have a significant impact on growth in micro-firms. The study found no support for interaction effects between innovativeness, autonomy, risk taking and customer orientation, however the interaction effect between customer orientation and autonomy was significant at the 10% level.
Editors
Kirsty McKinnonAbstract
No abstract has been registered
Abstract
No abstract has been registered
Abstract
No abstract has been registered
Authors
Ricardo HolgadoAbstract
No abstract has been registered
Authors
Karsten Dunger Sven Hans-Olof Petersson Susana Barreiro Emil Cienciala Antoine Colin Gro Hylen Gal Kusar Katja Oehmichen Erkki Tomppo Tarja Tuomainen Göran StahlAbstract
Most European countries have signed the United Nations Framework Convention on climate change and its Kyoto Protocol. Because the European Union is a party to the convention just like the individual countries, there is a need for harmonizing emissions reporting. This specifically applies to the Land Use, Land-Use Change, and Forestry sector, for which harmonized reporting is complex and generally challenging. For example, parties use a variety of different methods for estimating emissions and removals, ranging from application of default factors to advanced methods adapted to national circumstances, such as ongoing field inventories. In this study, we demonstrate that without harmonization, national definitions and methods lead to inconsistent estimates. Based on case studies in Finland, Germany, Norway, Portugal, Slovenia, and Sweden, we conclude that common reference definitions and country-specific bridges are means to harmonize the estimates and make greenhouse gas reporting from forests comparable across countries.