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.
2008
Authors
Gert-Jan Nabuurs Esther Thürig Nanny Heidema Kestutis Armolaitis Peter Biber Emil Cienciala Edgar Kaufmann Raisa Mäkipää Petter Nilsen Richard Petritsch T. Pristova Joachim Rock Mart-Jan Schelhaas Risto Sievänen Zoltan Somogyi Patrick ValletAbstract
This paper is the outcome of a group discussion held at the Savonlinna meeting ‘Management of forest ecosystems and its impact on the GHG budget’. The aim of this break-out group discussion was to ‘Characterize forest management impacts on the GHG budget of forest ecosystems in different European regions’. In this paper we briefly characterize different options that a forest owner has in order to maintain or maximize forest carbon pools and carbon sequestration. These hectare scale descriptions of measures are then regarded in connection to the current state of European forests and how they can be combined with ongoing management trends and local issues. We point out the various possibilities that exist in European forests, where they are located, and where they could possibly be combined with adaptation. We identify these hotspots for largest growing stocks, largest peat areas, and, e.g. largest risks for loss of carbon due to fire or urban sprawl. We conclude that one common strategy cannot be designed. Within each region, local solutions have to be found that optimize goals and aim at integrated and sustainable land use.
Abstract
No abstract has been registered
Authors
Daniel Kwaku A. Asante Igor A. Yakovlev Carl Gunnar Fossdal Anna Holefors Lars Opseth Jorunn Elisabeth Olsen Olavi Junttila Øystein JohnsenAbstract
Short days (SD) trigger cessation of elongation growth and transition from an actively growing apex to a terminal bud in woody plants of the temperate and boreal zones. The molecular basis behind this is not well understood in gymnosperm forest trees such as Norway spruce. By combining suppression subtractive hybridization (SSH) libraries and monitoring of gene expression using quantitative RT-PCR analysis, we aimed to identify genes involved in photoperiodic control of growth cessation and dormancy induction in Norway spruce. The gene expression patterns described here will be useful for future detailed functionalanalyses.
Abstract
The Fusarium genus includes devastating plant pathogenic fungi that cause diseases in cereals around the world. They produce several mycotoxins, including the estrogenic compound zearalenone. To better understand the molecular mechanisms determining zearalenone production, we performed differential display RT-PCR under conditions where Fusarium graminearum and F. culmorum produced high amounts of zearalenone. We found 133 expressed sequence tags (ESTs) and 54 of these were considered to be up-regulated during high zearalenone production. Several of the ESTs were confirmed to be up-regulated by real-time qPCR, but none showed any significant down-regulation in the zearalenone negative mutant Delta PKS4-T9, or were similar to typical gene expression patterns of previously described zearalenone-related genes. Some of the up-regulated ESTs were similar to genes involved in secondary metabolite production, lipid metabolism, transcriptional activation, provision of precursors, signal transduction, transport or detoxification. Several of the ESTs were also located adjacent to one another in the genome and therefore might represent genes involved in the same biosynthetic pathway. Members of six such putative pathways could be found. All sequences were compared to the MIPS F. graminearum Genome Database to verify autocalled gene predictions experimentally and to introduce new exons and gene structures.
Authors
H. Dupré de Boulois Erik J. Joner C. Leyval I. Jakobsen B.D. Chen P. Roos Y. Thiry G. Rufyikiri B. Delvaux S. DeclerckAbstract
No abstract has been registered
Abstract
No abstract has been registered
Authors
Yijie WuAbstract
Luftforurensninger og klimaendringer påvirker kjemien i kronedrypp og jordvann i boreale skoger. Løst organisk materiale (DOM), inklusiv løst organisk karbon (DOC) og løst organisk nitrogen (DON), spiller en nøkkelrolle, og det er derfor nødvendig å forstå hvordan DOM blir påvirket, ikke bare av luftforurensninger og klimatiske faktorer, men også av andre faktorer. Denne avhandling undersøker faktorer som påvirker DOC og DON i norske skogøkosystem, med bruk av data fra de norske ICP Forests Level II-flater og andre studier...
Abstract
Quota regulations that prevent output expansion of farms and reallocation of output between farms can cause lower growth in output and productivity. The aim of this study was to explain the output growth rate of Norwegian dairy farms since 1976, and to decompose it into output, input, socioeconomic and technical change components. Instead of using the standard distance function approach for multi-output technologies, we use a growth rate formulation, which automatically removes the farm-specific effects. This formulation also helps to impose non-negativity constraints on marginal products of inputs (input elasticities), which are often violated for many observations, especially when flexible functional forms are used. The farm-level panel data cover three periods: before the quota scheme was introduced (1976-1982); the period with the most output-restricting quota scheme (1983-1996); and the period with a more flexible quota scheme (from 1997 onwards). Results show that the milk quota regulations had a significant constraining effect on output growth, in particular on milk output in the period 1983-1996. Furthermore, the output mix has shifted towards meat production for the average farm. What emerges from this study is that output growth and technical change are negatively influenced by policy aims where productive performance has not been the primary objective, and that there is scope for increased farm growth if the quota regime is liberalised.
Abstract
Runoff time series are known to contain long term structures on interannual to decadal time scales. Investigating spatial patterns of long term structures is a way to elucidate the relationship between external forcings and watershed properties. This would be a valuable contribution to an improved water resources management. Singular System Analysis (SSA) is a powerful technique to identify and extract significant long term components from time series. However, many observations from natural systems are prone to missing data that hamper many analysis techniques, including the SSA in its original formulation...
Abstract
Wood is a unique building material, but is by nature designed to deteriorate. A detailed understanding of the factors and interactions involved are important when working with service life prediction of wooden components in buildings. Wood may experience exponential fungal degradation caused by variation in the climatic factors within a small limited area and by minor imperfection in the wooden component. In this paper we put forward a new term: critical in-situ conditions (CIC). This is meant to bring the attention to the importance of looking into details in the construction design, the specific climatic factors and interactions involved. Gaining realistic and useful data for prediction of service life is only possible by controlling and understanding the factors that are target specific for a wooden component or even only a part of it. Performing measurements in a right way and in the proper part of the wooden component are vital for getting useful data for further processing. The objective in this paper is to exemplify the CIC in inservice situations and to describe the factors and interactions that control the service life. Case studies were performed on a building at Bryggen in Bergen, on a hunting cabin on Svalbard, on several wooden windows in the southern part of Norway and on an external wall of a residence house in Ås.