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.
2013
Authors
Pierre Ackerman Bruce Talbot Bo DahlinAbstract
This chapter provides an introduction into the harvesting and supply of biomass from timber plantations. It considers the main sources of utilizable biomass and their properties and discusses harvesting equipment, machinery and systems that could potentially be applied for moving these resources to a landing and eventually the conversion plant. Important supply processes such as storage and drying, quality assurance, transport and simple trade models are also presented. Management of feedstock supply is discussed and illustrated with two examples integrating concepts included in this chapter. This chapter will provide the reader with an overview of the techno-economic factors to be considered for biomass procurement, how these interact with each other, and how they can be applied in developing supply models to provide strategic insight into the harvesting and transport of woody biomass.
Authors
Hege Johansen Marit Solum Geir Kjølberg Knudsen Eline Benestad Hågvar Hans Ragnar Norli Anders AakAbstract
No abstract has been registered
Authors
Åsmund Asdal Jade V. Phillips Nigel MaxtedAbstract
No abstract has been registered
Authors
Chuan Li Heidi Rudi Eric J. Stockinger Hongmei Cheng Moju Cao Samuel E. Fox Todd C. Mockler Bjørge Westereng Siri Fjellheim Mats Höglind Odd Arne Rognli Simen Rød SandveAbstract
No abstract has been registered
Authors
Paolo Capretti Alberto Santini Halvor SolheimAbstract
No abstract has been registered
Authors
Tor Myking Erling Johan Solberg Gunnar Austrheim James David Mervyn Speed Fredrik Bøhler Rasmus Astrup Rune EriksenAbstract
Sallow (Salix caprea L.) and rowan (Sorbus aucuparia L.) constitute small proportions of the deciduous tree volume in Scandinavia, but are highly preferred winter forage for moose and red deer, which occur at historically high densities. Thus, a possible decline of these tree species has been indicated. Against this background, we have reviewed the life histories of relevance for browsing, as well as the basic biology and genetics of sallow and rowan. The species show similarities with respect to short lifespan, small size and sympodial growth pattern, which are risk factors in a browsing context. They also have high juvenile growth rate, important for growing quickly out of reach of browsers. Sallow depends strongly on disturbance for establishment and is more demanding with respect to soil and light conditions than rowan, possibly important for the substantially lower abundance of sallow on the Norwegian Forest Inventory plots. Similarly, the relative recruitment of small size classes of sallow is less than for rowan. Although recruitment is reported to be hampered in wintering areas with high moose or red deer densities, the inventory data, however, dating only back to 1994, do not suggest a general decrease in any of the species. Sallow and rowan saplings show low mortality in moose and deer dominated areas and the species can be characterised as rather resilient to browsing. Of more concern is that browsing can constrain the development of mature rowan and sallow trees locally, with possible consequences for associated epiphytic biodiversity.
Authors
Emma Brunberg Knut Egil Bøe Grete H. Meisfjord Jørgensen Kristin SørheimAbstract
No abstract has been registered
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No abstract has been registered
Abstract
The quality of surface water and groundwater is closely related to flow paths in the vadose zone. Therefore, dye tracer studies are often carried out to visualise flow patterns in soils. These experiments provide images of stained soil profiles and their evaluation demands knowledge in hydrology as well as in image analysis and statistics. The classical analysis consists of image classification in stained and non-stained parts and calculation of the dye coverage (i.e. the proportion of staining). The variation of this quantity with depth is interpreted to identify dominant flow types. While some feature extraction from images of dye-stained profiles is necessary, restricting the analysis to the dye coverage alone might miss important information. In our study we propose to use several index functions to extract different (ideally complementary) features. We associate each image row with a feature vector (i.e. a certain number of image function values) and use these features to cluster the image rows to identify similar image areas. Because images of stained profiles might have different reasonable clusterings, we calculate multiple consensus clusterings. Experts can explore these different solutions and base their interpretation of predominant flow type on quantitative (objective) criteria.