Using Caribbean pine to establish a mixed plantation: testing effects of pine canopy removal on plantings of rain forest tree species
Open Access
- 27 July 1998
- journal article
- Published by Elsevier in Forest Ecology and Management
- Vol. 106 (2-3) , 211-222
- https://doi.org/10.1016/s0378-1127(97)00314-9
Abstract
No abstract availableThis publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- Restoration of a Sri Lankan Rainforest: Using Caribbean Pine Pinus caribaea as a Nurse for Establishing Late-Successional Tree SpeciesJournal of Applied Ecology, 1997
- Role of Legumes in Release of Successionally Arrested Grasslands in the Central Hills of Sri LankaRestoration Ecology, 1997
- The role of exotic conifer plantations in rehabilitating degraded tropical forest lands: A case study from the Kibale Forest in UgandaForest Ecology and Management, 1996
- Early Woody Invasion Under Tree Plantations in Costa Rica: Implications for Forest RestorationRestoration Ecology, 1995
- Releasing Rain Forest Succession: A Case Study in the Dicranopteris linearis Fernlands of Sri LankaRestoration Ecology, 1995
- Enrichment planting of dipterocarps in logged-over secondary forests: effect of width, direction and maintenance method of planting line on selected Shorea speciesForest Ecology and Management, 1995
- Seedling survival and growth of four Shorea species in a Sri Lankan rainforestJournal of Tropical Ecology, 1995
- Seedling growth of co-occurring Shorea species in the simulated light environments of a rain forestForest Ecology and Management, 1995
- Caribbean Pine in Sustainable Tropical ForestryJournal of Sustainable Forestry, 1993
- New Light on the Plant Geography of Ceylon. II. The Ecological Biogeography of the Lowland Endemic Tree FloraJournal of Biogeography, 1987