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Researchers from the UEF took part in drafting the handbook together with the Finnish Environment Institute SYKE, Aalto University and other experts.
An observational study by Finnish research groups confirms a prevailing theory that volatile organic compounds emitted by vegetation form atmospheric aerosols which make clouds more reflective.
A new spatial modelling study across over 81,000 landscapes in Europe shows that large-scale deployment of perennial biomass plantations can effectively reduce nitrogen emissions to water and soil loss by wind erosion.
MSc Dongxia Wu’s dissertation designed and implemented experiments to provide solutions for the appropriate precondition of economically important species in forestry and horticulture.
The Pellesmäki Orchard in Kuopio is a living gene bank. The first apple trees were grafted in 2004 and now, the orchard is home to more than 350 different apple cultivars, and over 60 pear cultivars.
New and adaptive governance that brings together public and private sector actors and researchers, and which forms a shared knowledge base and goals for the governance of common pool resources, is needed.
Researchers from the University of Eastern Finland and the Zoological Museum of the University of Turku have published in the journal ZooKeys an official description for Scenopinus jerei, a new fly species from Finland.
Stephanie Bohlmann, researcher at the Finnish Meteorological Institute, studied in her doctoral dissertation how lidar measurements could be used to detect pollen in the air.
In peatlands, the choice of the silvicultural system between rotation forestry and continuous cover forestry may have a decisive role for carbon dynamics since it directly interacts with the soil water table.
An international research team has now determined the annual contribution made by deadwood to the global carbon cycle and quantified the importance of insects in the decomposition of wood for the first time.