We use some essential cookies to make this website work.
We’d like to set additional cookies to understand how you use forestresearch.gov.uk, remember your settings and improve our services.
We also use cookies set by other sites to help us deliver content from their services.
Supporting public engagement in forest governance and management
The purpose of the Grow Wild evaluation is to assess the impact on the people participating in two different kinds of activities, that make up the Grow Wild project.
• Novel dendrochronological modelling was developed to explore oak stem growth trends. • Trees with long-term AOD symptoms may have been predisposed many decades earlier. • Diseased trees struggle to take advantage of favourable growing conditions. • Historic episodes of stress may impact the future resilience of oaks to disturbance.
Research to understand the processes and rates of exchange of greenhouse gases in forests, and how they are affected by forest management
Collaborative European research action against emerging plant pathogens that threaten plant and trees in Europe.
Plot description, management history, surround habitat, measurements taken and current/planned research projects
Plot description, management history, surround habitat, measurements taken and current/planned research projects
Plot description, management history, surround habitat, measurements taken and current/planned research projects
In this project we explored what hinders and enables researchers, policymakers and practitioners in their work protecting native trees and forests in New Zealand/Aotearoa and Wales/Cymru. This is an international collaborative project between the two countries called Post-colonial biosecurity possibilities.
Why cultivation of soil in the urban and peri-urban greenspace environment is important and a summary of cultivation techniques
This is one of a series of papers which form part of a study to consider the scale, location and nature of forestry expansion in Britain.
These essential cookies do things like remember your progress through a form. They always need to be on.
We use Google Analytics to measure how you use the website so we can improve it based on user needs. Google Analytics sets cookies that store anonymised information about: how you got to the site the pages you visit on forestresearch.gov.uk and how long you spend on each page what you click on while you're visiting the site
Some forestresearch.gov.uk pages may contain content from other sites, like YouTube or Flickr, which may set their own cookies. These sites are sometimes called ‘third party’ services. This tells us how many people are seeing the content and whether it’s useful.