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The June 2004 issue of Forest Science is devoted to canopy research. In this special issue, leading researchers highlight the growing importance of canopy research to enhance foresters' knowledge of the processes that drive tree and stand development.
Articles include, among others:
Importance of Foliar Nitrogen Concentration to Predict Forest Productivity in the Mid-Atlantic Region—Yude Pan, John Hom, Jennifer Jenkins, and Richard Birdsey
Old-Growth Forest Canopy Structure and Its Relationship to Throughfall Interception—Nalini M. Nadkarni and Mark M. Sumera
Forest Stand Structure and Pattern of Old-Growth Western Hemlock/Douglas-Fir and Mixed-Conifer Forests—Malcolm North, Jiquan Chen, Brian Oakley, Bo Song, Mark Rudnicki, Andrew Gray, and Jim Innes
The Distribution of Free Space and Its Relation to Canopy Composition at Six Forest Sites—Roman Dial, Benjamin Bloodworth, Andrew Lee, Patrick Boyne, and Jeffrey Heys
Development of Canopy Structure in Pseudotsuga menziesii Forests in the Southern Washington Cascades—Robert Van Pelt and Nalini M. Nadkarni
Crown Cover Is Correlated with Relative Density, Tree Slenderness, and Tree Height in Lodgepole Pine—Mark Rudnicki, Uldis Silins, and Victor J. Lieffers
Spatial Relationship of Biomass and Species Distribution in an Old-Growth Pseudotsuga-Tsuga Forest—Jiquan Chen, Bo Song, Mark Rudnicki, Melinda Moeur, Ken Bible, Malcolm North, Dave C. Shaw, Jerry F. Franklin, and Dave M. Braun
Three-Dimensional Canopy Structure of an Old-Growth Douglas-Fir Forest—Bo Song, Jiquan Chen, Janet Silbernagel