120,99 €
inkl. MwSt.
Versandkostenfrei*
Versandfertig in über 4 Wochen
payback
60 °P sammeln
  • Gebundenes Buch

According to the FAO's "State of the world's forests 1999, the total forest area in Russia is 764 million hectares. In the international statistics the forest resource of Russia is treated as one unit. One quarter of this vast forest area, approximately as much forest as all the other European countries together, is in the European part of Russia, west of the Ural mountains. This report will complete the picture of European Forests given in the EFI Research Report No 1 by Kullervo Kuusela in 1994. The first aim of this study is to describe the distribution and development of forest resources…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
According to the FAO's "State of the world's forests 1999, the total forest area in Russia is 764 million hectares. In the international statistics the forest resource of Russia is treated as one unit. One quarter of this vast forest area, approximately as much forest as all the other European countries together, is in the European part of Russia, west of the Ural mountains. This report will complete the picture of European Forests given in the EFI Research Report No 1 by Kullervo Kuusela in 1994. The first aim of this study is to describe the distribution and development of forest resources in the European part of Russia. Due to the availability of basic information, this study concentrates on lands under the authority of the Federal Forest Service of Russia, which cover more than 80% of the forest area. The emphasis is on wood resources, non-wood goods and benefits have not been discussed in detail. Secondly, the study is an effort towards better comparability between forest statistics in Russia and other European countries. The traditions of Russian forestry and forest inventory concepts differ from the other European countries, which, in the past, have caused misinterpretations in the comparison of the statistics between the countries. The third aim has been to 'cross check' the consistency of available information by analysing the dynamics of the forest resources from 1966 to 1993. It is hoped that this study is able to fill in some voids in the information about Russian forest resources and that forest researchers, students, forestry experts, policy makers and the public will be able to see more clearly the historical development and future potentials of Russianforestry. It must be kept in mind that forestry is not only wood production, it deals with nature conservation, protective and recreational functions of forests, and other non-wood benefits and services which, in some forests, play the main role. However, due to the availabi
Autorenporträt
Anatoly I. Pisarenko, Professor, President of the Russian Association of Foresters; Full Member of the Russian Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Russia. Valentin V. Strakhov, Doctor of Science, Director All-Russian Research and Information Centre for Forest Resources (ARICFR), Moscow, Russia. Risto Päivinen, Professor, Director of the European Forest Institute, Joensuu, Finland. Kullervo Kuusela, emeritus Professor, Finland. Fedor A. Dyakun, Doctor of Science, Head Division of Forest Resources' Account and Assessment, All-Russian Research and Information Centre for Forest Resources (ARICFR), Moscow, Russia. Valentina V. Sdobnova, Ph.D., Head Section of Forest Resources' Account, All-Russian Research and Information Centre for Forest Resources (ARICFR), Moscow, Russia.