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Showing publications 1 to 5 out of 5 found.

1: Basics of automated plant identification  

Publication date2020
Author(s)Bonnet, P. & D. Frame
Editors(s)Elliott S., G, Gale & M. Robertson
PublisherFORRU-CMU

ABSTRACTHistorically, image-based dichotomous plant identification keys precede text-based ones by nearly one hundred years. Having lain in conceptual torpor for over 300 years, the notion of...

2: Auto-monitoring wildlife recovery

Publication date2020
Editors(s)Elliott S., G, Gale & M. Robertson
PublisherFORRU-CMU

ABSTRACT: Wildlife monitoring during forest restoration addresses such questions as: What species re-colonize or disappear from restored areas? How many individuals are present? What are the...

3: The Framework Species Method: Restoring tropical forest biodiversity in a changing climate

Publication date2011
Author(s)Elliot, S., D. Blakesley, K. Hardwick, K. Sinhaseni, G. Pakkad, & S. Chairuangsri
PublisherUniversiti Putra Malaysia

ABSTRACT: The ultimate goal of forest restoration is to re-establish climax forest, with maximum biomass, structural complexity and species diversity that can be supported by the soil conditions...

4: The Chiang Mai Research Agenda for the Restoration of Degraded Forestlands for Wildlife Conservation in Southeast Asia

Publication date2000
Author(s)Elliott, S., J. Kerby, D. Blakesley, K. Hardwick, K. Woods & V. Anusarnsunthorn
Editors(s)Elliott, S.
PublisherInternational Tropical Timber Organization and the Forest Restoration Research Unit, Chiang Mai University

Back in 2000, forest restoration research was far from main stream. Deforestation was regarded as irreversible and the idea that ecologists could actually find a way to restore tropical forest...

5: The effect of artificial perches and local vegetation on bird-dispersed seed deposition into regenerating sites

Publication date2000
Author(s)Scott, R., P. Pattanakaew, J. F. Maxwell, S. Elliott and G. Gale
Editors(s)Elliott, S., J. Kerby, D. Blakesley, K. Hardwick, K. Woods & V. Anusarnsunthorn
PublisherInternational Tropical Timber Organization and the Forest Restoration Research Unit, Chiang Mai University

ABSTRACT: Knowledge of the role of birds in natural regeneration could be used to accelerate and reduce the costs of forest restoration. The objectives of this study were to determine: (1) whether...

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