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Publications

81: Understanding and assisting natural regeneration processes in degraded seasonal evergreen forests in northern Thailand

Publication date1997
Author(s)Hardwick, K., J. Healey, S. Elliott, N. C. Garwood & V. Anusarnsunthorn
PublisherElsevier, Forest Ecology and Management 99:203-214.
Format

ABSTRACT: The Thailand government has recently embarked upon a nation-wide project to restore degraded forests. One approach could be to assist natural regeneration (ANR) by counteracting...

82: The vegetation of Jae Sawn National Park, Lampang Province

Publication date1997
Author(s)Maxwell, J. F., S. Elliott and V. Anusarnsunthorn
PublisherNat. Hist. Bull. Siam Soc. 45(1): 71-97.
Format

After joining CMU's Biology Department in 1992, Ach. Max embarked on prolific and exhaustive plant-species inventories of several of northern Thailand's mountains, expanding the department's...

83: Research towards the restoration of northern Thailand's degraded forests

Publication dateJun 1996
Author(s)Elliott, Anusarnsunthorn, Siriporn Kopachon
PublisherUnited States Department of Agriculture
Format

Throughout northern Thailand, large areas of land within national parks and wildlife sanctuaries are deforested or degraded and require reforestation. Within such protected areas, where the...

84: Forest Restoration Research in Northern Thailand, 1. The Fruits, Seeds and Seedlings of Hovenia dulcis Thunb. (Rhamnaceae)

Publication date1996
Author(s)Kopachon, S., K. Suriya, K. Hardwick, G. Pakaad, J.F. Maxwell, V. Anusarnsunthorn, D. Blakesley, N.C. Garwood & S. Elliott
PublisherNatural History Bulletin of The Siam Society. 44(1): 41-52. The Siam Society.
Format

Hovenia dulcis Thunb. (Rhamnaceae) is a rare native tree species recently added to Thailand's flora, found in stream valleys in primary lower montane evergreen forest 1,075- 1,250 m above sea...

85: The vegetation of Doi Khuntan National Park, Lamphun-Lampang Provinces, Thailand

Publication date1995
Author(s)Maxwell, J.F., S. Elliott, P. Palee & V. Anusarnsunthorn
PublisherNat. Hist. Bull. Siam Soc. 43(2):185-205. The Siam Society.
Format

After joining CMU's Biology Department in 1992, Ach. Max embarked on prolific and exhaustive plant-species inventories of several of northern Thailand's mountains, expanding the department's...

86: Research needs for restoring the forests of Thailand

Publication date1995
Author(s) Elliott, S., V. Anusarnsunthorn, N. Garwood & D. Blakesley
PublisherNat. Hist. Bull. Siam Soc. 43(2): 179-184. The Siam Society.
Format

We wrote this paper shortly after FORRU-CMU's foundation in 1994, with our UK partners, to raise the profile of the then novel concept of forest ecosystem restoration and to lay out the unit's...

87: Can community forestry save biodiversity? 

Publication date1994
Author(s) Elliott, S.
PublisherNat. Hist. Bull. Siam Soc. 42(2): 150-152
Format

All over the world, governments are handing over control of state forests to local communities, in the hope that local communities will make a better job of managing them than state agencies. But...

88: The status, ecology and conservation of Sapria himalayana Griff. (Rafflesiaceae) in Thailand

Publication date1991
Author(s)Elliott, S.
PublisherKasetsart University, J. Wildlife in Thailand 2(1): 44-52
Format

ABSTRACT:   Sapria himalayana (Griffith, 1845) (Rafflesiaceae) is a parasitic plant with spectacular red flowers about 20 cm across which grows in the roots of lianas. The objectives of the study...

89: Taxonomy, ecology and conservation of Rafflesia kerrii Meijer in southern Thailand

Publication date1990
Author(s)Meijer, W. & S. Elliott
PublisherNat. Hist. Bull. Siam Soc. 38(2): 117-133
Format

ABSTRACT: Rafflesia kerrii Meijer, Thailand's largest flower, is described from buds examined at Khao Sok National Park, Southern Thailand, in greater detail than previously reported. Current...

90: Rafflesia kerrii Meijer, Thailand's largest flower

Publication date1990
Author(s)Elliott, S.
PublisherKasetsart University, J. Wildlife in Thailand 1(1): 15-20.
Format

ABSTRACT: With flowers more than 70 cm in diameter, Rafflesia kerrii Meijer is Thailand's largest flower. It was first collected by A.F.G. Kerr in 1927 and described by Willem Meijer in 1984. In...

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