2013 - 2016 The process of catastrophic forest degradation caused by deer browsing
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Papers (66):
Kenichi Ozaki, Nobuhiro Akashi, Kazuhiro Kawamura, Keisuke Obase, Akira Ueda, Akira Unno, Satoshi Yamanaka, Yuichi Yamaura. Retention forestry in plantations: Synthesizing key findings of early studies from a long-term experiment in northern Japan. Forest Ecology and Management. 2024. 562. 121929-121929
Hayato Iijima, Junco Nagata, Ayako Izuno, Kentaro Uchiyama, Nobuhiro Akashi, Daisuke Fujiki, Takeo Kuriyama. Current sika deer effective population size is near to reaching its historically highest level in the Japanese archipelago by release from hunting rather than climate change and top predator extinction. The Holocene. 2023. 095968362311570-095968362311570
Toshiyuki Tsushima, Ichiro Watanabe, Nobuhiro Akashi, Kenichi Ozaki. Productivity and Cost of Retention Harvesting Operation in Conifer Plantations. Forests. 2023. 14. 2
Akashi, N. Responses of understory vascular plant communities up to 6 years after retention harvesting in planted Abies sachalinensis forests. Forest Ecology and Management. 2023. 538
Akashi Nobuhiro, Unno Akira, Nakata Keisuke. Effect of Vole Abundance in October, Snow Accumulation and Rodenticide Application on the Gnawing Damage on Planted Trees. Journal of the Japanese Forest Society. 2022. 104. 4. 235-240
Site selection for culling deer in a forested area in eastern Hokkaido
(The Japanese Forest Society Congress 2018)
Evaluation of the impact of sika deer on natural forests using a simple check list.
(IUFRO 125th Anniversary Congress 2017 2017)
Abies sachalinensis planted forests are important habitats for understory plants.
(The 15th International Conference on Ecology and Sivliculture of Fir 2016)
The early process deer impact arise in secondary forests
(The Japanese Forest Society Congress 2016)
Sika deer impacts on forests and forestry in Japan.
(Vth International Wildlife Management Congress 2015)
2010/03 - The Ecological Society of Japan Ecological Research Award, 2009 Simulation of the effects of deer browsing on forest dynamics. 24(2): 247-255
Association Membership(s) (6):
International Union of Forest Research Organizations (Associate Member)
, Ecological Society of America
, 北方森林学会
, THE ECOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF JAPAN
, THE MAMMAL SOCIETY OF JAPAN
, THE JAPANESE FOREST SOCIETY