Authors
Michael D Korzukhin, Michael T Ter-Mikaelian, Robert G Wagner
Publication date
1996/5/1
Journal
Canadian Journal of Forest Research
Volume
26
Issue
5
Pages
879-887
Publisher
NRC Research Press
Description
The emergence of forest ecosystem management presents new information challenges for forest managers. Shifting views of the forest from primarily one as a production system for wood fibre to an ecosystem with spatially and temporally complex interrelationships is changing the demand for information about the forest. These new information needs are characterized by greater complexity, limited availability of mechanistic hypotheses, and a paucity of data. Empirical and process modelling approaches have evolved in forest management to solve different problems, and debate about the two approaches has existed for some time. Which approach to forest modelling will best be able to meet the challenges of ecosystem management? Empirical models seek principally to describe the statistical relationships among data with limited regard to an object's internal structure, rules, or behaviour. In contrast, process …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
MD Korzukhin, MT Ter-Mikaelian, RG Wagner - Canadian Journal of Forest Research, 1996