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Effects of elevated CO2 concentration on tree species. What have we learned during the past 15 years?

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    0491793 - ÚVGZ 2019 CZ eng A - Abstract
    Urban, Otmar
    Effects of elevated CO2 concentration on tree species. What have we learned during the past 15 years?
    Quo vaditis agriculture, forestry and society under Global Change?: Book of abstracts. Brno: Global Change Research Institute of the Czech Academy of Sciences, 2017. s. 24-24. ISBN 978-80-87902-20-2.
    [Quo vaditis agriculture, forestry and society under Global Change? 02.10.2017-04.10.2017, Velké Karlovice]
    R&D Projects: GA MŠMT(CZ) LO1415; GA MZe QJ1530373; GA MŠMT(CZ) EF16_013/0001609
    Institutional support: RVO:86652079
    Subject RIV: EF - Botanics

    Research on impacts of elevated CO2 on the physiology of forest trees started in the Czech
    Republic in 1989 when the Laboratory of Ecological Physiology of Forest Trees at former
    Institute of Landscape Ecology, Czech Academy of Sciences joined an international project
    ECOCRAFT (European Collaboration on CO2 Responses Applied to Forests and Trees) leaded
    by prof. Paul G. Jarvis (University of Edinburgh, Scotland). The research has been focused on
    the investigation of Norway spruce trees – dominant tree species of the Czech Republic – grown
    under mountain conditions. Such specific conditions requested a development of specific
    experimental facilities for the fumigation by elevated CO2 concentration at tree – open-top
    chamber (Janouš et al. 1996) and stand level – glass domes
    Permanent Link: http://hdl.handle.net/11104/0285421

     
     
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