All Stories

  1. Corrigendum to “Importance of stand structure and neighborhood in European beech regeneration” [For. Ecol. Manage. 448 (15) (2019) 57–66]
  2. Investigating the relationship between climate, stand age, and temporal trends in masting behavior of European forest trees
  3. Importance of stand structure and neighborhood in European beech regeneration
  4. Effect of Deadwood on Ectomycorrhizal Colonisation of Old-Growth Oak Forests
  5. Applied research for optimized vertebrate management: 11thEuropean Vertebrate Pest Management Conference
  6. Cover Image, Volume 75, Issue 3
  7. Does winter supplementary feeding affect deer damage in a forest ecosystem? A field test in areas with different levels of deer pressure
  8. Effects of forest roads on oak trees via cervid habitat use and browsing
  9. Masting in wind-pollinated trees: system-specific roles of weather and pollination dynamics in driving seed production
  10. The Role of Topography in the Distribution and Intensity of Damage Caused by Deer in Polish Mountain Forests
  11. Purifying Selection, Density Blocking and Unnoticed Mitochondrial DNA Diversity in the Red Deer, Cervus elaphus
  12. Lower body mass and higher metabolic rate enhance winter survival in root voles,Microtus oeconomus
  13. Unexpected population genetic structure of European roe deer in Poland: an invasion of the mtDNA genome from Siberian roe deer
  14. Relationships between dominance, testosterone level and scent marking of males in a free-living root vole (Microtus oeconomus) population
  15. Is there a linkage between metabolism and personality in small mammals? The root vole (Microtus oeconomus) example
  16. Drive counts as a method of estimating ungulate density in forests: mission impossible?
  17. Radiotelemetry Applied to Field Studies of Shrews
  18. Radiotelemetry Applied to Field Studies of Shrews
  19. Field vole (Microtus agrestis) seasonal spacing behavior: the effect of predation risk by mustelids
  20. Multiple paternity in free-living root voles (Microtus oeconomus)
  21. Applicability of Cranial Features for the Calculation of Vole Body Mass
  22. Spatial organization of the fat dormouse (Glis glis) in an oak-hornbeam forest during the mating and post-mating season
  23. Damage caused by rodents in Polish forests*
  24. Linking evidence from health technology assessments to policy and decision making: The Alberta Model
  25. Habitat selection and home range size of field volesMicrotus agrestis in Słowiński National Park, Poland
  26. Individual and seasonal differences in antipredatory behaviour of root voles—a field experiment
  27. Spatial Responses of Field (Microtus Agrestis) and Bank (Clethrionomys Glareolus) Voles to Weasel (Mustela Nivalis) Odour in Natural Habitat
  28. Influence of weasel (Mustela nivalisLinnaeus, 1766) odour on spatial behaviour of root voles (Microtus oeconomusPallas, 1776)
  29. Influence of predator odour on the feeding behaviour of the root vole (Microtus oeconomusPallas, 1776)