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1. The challenge of estimating global termite methane emissions

2. Nutrient availability explains distinct soil fungal colonization of angiosperm versus gymnosperm wood.

3. Increased deadwood carbon stocks through planted forestry practices: insights from a Forest Inventory Survey in Japan.

4. Condo or cuisine? The function of fine woody debris in driving decomposition, detritivores, and their predators.

5. Host trees partially explain the complex bacterial communities of two threatened saproxylic beetles.

6. The Role of Deadwood in the Carbon Cycle: Implications for Models, Forest Management, and Future Climates.

7. Methane cycling in temperate forests.

8. What Quality Suffices for Nanopore Metabarcoding? Reconsidering Methodology and Ectomycorrhizae in Decaying Fagus sylvatica Bark as Case Study.

9. Effects of forest management intensity and climate change severity on volume growth, timber yield, carbon stocks, and the amount of deadwood in Scots pine, Norway spruce, and silver birch stands in boreal conditions.

10. Remote sensing of forest fine-scale gap dynamics: A case study on lenga beech forests in Argentina.

11. Characterizing Forest Plot Decay Levels Based on Leaf Area Index, Gap Fraction, and L-Moments from Airborne LiDAR.

12. Production of greenhouse gases by logging residue in boreal clear-cut forests.

13. The state and structure of beech primaeval forests in the "Zacharovanyi Krai" National Nature Park.

14. اهمیت خشک دار برای موجودات Saproxylic و لزوم استفاده از واژه فارسی «خشک دارزی».

15. Increased deadwood carbon stocks through planted forestry practices: insights from a Forest Inventory Survey in Japan

18. The largest European forest carbon stocks are in the Dinaric Alps old-growth forests: comparison of direct measurements and standardised approaches

19. Application of the Global Uncertainty and Sensitivity Analysis to assess the importance of deadwood characteristics for forest biodiversity.

20. Contrasting patterns of habitat use in a threatened carabid (Carabus intricatus) and a sympatric congener in ancient temperate rainforest.

21. Responses of the hyper‐diverse community of canopy‐dwelling Hymenoptera to oak decline.

22. The Potential of Artificial Snags to Promote Endangered Saproxylic Beetle Species in Bavarian Forests.

23. Influence of Picea Abies Logs on the Distribution of Vascular Plants in Old-Growth Spruce Forests.

24. Assessing Deadwood Carbon Stock within the National Parks of Indonesia.

25. Impact of Ice Rain on Forests of Russky Island.

26. Visitors’ attitudes and perceptions towards biodiversity conservation in production forests: the case study of University Forest Sailershausen in southern Germany.

27. Diversity and ecology of deadwood-inhabiting mushrooms in Yankari Game Reserve, North-East Nigeria

28. What Quality Suffices for Nanopore Metabarcoding? Reconsidering Methodology and Ectomycorrhizae in Decaying Fagus sylvatica Bark as Case Study

32. Translocation of deadwood in ecological compensation: A novel way to compensate for habitat loss.

33. A decadal study reveals that restoration guided by an umbrella species does not reach target levels.

34. Lying deadwood retention affects microhabitat use of martens (Martes spp.) in European mountain forests.

35. Country-wide assessment of biodiversity, naturalness and old-growth status using national forest inventory data.

36. Termites are key drivers of short‐term deadwood decay in Neotropical Cerrado across vegetation types.

37. How to Optimize Carbon Sinks and Biodiversity in the Conversion of Norway Spruce to Beech Forests in Austria?

38. Revealing suitable micro‐ and macrohabitat characteristics to save the critically endangered Chilean saproxylic beetle Sclerostomulus nitidus (Coleoptera: Lucanidae).

39. PATTERNS OF DEADWOOD VOLUME AND DYNAMICS IN SLOVENIAN FORESTS.

40. Fire and retention island remnants have similar deadwood carbon stock a decade after disturbances in boreal forests of Alberta.

41. Effect of the rotation frequency in the eucalypt plantations.

42. Use of fallen dead trees by Japanese squirrels within cedar plantations in northeastern Japan

43. Effect of the rotation frequency in the eucalypt plantations

44. Fire and retention island remnants have similar deadwood carbon stock a decade after disturbances in boreal forests of Alberta

45. Spatial Distribution of the Anecic Species of Earthworms Dendrobaena nassonovi nassonovi (Oligochaeta: Lumbricidae) in the Forest Belt of the Northwestern Caucasus.

46. Experimental Evidence that Forest Structure Controls Detrital Decomposition.

47. Alternative measures of trait–niche relationships: A test on dispersal traits in saproxylic beetles.

48. Use of fallen dead trees by Japanese squirrels within cedar plantations in northeastern Japan.

49. Dead Better than Alive—The Case of Retention Trees and Tree-Related Microhabitats in Young Stands of Hemiboreal Forests in Latvia.

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