Evolution of Trees and Forest Communities - Ten Years of the EVOLTREE Network. Abarca, D., Aitken, S. N., Alberto, F. J., Alía, R., Bastien, C., Bataillon, T., Beuker, E., Bohrer, G., Boivin, T., Bontemps, A., Brandl, R., Bräutigam, K., Bridle, J. R., Brochmann, C., Calfapietra, C., Campbell, M. M., Castagneyrol, B., Cavers, S., Cervera, M., Churin, J., Conord, C., Courbet, F., Courty, P., Davi, H., De Angelis, P., Díaz-Sala, C., Durand-Gillmann, M., Ehrenmann, F., Fady, B., Fernández Fraga, M., Fluch, S., Fossdal, C. G., Franc, A., Gaubitzer, S., Gauzere, J., Gerber, S., Gidoin, C., Gomulkiewicz, R., González-Martínez, S. C., Grivet, D., Guevara, M. Á., Gugerli, F., Guillaume, F., Gurevitch, J., Gutiérrez Marcos, J., Hänninen, H., Hayes, S., Jactel, H., Johnsen, Ø., Karam, M., Karnosky, D. F., Klein, E. K., Koelewijn, H., Kohler, A., Kopecky, D., Kowalczyk, J., Kremer, A., Kuparinen, A., Labbé, J., Lafon-Placette, C., Lalagüe, H., Latałowa, M., Le Tacon, F., Lefèvre, F., Lenormand, T., Lin, Y., Marçais, B., Martin, F., Matras, J., Maury, S., Miglietta, F., Mirouze, M., Nathan, R., Oddou-Muratorio, S., Orazio, C., Peter, M., Pichot, C., Pritsch, K., Ritland, K., Robledo-Arnuncio, J. J., Rogers, A., Rohde, A., Ronce, O., Savolainen, O., Schmidt, J., Schröder, H., Schueler, S., Sebastiani, F., Sehr, E. M., Smulders, M. J., Sperisen, C., Stierschneider, M., Strauss, S. H., Street, N. R., Tallis, M. J., Taylor, G., Tollefsrud, M. M., Torre, S., van Halder, I., Vendramin, G. G., Villar, M., Vining, K. J., van der Knaap, W. O., Weichselbaum, O., Whetten, R., Yeaman, S., Zabal-Aguirre, M., Zhang, J., Ziegenhagen, B., & Ziehe, M. PG Edition.
Evolution of Trees and Forest Communities - Ten Years of the EVOLTREE Network [link]Paper  abstract   bibtex   
[Excerpt: Introduction] It all started in 2006, when twenty-five Universities and research institutes from fifteen European countries joined forces to set up EVOLTREE as a Network of Excellence. EVOLTREE aimed to link four major disciplines Ecology, Genetics, Genomics and Evolution to address global issues faced by European forests, such as environmental changes and the erosion of biodiversity. Funded by the European Union within the 6th framework programme, it spent the next four years developing and setting up the necessary experimental and monitoring infrastructures and physical and electronic resources upon which long term research could be built. These network infrastructures and resources were therefore well in place and up and running when EVOLTREE embarked on its next four year period in 2011. Twenty-three research groups from thirteen European countries agreed upon and signed a new consortium agreement. Now self-funding (based on financial contributions from some partners and “in-kind” contributions from others in the form of running relevant scientific training courses, for example), EVOLTREE was integrated into the European Forest Institute’s (EFI) network. Instrumental in EU projects (such as NOVELTREE, PROCOGEN, FORGER, NOVELTREE, TreesForFUTURE and GENTREE) EVOLTREE’s research activities address topical issues such as the discovery of genes with economic and ecological relevance and the evaluation of their genetic diversity in natural tree populations and associated species, as well as the evolution, conservation, restoration, breeding and management of tree populations subject to environmental change and human interference. EVOLTREE offered its resources to European projects, but also benefited from contributions of these projects by populating existing databases or upgrading existing infrastructures. During this period, EVOLTREE stimulated the organisation of workshops and summer schools on dedicated technical or broader issues related to EVOLTREE’s interests. [...]
@book{abarcaEvolutionTreesForest2016a,
  title = {Evolution of Trees and Forest Communities - {{Ten}} Years of the {{EVOLTREE}} Network},
  author = {Abarca, Dolores and Aitken, Sally N. and Alberto, Florian J. and Alía, Ricardo and Bastien, Catherine and Bataillon, Thomas and Beuker, Egbert and Bohrer, Gil and Boivin, Thomas and Bontemps, Aurore and Brandl, Roland and Bräutigam, Katharina and Bridle, Jon R. and Brochmann, Christian and Calfapietra, Carlo and Campbell, Malcolm M. and Castagneyrol, Bastien and Cavers, Stephen and Cervera, María-Teresa and Churin, Jean-Louis and Conord, Cyrille and Courbet, François and Courty, Pierre-Emmanuel and Davi, Hendrik and De Angelis, Paolo and Díaz-Sala, Carmen and Durand-Gillmann, Marion and Ehrenmann, François and Fady, Bruno and Fernández Fraga, Mario and Fluch, Silvia and Fossdal, Carl G. and Franc, Alain and Gaubitzer, Stephan and Gauzere, Julie and Gerber, Sophie and Gidoin, Cindy and Gomulkiewicz, Richard and González-Martínez, Santiago C. and Grivet, Delphine and Guevara, M. Ángeles and Gugerli, Felix and Guillaume, Frédéric and Gurevitch, Jessica and Gutiérrez Marcos, José and Hänninen, Heikki and Hayes, Stephanie and Jactel, Hervé and Johnsen, Øystein and Karam, Marie-Joe and Karnosky, David F. and Klein, Etienne K. and Koelewijn, Hans-Peter and Kohler, Annegret and Kopecky, Dieter and Kowalczyk, Jan and Kremer, Antoine and Kuparinen, Anna and Labbé, Jessy and Lafon-Placette, Clément and Lalagüe, Hadrien and Latałowa, Małgorzata and Le Tacon, François and Lefèvre, François and Lenormand, Thomas and Lin, Yunan and Marçais, Benoit and Martin, Francis and Matras, Jan and Maury, Stéphane and Miglietta, Franco and Mirouze, Marie and Nathan, Ran and Oddou-Muratorio, Sylvie and Orazio, Christophe and Peter, Martina and Pichot, Christian and Pritsch, Karin and Ritland, Kermit and Robledo-Arnuncio, Juan J. and Rogers, Alistair and Rohde, Antje and Ronce, Ophélie and Savolainen, Outi and Schmidt, Johanna and Schröder, Hilke and Schueler, Silvio and Sebastiani, Federico and Sehr, Eva Maria and Smulders, Marinus J.M. and Sperisen, Christoph and Stierschneider, Michael and Strauss, Steven H. and Street, Nathaniel R. and Tallis, Matthew James and Taylor, Gail and Tollefsrud, Mari Mette and Torre, Sara and van Halder, Inge and Vendramin, Giovanni G. and Villar, Marc and Vining, Kelly J. and van der Knaap, Willem O. and Weichselbaum, Otto and Whetten, Ross and Yeaman, Sam and Zabal-Aguirre, Mario and Zhang, Jing and Ziegenhagen, Birgit and Ziehe, Martin},
  editor = {Kremer, Antoine and Hayes, Stéphanie and zález- Martínez, Santiago C.},
  date = {2016},
  publisher = {{PG Edition}},
  location = {{Bordeaux}},
  url = {https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01605800},
  abstract = {[Excerpt: Introduction]
It all started in 2006, when twenty-five Universities and research institutes from fifteen European countries joined forces to set up EVOLTREE as a Network of Excellence. EVOLTREE aimed to link four major disciplines Ecology, Genetics, Genomics and Evolution to address global issues faced by European forests, such as environmental changes and the erosion of biodiversity.

Funded by the European Union within the 6th framework programme, it spent the next four years developing and setting up the necessary experimental and monitoring infrastructures and physical and electronic resources upon which long term research could be built.

These network infrastructures and resources were therefore well in place and up and running when EVOLTREE embarked on its next four year period in 2011. Twenty-three research groups from thirteen European countries agreed upon and signed a new consortium agreement. Now self-funding (based on financial contributions from some partners and “in-kind” contributions from others in the form of running relevant scientific training courses, for example), EVOLTREE was integrated into the European Forest Institute’s (EFI) network.

Instrumental in EU projects (such as NOVELTREE, PROCOGEN, FORGER, NOVELTREE, TreesForFUTURE and GENTREE) EVOLTREE’s research activities address topical issues such as the discovery of genes with economic and ecological relevance and the evaluation of their genetic diversity in natural tree populations and associated species, as well as the evolution, conservation, restoration, breeding and management of tree populations subject to environmental change and human interference.

EVOLTREE offered its resources to European projects, but also benefited from contributions of these projects by populating existing databases or upgrading existing infrastructures. During this period, EVOLTREE stimulated the organisation of workshops and summer schools on dedicated technical or broader issues related to EVOLTREE’s interests. [...]},
  isbn = {978-2-9519296-3-9},
  keywords = {~INRMM-MiD:z-WK3ZVWBZ,conservation,diversisty,europe,field-measurements,forest-resources,genetic-diversity},
  options = {useprefix=true},
  pagetotal = {175 p.}
}

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