Aims and scope
Annals of Forest Science is an international research journal devoted to multidisciplinary research for forests and wood in a changing world. It is one of the journals of the French National Institute for Agriculture, Food and Environment (INRAE), a public non-profit research institution.
The scope of Annals of Forest Science covers the following research areas:
- Biology of trees and associated organisms
- Forest dynamics and ecosystem processes under environmental or management drivers (ecology, genetics)
- Risks and disturbances affecting forest ecosystems (biology, ecology, economics)
- Forests as drivers of a sustainable, circular and inclusive bioeconomy (tree breeding, forest management and productivity, ecosystem services, silviculture)
- Wood sciences (relationships between wood structure and tree functioning, and between forest management or environment and wood properties)
The Editorial Board encourages:
- New ideas or methods for measuring or monitoring any property of interest for tree biology, forest ecosystem dynamics, wood
- Model-based papers focused on the forestry wood chain, including carbon accounting investigations, ecosystem services, quantification of the relationships between forest management and the properties of end products
- Studies addressing economic and social issues of forest management under climate change and forest based bioeconomy
- Review articles on timely topics in the scope of the journal
- Data papers presenting databases made available to a wider community
- Opinion papers presenting arguments about open research questions
The Editorial Board does not encourage:
- Local case studies based on single stand experiments or small samples under local conditions, unless the addressed questions are innovative and timely
- Purely technological papers presenting applications without a broader scientific perspective
- Wood science papers that address purely technological questions unless the topic is very innovative or in relation to tree biology, forest ecology, or forest management