The INTA Concordia Forest News Bulletin has reached its 600th number!!!! Congratulations !!!!
We appreciate the permanence of our more than 9,000 subscribers in 55 countries, and especially our collaborators from different countries who constantly provide us with information.
Despite the adversity of the computer system, and the hacking of the INTA system, we have still moved forward showing that "it can be done", using the same shipping system for 24 years, thanks to the good disposition of the Concordia Electric Cooperative, with whom INTA Concordia began its internet computer system.
This bulletin, together with the now discontinued one from the then former San Martín Forest Station of IFONA, which became INTA El Bolsón (edited by colleagues from the Forest Extension core of the former SAGpyA and Inta), were the first two forestry e-bulletins in the country, and one of the first from INTA, when e-mails were just beginning.....
We take the opportunity to celebrate it in accordance with the 37th edition of the Entre Ríos Forest Days, to which adding the Forestry Price Bulletin, which has been around for 40 years, marks the continuity of INTA Concordia in the transfer of technology.
Personally, one knows that one is not going to reach number 700.... but like any forestry task we know that "a forester is a link in a chain that has no end"
Our Forest thanks!!!
IT MAY INTEREST YOU
White or wrapped painted of tree trunks is a common practice that goes beyond aesthetics. In various places, streets and even rural areas, this technique that has specific purposes for their protection, especially those youngest or vulnerable can be observed.
A new study maps the species that exist in the world and warn about the risk that inhabit those that inhabit exclusively in island territories.
Phyllostachys nigra var. Henonis is the scientific name of this curious plant who goes for a walk through the countryside or through the parks of his city can still find numerous flower plants, while many others are already paying off. Many of the plants around us bloom, bear fruit and repeat this part of their reproductive cycle the following year. Others take a little longer