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This article needs attention from an expert in Forestry. The specific problem is: Article is incomplete and consists almost solely of opinionated original research. Needs fundamental rewrite.WikiProject Forestry may be able to help recruit an expert.(October 2017)
Silvology (Latin: silva or sylva, "forests and woods"; Template:Lang-grc, -logia, "science of" or "study of") is the biological science of studying forests and woodlands, incorporating the understanding of natural forest ecosystems, and the effects and development of silvicultural practices. The term complements silviculture, which deals with the art and practice of forest management.[1]
Silvology is seen as a single science for forestry and was first used by Roeloff Oldeman.[2] It integrates the study of forests and forest ecology, dealing with single treeautecology and natural forest ecology.
Relationship with dendrology and other terms
Arboriculture is the management of individual trees.