2018 Refereed Journal Articles

1. Acquah, S. B., Sraku-Lartey, M., Samar, S. B. and Djagbletey, G. D. (2018). Traditional knowledge and consumption of forest plant foods in Ghana. Ghana Journal of Forestry, 34 (1): 49-70.

2. Acquah, G. E., Essien, C., Via, B. K., Billor, N. and Eckhardt, L. G. (2018). Estimating the basic density and mechanical properties of elite loblolly pine families with near infrared spectroscopy. Forest Science, 64(2):149–158.

2018 Refereed Journal Articles

1. Acquah, S. B., Sraku-Lartey, M., Samar, S. B. and Djagbletey, G. D. (2018). Traditional knowledge and consumption of forest plant foods in Ghana. Ghana Journal of Forestry, 34 (1): 49-70.

2. Acquah, G. E., Essien, C., Via, B. K., Billor, N. and Eckhardt, L. G. (2018). Estimating the basic density and mechanical properties of elite loblolly pine families with near infrared spectroscopy. Forest Science, 64(2):149–158.

2018 Refereed Journal Articles

1. Acquah, S. B., Sraku-Lartey, M., Samar, S. B. and Djagbletey, G. D. (2018). Traditional knowledge and consumption of forest plant foods in Ghana. Ghana Journal of Forestry, 34 (1): 49-70.

2. Acquah, G. E., Essien, C., Via, B. K., Billor, N. and Eckhardt, L. G. (2018). Estimating the basic density and mechanical properties of elite loblolly pine families with near infrared spectroscopy. Forest Science, 64(2):149–158.

2017 Refereed Journal Articles

1. Aabeyir, R., Agyare, W. A., Weir, M.J.C. & Adu-Bredu, S. (2017). Multi-Level land cover change analysis in the Forest-Savannah Transition Zone of the Kintampo Municipality, Ghana. Journal of Natural Resources and Development 7: 1-11

2. Adele, C.M.J., Jardine, P.E., Adu-Bredu, S., Coe, A.L., Duah-Gyamfi, A., Fraser,W.T., Lomax, B.H., Malhi, Y., Moore, S., Owusu-Afriyie, K. and Gosling, W.D.(2017). The modern pollen– vegetation relationships of a tropical forest–savannah mosaic landscape, Ghana, West Africa. Palynology: 1-15. Published online August 10, 2017. (http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/01916122.2017.1356392).

2017 Refereed Journal Articles

1. Aabeyir, R., Agyare, W. A., Weir, M.J.C. & Adu-Bredu, S. (2017). Multi-Level land cover change analysis in the Forest-Savannah Transition Zone of the Kintampo Municipality, Ghana. Journal of Natural Resources and Development 7: 1-11

2. Adele, C.M.J., Jardine, P.E., Adu-Bredu, S., Coe, A.L., Duah-Gyamfi, A., Fraser,W.T., Lomax, B.H., Malhi, Y., Moore, S., Owusu-Afriyie, K. and Gosling, W.D.(2017). The modern pollen– vegetation relationships of a tropical forest–savannah mosaic landscape, Ghana, West Africa. Palynology: 1-15. Published online August 10, 2017. (http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/01916122.2017.1356392).

Who We Are

Forestry Research Institute of Ghana is one of the 13 institutes of the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR). It is located at Fumesua near Kumasi in the Ashanti Region of Ghana. It started as a research unit within the Forestry Department in 1962. It was fully established as a research institute and named FOREST PRODUCTS RESEARCH INSTITUTE (FPRI) under the then Ghana Academy of Sciences in 1964 and in 1968 placed under the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR).

Contact Us

The Director
Forestry Research Institute of Ghana, P. O. Box UP 63 KNUST
Kumasi, Ghana

Tel :+233-(0)3220-60123/60373
Fax :+233-(0)3220-60121
Email : [email protected]