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Soil properties and light availability determine species richness and vegetation diversity in an overgrown coppice oak stand

Identyfikatory
Warianty tytułu
Języki publikacji
EN
Abstrakty
EN
Coppicing is uncommon in Poland; however, some remnants of a previously coppiced oak forest persist in the foothills of the Sudety Mountains (southern Poland). Some of these forests are considered as a kind of thermophilous oak forest, classified as habitat 91I0 in the European programme Natura 2000. As an example of previously coppiced sessile oak (Quercus petraea (Matt.) Liebl.) forest in Poland, the vegetation and environmental factors in the "Wąwóz Lipa" reserve (area 101 ha, altitude ca. 400 m a.s.l.) were surveyed. Canonical correspondence analysis showed a basic compositional gradient of vegetation related to the content of coarse fragments in the soil, light availability and soil pH. The number of species per plot was not correlated with any particular environmental variable; in general, the plant species number and cover decreased in the most exposed sites, where the heat load was highest. We hypothesize that the higher number of species in some plots was the results of an edge effect: this occurred in transitional zones between the most exposed sites, which work as refuges for light-demanding, drought-tolerant species, and less exposed sites, with vegetation typical of acidophilous oak forests. The land relief also allowed the spread of species typical of mesophilous forests, which found refuge in the shaded, wet gorges. Thus, the specific land relief, along with previous coppice management, allowed the coexistence, probably temporally, of species of plants considered typical of different habitats.
Rocznik
Strony
523--533
Opis fizyczny
Bibliogr. 27 poz.,Rys., tab.,
Twórcy
autor
autor
  • Ecological Station, Institute of Plant Biology, Wrocław University, Maksa Borna square 9, 50-328 Wrocław, Poland, tszymura@biol.uni.wroc.pl
Bibliografia
  • 1. Baeten L., Bauwens B., De Schrijver A., De Keersmaeker L., Van Calster H., Vandekerkhove K., Roelandt B., Beeckman H., Verheyen K. 2009 – Herb layer changes (1954–2000) related to the conversion of coppice-with-standards forest and soil acidification – Appl. Veg. Scienc. 12: 187–197.
  • 2. Bednorz L. 2007 – The wild service tree Sorbus torminalis (L.) Crantz in plant communities of Poland – Dendrobiol. 57: 49–54.
  • 3. Chytrý M. 1997 – Thermophilous oak forests in the Czech Republic: syntaxonomical revision of the Quercetalia pubescenti petreae – Folia Geobot. Phytotax. 32: 221–258.
  • 4. Chytrý M., Danihelka J. 1993 – Long-term changes in the field layer of oak and oak-hornbeam forests under the impact of deer and mouflon – Folia Geobotanica, 28: 225–245.
  • 5. Chytrý M., Horák J. 1996 – Plant communities of the thermophilous oak forests in Moravia – Preslia, 68: 193–240.
  • 6. Chytrý M., Tichý L., Roleček J. 2003 – Local and regional patterns of species richness in Central European vegetation types along the pH/calcium gradient – Folia Geobotanica, 38: 429–442.
  • 7. Ellenberg H. 2008 – Vegetation Ecology of central Europe – Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, New York, 731pp.
  • 8. Geiger R., Aron R.H., Todhunter P. 2003 – The climate near the ground – Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc., 589 pp.
  • 9. Hédl R., Kopecký M., Komárek J. 2010 – Half a century of succession in a temperate oakwood: from species-rich community to mesic forest – Diversity and Distributions, 16: 267–276.
  • 10. Kazda M., Pichler M. 1998 – Priority assessment for conversion of Norway spruce forests through introduction of broadleaf species – For. Ecol. Manage. 102: 245–258.
  • 11. Kącki Z. Dajdok Z., Szczęśniak E. 2003 – Czerwona lista roślin naczyniowych Dolnego Śląska [Red Book of vascular plant sof Lower Silesia] (In: Zagrożone gatunki flory naczyniowej Dolnego Śląska [Threatened species of vascular plants in Lower Silesia] Ed: Z. Kącki) – Instytut Biologii Roślin, Uniwersytet Wrocławski, Polskie Towarzystwo Przyjaciół Przyrody “Pro Natura”, Wrocław, pp. 9–64 (in Polish).
  • 12. Kučera T. 2005 – Red book on Habitats of the Czech Republic – http://www.usbe.cas.cz/cervenakniha/eng.
  • 13. Kwiatkowski P. 1995 – Szata roślinna projektowanego rezerwatu leśnego Wąwóz Lipy na Pogórzu Kaczawskim (Sudety Zachodnie) [Vegetation of projected forest reserve Wąwóz Lipy in Kaczawy Mts foothills (Western Sudety Mts)] – Ochrona Przyrody, 52: 167–184 (in Polish).
  • 14. Kwiatkowski P. 2003 – Podgórska ciepłolubna dąbrowa brekiniowa Sorbo torminalis-Quercetum na Pogórzu Złotoryjskim [Submontane thermophilous oak-wild service forest Sorbo torminalis-Quercetum in Złotoryja foothils] – Fragm. Flor. Geobot. Polonica, 10: 175–193 (in Polish).
  • 15. Kwiatkowski P. 2004 – Podgórska ciepłolubna dabrowa brekiniowa Sorbo torminalis-Quercetum [Submontane thermophilous oak-wild service forest Sorbo torminalis-Quercetum] (In: Lasy i Bory. Poradniki ochrony siedlisk i gatunków Natura 2000 – podręcznik metodyczny [Broadleaved and coniferous forests. A guidebook of protection of habitats and species Natura 2000 – methodological guidebook] Ed: J. Herbich) – Ministerstwo Śodowiska, Warszawa, vol. 5, pp. 266–269 (in Polish).
  • 16. Lepš J., Šmilauer P. 2003 – Multivariate analysis of ecological data using CANOCO – Cambridge University Press, Cambrige, 268 pp.
  • 17. Łuczaj Ł., Sadowska B. 1997 – Edge effect in different groups of organisms: vascular plant, bryophyte and fungi species richness across a forest-grassland border – Folia Geobotanica, 32: 343–353.
  • 18. Matuszkiewicz J.M. 2006 – Zespoły leśne Polski [Forest communities of Poland] – PWN – Polish Scientific Publishers, Warszawa, 358 pp.
  • 19. McCune B., Keon D. 2002 – Equations for potential annual direct incident radiation and heat load – J. Veg. Scien. 13: 603–606.
  • 20. Müller S.W., Rusterholc H.P., Baur B. 2006 – Effects of forestry practices on relict plant species on limestone cliffs in the northern Swiss Jura mountains – For. Ecol. Manage. 237: 227–236.
  • 21. Pärtel M., Helm A., Ingerpuu N., Reier U., Tuvi E-L. 2004 – Conservation of Northern European plant diversity: the correspondence with soil pH – Biol. Conser. 120: 525–531
  • 22. Roleček J. 2007 – Formalized classification of thermophilous oak forests in the Czech Republic: what brings the Cocktail method? – Preslia, 79: 1–21.
  • 23. Szymura T.H. 2010 – Tradycyjna gospodarka odroślowa w Europie Środkowej i jej wpływ na różnorodność biologiczną [Traditional coppice management in Central Europe and its influence on biodiversity] – Sylwan, 8: 545–551. (in Polish).
  • 24. Szymura T.H., Buszczak M., Szymura M. 2010 – Structure and dynamics of a mature tree stand in submontane alluvial forest of Carici ramotae-Fraxinetum in the Sudety Mts foothills (Lower Silesia, Poland) – Dendrobiology, 63: 43–51.
  • 25. ter Braak C.J. F., Prentice I. C. 1988 – A theory of gradient analysis – Adv. Ecol. Res. 18: 271–313.
  • 26. Valladares F. 2003 – Light heterogeneity and plants: from ecophysiology to species coexistence and biodiversity (In: Progress in Botany, Eds: K. Esser, U. Lüttge, W. Beyschlag, F. Hellwig) – Springer Verlag, Heidelberg, Germany, pp. 439–471.
  • 27. WinScanopy 2003b Regent Instruments Co. www.regentinstruments.com.
Typ dokumentu
Bibliografia
Identyfikator YADDA
bwmeta1.element.baztech-article-BGPK-3304-2854
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