Abstract

The highly specialized flora of localities affected by former metal ore mining and metallurgy is endangered by succession or intentional afforestation all over Europe. Its last remnants therefore deserve our attention. We examined whether Scots pine encroaching on a heavy-metal grassland (Olkusz Zn-Pb mining area, S Poland) is outcompeting specialized herbaceous species, as has been observed elsewhere. Plant species composition and richness sampled at 124 plots were analysed in relation to pine stand parameters (canopy cover, stand age, stand basal area), abiotic environmental factors (e.g. soil properties) and spatial variables (e.g. plot coordinates). Plots were divided into three shading categories and compared in terms of vegetation and habitat parameters. Scots pine outcompeted several light-demanding species, leading to a decrease of total species richness and cover. Characteristic species of this grassland (Biscutella laevigata, Silene vulgaris) and some metal-tolerant plants were clearly insensitive to shading. For these early successional species, more important was the availability of microsites with shallow skeletal soil or bare subsoil. Tree stand parameters differently affected grassland vegetation: canopy cover caused primarily a compositional shift in the community, while stand age was the principal agent of decline in species richness. Scots pine increased the soil concentrations of available Ca and Mg, and negatively affected soil development (organic matter and mineral particle accumulation), which might be beneficial to some shade-tolerant grassland species. Maintaining the studied grassland’s present species richness and composition would require cutting woody plants less frequently than recommended for dry grasslands of non-metalliferous sites, and disturbing the soil surface.

Highlights

  • Metalliferous sites have recently become high-priority conservation targets in Europe (Baker et al 2010; Baumbach 2012)

  • Similar plant communities occur in Poland as well; their range is limited to ore-bearing parts of the Silesian-Kraków Upland, especially the Olkusz Ore-Bearing Region (OOR)

  • It is located near the town of Bolesław in the OOR, S Poland (19°28′21′′ E, 50°17′31′′ N)

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Summary

Introduction

Metalliferous sites have recently become high-priority conservation targets in Europe (Baker et al 2010; Baumbach 2012). They are cultural heritage sites associated with earlier metal ore mining and metallurgy They are and primarily, localities of a highly specialized flora formed by plant species, subspecies and ecotypes that under strong selection pressure, have developed morphological, anatomical or physiological adaptations enabling them to survive in extremely hostile habitats (Shaw 1990; Baker et al 2010; Baumbach 2012). There is some evidence, including literature reports and archival photographs (Wóycicki 1913; Dobrzańska 1955), that the spoil heaps in the Olkusz environs were not colonized by woody plants for a number of decades The reason for this was thought to be the impact of heavy metals, which can be more toxic to long-lived plants (shrubs and trees) than to short-lived ones (Dickinson et al 1991). We assessed the relative contributions of three datasets (pine stand, abiotic environment, space) to the variation of species richness and composition

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