Abstract

Abstract From Preboreal to Late Atlantic times the landscape of Central Europe was covered by dense primeval woodlands, with the final stages of the natural succession differing from site to site, according to the climatic and soil conditions. There is evidence today, that the potential natural state of vegetation exists under the prevailing environmental conditions. In the same way, the Late- and Postglacial vegetation types and stages are supposed to have had floristical differences, or at least regional differences in the dominance or composition of their characteristic species. According to that, the periodic development phases of broad-leaved woodland with the successive immigration of the respective trees till the middle of the Atlantic period (until about 6000 yr. B.P.; POTT 1988) reflect the ecological balance under different climatic and edaphic conditions and are exclusively due to natural factors. In conifer-woods of Boreal and Pre-Atlantic fires, insects and diseases were the most important na...

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