Abstract

Summary Studies of old-growth forests are becoming increasingly important for the improvement of silviculture and for understanding environmental changes. However, in Europe such forests are rare, fragmented and influenced by millennia of human activity. Comparative studies of old-growth forests across Europe are needed to improve knowledge on how direct and indirect anthropogenic factors influence their structure. We analysed structural dynamics in 15 silver fir-beech-Norway spruce old-growth forests in Slovenia, Croatia, Slovakia and Bosnia-Herzegovina. Changes in diameter distributions, stand parameters and regeneration were analysed at intervals of 6–116 years. Most diameter growth at breast height (d.b.h.) distributions approximated a rotated sigmoid shape, which could be explained by differences in growth and mortality rates with respect to d.b.h. class and by disturbance history. Our results suggest that different disturbance types are likely to cause different changes in d.b.h. distributions. For example, overbrowsing, canopy dieback of silver fir and windthrow decreased the density of small, intermediate and large-diameter silver fir, respectively. The slopes of the fitted diameter distribution curves were steeper for beech than for silver fir, which could be explained by their different life strategies. Despite disturbances, growing stocks remained stable over the long term. A synchronous silver fir decline was confirmed. It was more pronounced in Slovenia and Slovakia, both of which experienced more SO2 pollution and had higher ungulate densities. The silver fir sapling stage was often totally absent in both countries. Our results suggest that anthropogenic disturbances, especially air pollution and overbrowsing (resulting from human-induced increases in deer density), significantly influenced the coexistence of silver fir and beech; asynchronous, patchy changes in species mixture have been replaced by large-scale synchronous changes.

Highlights

  • Research on old-growth forests is essential for understanding forest ecosystem functioning and for the development of forest management strategies

  • Our results suggest that anthropogenic disturbances, especially air pollution and overbrowsing, significantly influenced the coexistence of silver fir and beech; asynchronous, patchy changes in species mixture have been replaced by large-scale synchronous changes

  • The overall objective of the study was to describe the change in stand structure and composition and to discuss these changes in relation to the natural and anthropogenic disturbance history, especially air pollution and overbrowsing resulting from human-induced increases in deer density

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Summary

Introduction

Research on old-growth forests is essential for understanding forest ecosystem functioning and for the development of forest management strategies. Their structural dynamics depends on disturbance patterns (White and Pickett, 1985). Much research in old-growth forests has focused on natural disturbances. Present-day old-growth forest structures are often a result of complex interactions between natural and anthropogenic disturbances (McLachlan et al, 2000). Studies of FORESTRY anthropogenic disturbance history could reveal new perspectives on European old-growth forests

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