Abstract
Abstract. A range of moorland sites in the North York Moors National Park were surveyed where Pteridium aquilinum has been sprayed once with the herbicide asulam between 1 and 7 yr before. The regeneration of both P. aquilinum and the moorland vegetation were studied. The latter was variable and much slower than reported for lowland grassland or heathland, with a large proportion of the developing plant cover consisting of mosses, especially Campylopus introflexus. This slow rate of revegetation was primarily due to the paucity of micro‐sites offered for germination in dense P. aquilinum litter, the poor establishment of seedlings in this litter and its slow breakdown. The consequences of this slow and variable development of vegetation to moorland restoration are discussed.
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