Abstract

At Hjelm Hede in Denmark where an oak shrub is invading into a heathland the successional process has been studied on poor sandy outwashed plain. The study used a transect through a successional gradient from open heath to oak shrub where vegetation, major topsoil parameters and tree characteristics were analysed. The study enables us with spatial variation of key parameters to combine numerous detailed studies from the same site into an overall picture of changing vegetation and soil parameters reflecting the succession, which has been documented previously. The data were analysed by the use of Detrended Correspondence Analysis (DCA). Along the gradient from heath to forest the thick mor layer of the heathland soil decomposed, the CM ratio decreased from 25 to 15, pH increased and ammonium became available for the plants during a time span of approximately 120 years. The vegetation on the open heath was typical Danish inland heath vegetation dominated by Calluna vulgaris, Empetrum nigrum and Deschampsiaflexuosa. Under the young oak shrub the vegetation was dominated by Deschampsia Jexuosa, Trientalis europaea, and Maianthemum bijiolium. In the oldest and most forest like parts of the shrub a vegetation dominated by Holcus mollis, Anemone nemomsa and Stellaria holostea was found. Woody chamaephytes were replaced first by hemicryptophytes and later by geophytes. The vegetation's Ellenberg values indicated an increase in nitrogen availability and a decrease in acidity and light availability through secondary succession.

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