Abstract

The earthworm fauna was recorded from a former open clay pit five and seven years after the area had been recultivated with various tree species. The highest abundances (200–245 specimens/m2) and biomasses (46.8 to 48.4 g/m2) were found in the following stand types: mixed woodland of balsam poplar (various sorts) and grey alder (Alnus incana (L.)Moench), mixed woodland of balsam poplar (Andoscoggin) and black alder (Alnus glutinosa (L.)Gaertn.), and a pure stand of black alder. Clearly lower values were found in a plot with common oaks (Quercus robur L.) under a dense shelterwood of naturally regenerated willows (Salix spec.), and a plot exclusively stocked with naturally regenerated willows. The rapid resettlement of the backfilled, compacted clay soil is above all explained by the high pH-values found in the surface soil. The differences between the studied plots regarding total abundance and biomass might be explained by the different qualities and amounts of litter. The highest species diversity — expressed by the Shannon-index — and the highest proportion of endogeic species, particularlyAporrectodea caliginosa Savigny 1826, were calculated for the two stands with a mixture of alder and balsam poplar. This result could have been caused by the lack of parent soil bed and the particularly high pH-value of the soils found there.

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