4.3 Article

Upper Holocene dry land vegetation in the Moravian-Slovakian borderland (Czech and Slovak Republics)

Journal

VEGETATION HISTORY AND ARCHAEOBOTANY
Volume 17, Issue 6, Pages 701-711

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00334-008-0160-z

Keywords

Late Holocene forest vegetation; Pollen analysis; Spring fen sediments; Beskydy Mts; Bile Karpaty Mts; Czech and Slovak Republics

Funding

  1. Czech Republic [206/02/0568]
  2. Institute of Botany of the Czech Academy of Sciences

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Five pollen diagrams representing the upper Holocene vegetation and its anthropogenic changes are presented and evaluated. They come from small spring fens in the Czech (Moravian) and Slovak borderland. The northern part of the region (the Beskydy Mts) had natural, precultural forests with either coniferous trees (Picea abies and Abies alba) or mixed with Fagus sylvatica. In the southern part of the region (the Bile Karpaty Mts) forests dominated by Fagus mixed with Acer, Fraxinus and Ulmus prevailed, whereas conifers were almost absent, although in a central, transitional region (northern Bile Karpaty Mts) Abies was locally abundant in relatively humid places. Medieval colonisation deforested their lower areas and foothills in the course of the 11th-13th centuries and transformed the original mixed oak forests into fields and meadows, but the mountain forests were little affected. In the Beskydy Mts in the north, the Walachian colonisation of the 16th and 17th centuries transformed parts of the mountain forests into meadows, pasture and farmlands. Most remaining woodlands were transformed during the last two centuries into spruce plantations. In the Bile Karpaty Mts in the south, the Walachian transformation of mountain forests had already started by the 15th century.

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