4.5 Article

Silviculture-driven vegetation change in a European temperate deciduous forest

Journal

ANNALS OF FOREST SCIENCE
Volume 62, Issue 4, Pages 313-323

Publisher

SPRINGER FRANCE
DOI: 10.1051/forest:2005026

Keywords

disturbance; microclimate; forest management; plant diversity; true forest species

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Forest management consists in anthropogenic disturbances that are able to modulate ecological features, resource availability and successional patterns. Plant communities are thus expected to react differently to contrasted silvicultural systems. We compared plant species composition between stands submitted to a traditional management since many centuries (i.e. coppice-with-standards treatment, stands intensively but infrequently disturbed) and stands recently converted into a selective cutting system ( stands moderately but frequently disturbed), over uniform edaphic and topographic conditions. We found significant differences in species composition between both systems. Despite a strong shift in species composition among different stages of the coppice cycle, coppice-with-standards stands supported the highest number of true forest species. Selectively-cut stands were more homogeneous and characterized by ruderal generalist species. These fast changes in vegetation composition were related to differences in a group of factors that are directly or indirectly linked to the silviculture-associated disturbance regime, including soil moisture, soil fertility, forest microclimate, light and game predation. We conclude that the conversion of a silvicultural system which has patterned plant communities since many centuries, induces early major changes in vegetation composition. The most negatively impacted species are the so-called true forest species that may be better labelled coppice-woodlandspecies.

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