4.5 Article

The effect of landscape fragmentation and forest continuity on forest floor species in two regions of Denmark

Journal

JOURNAL OF VEGETATION SCIENCE
Volume 11, Issue 6, Pages 881-892

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.2307/3236558

Keywords

colonization; interior forest species; isolation; seed dispersal; temperate broad-leaved forest

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Forest species composition was recorded in 82 forests in the Himmerland and Hornsherred regions in Denmark and analysed with respect to isolation (distance to other forests and areas of forest), forest continuity (older or younger than 200 yr), soil pH, tree species composition and seed dispersal groups. Continuity and isolation measures were correlated with forest species richness in Hornsherred. Myrmecochorous, autochorous, anemoballistic and endozoochorous species were markedly fewer in recent than in ancient forests. In Himmerland, patterns were much weaker and few significant correlations were found between forest species richness or different seed dispersal groups and continuity or isolation of the forests. Differences between the two regions may result from less intensive land use, a more humid climate and a smaller species pool with less species with short distance dispersal in Himmerland. Landscape fragmentation therefore appears to limit forest species' recolonization more in Hornsherred than in Himmerland.

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