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Reconstructing Soil Recovery from Acid Rain in Beech (Fagus sylvatica) Stands of the Vienna Woods as Indicated by Removal of Stemflow and Dendrochemistry
2019
Türtscher, Selina | Grabner, Michael | Berger, Torsten W.
Our goal was to reconstruct soil recovery from Acid Rain based upon removal of stemflow at beech (Fagus sylvatica) stands of known historic and recent soil status. Fourteen beech stands in the Vienna Woods were selected in 1984 and again in 2012 to study changes in soil and foliar chemistry over time. A part of those stands had been strip cut, and to assess reversibility of soil acidification, we analyzed soils around beech stumps from different years of felling, representing the years when acidic stemflow ceased to affect the soil. Furthermore, it was hypothesized that changes of soil chemistry are reflected in the stemwood of beech. Half-decadal samples of tree cores were analyzed for Ca, Mg, K, Mn, Fe, and Al. Soil analyses indicated recovery in the top soil of the stemflow area but recovery was delayed in the between trees areas and deeper soil horizons. Differences in soil pH between proximal and distal area from beech stumps were still detectable after 30 years indicating that soils may not recover fully from acidification or do so at a rather slow rate. Stemwood contents indicated mobilization of base cations during the early 80s followed by a steady decrease thereafter. Backward reconstructions of soil pH and soil nutrients, building on regressions between recent stemwood and soil chemistry, could not be verified by measured soil data in 1984, but matched with declining cation foliar contents from 1984 to 2012. Dendrochemical reconstructions showed highest values in the 1980s, but measured soil exchangeable cation contents were clearly lower in 1984. Hence, we conclude that our reconstructions mimicked soil solution rather than soil exchanger chemistry.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]The effect of immission load on the costs and yields of the output wood
1995
Kupcak, V. (Mendelova Zemedelska a Lesnicka Univ., Brno (Czech Republic). Fakulta Lesnicka a Drevarska)
Forests in Virumaa
2000
Ratas, R. (Estonian Agricultural Univ., Tartu (Estonia). Inst. of Environment Protection) | Ratas, J. (Tallinn Technical University, Tallinn (Estonia))
Virumaa has the richest forest resources in Estonia. The area covered with forests in Virumaa amounts to 51.3 per cent (total in Estonia 49 per cent). Pine, birch and spruce forests dominate. A large part of forests are under technogenous pressure (oil-shale mining, power engineering etc.). The total amount of all the fellings in 1999 was 1.061 million cubic metres (in Estonia totally 6.704 mln. cubic metres). The volume of fellings has reached the critical level close to the annual increment of forests. Therefore, the volume of cutting down forests should not be increased
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