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Título
Effect of the forest-mine boundary form on woody colonization and forest expansion in degraded ecosystems
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
boundary form
browsing pattern
fragmentation
Quercus petraea forests
sub-Mediterranean climate
surface coal-mining
vertical structure
vertical structure
Clasificación UNESCO
24 Ciencias de la vida
Fecha de publicación
2021
Editor
MDPI
Citación
Martínez-Ruiz, C., Milder, A. I., López-Marcos, D., Zaldívar, P., & Fernández-Santos, B. (2021). Effect of the forest-mine boundary form on woody colonization and forest expansion in degraded ecosystems. Forests, 12(6), 773.
Resumen
[ENG]We evaluated the ecological significance of the boundary form between two patches
with contrasting vegetation (mine grassland and adjacent forest) on woody colonization and forest
expansion in open-cast coal mines in Northern Spain. Woody colonization and browsing traces
were measured on three mine sites, along 24 transects that were laid out perpendicular to the
forest-mine boundary and classified according to their shape (concave, convex, straight). Mine sites
were colonized from the close forest by woody species, whose colonization intensity depends on
the boundary form. The overall colonization intensity decreased with increasing distance to the
forest and differed depending on the boundary form. The more intense colonization was found in
concave boundaries and the strongest decrease in convex boundaries close to the forest, whereas
straight boundaries showed an intermediate colonization pattern. Concave boundaries reached
higher woody cover in the basal strata of the mines than convex (up to 2 m) or straight boundaries
(up to 1 m) from 11 m to the forest edge, mainly by the presence of dense patches of Cytisus scoparius
(L.) Link, with a scattered overstory of Genista florida L. These shrubs might reduce the browsing
intensity and act as nurse plants facilitating the establishment of Quercus petraea (Matt.) Liebl. in
mine areas at greater distances from the forest edge. The forest-mine boundary form does not affect
the forest vertical structure that is homogenous and does not help explain the woody colonization
pattern in the mines. We conclude that edge characteristics have a strong potential to be used in the
restoration of native forests based on natural processes. The implications of our results for sessile
oak (Quercus petraea (Matt.) Liebl.) forest expansion along edges in fragmented Mediterranean forest
landscapes were discussed.
URI
DOI
10.3390/F12060773
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