Early succession on plots with the upper soil horizon removed |
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Authors: | Jan Lep Jaroslav Michlek Ota Rauch Petr Uhlík |
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Institution: | Jan Lep?,Jaroslav Michálek,Ota Rauch,Petr Uhlík |
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Abstract: | Abstract. Succession was studied on plots with the upper soil horizon removed in an area affected by acidic air pollution in the Kru?né Hory Mts., Czech Republic. 10 permanent 1‐m2 plots were marked and vegetation recorded annually using a grid of 100 subplots from 1989 to 1995. Constrained ordination analyses showed that soil texture is the most important environmental factor influencing the course of succession. Its effect on species composition increases with successional age of the plant community. On fine‐grained soils species‐poor communities dominated by grasses (Calamagrostis villosa, Deschampsiaflexuosa) and on coarse‐grained soils species‐rich communities dominated by heather (Calluna vulgaris) developed. Succession proceeded from communities where species composition was determined by diaspore availability towards communities where species composition depended on environmental conditions. Successional communities after 10 yr are more dependent on soil characteristics and consequently environmental determination increases over the course of succession and causes the communities to diverge. |
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Keywords: | Convergence Divergence Kruš né Hory Mts Redundancy Analysis Soil texture |
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