Ausmass und Auswirkungen der Waldbrände auf die Vegetation der Schweiz im Laufe der Jahrtausende | Relevance and effects of fire disturbance on vegetation in Switzerland during the past millennia
Author(s) -
Willy Tinner,
Britta Allgöwer,
Brigitta Ammann,
Marco Conedera,
Erika Gobet,
André F. Lotter,
Markus Stähli
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
schweizerische zeitschrift fur forstwesen
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2235-1469
pISSN - 0036-7818
DOI - 10.3188/szf.2005.0325
Subject(s) - plateau (mathematics) , vegetation (pathology) , geography , fire history , disturbance (geology) , ecology , fire ecology , fire regime , physical geography , macrofossil , forestry , pollen , geology , ecosystem , climate change , biology , geomorphology , medicine , mathematical analysis , mathematics , pathology
New palaeoecological investigations (pollen, macrofossil, and charcoal analyses) provide important evidence on the fire history and the long-term fire ecology of different regions of Switzerland. The results from the Swiss plateau, the Northern and Central Alps and Southern Switzerland suggest that fire played a different role for the long-term vegetational development in the different regions. In the Northern Alps and Southern Switzerland anthropogenic fires led to the disappearance of entire forest communities. These fires especially affected the fire-sensitive species Abies alba. On the Swiss Plateau fire frequencies were markedly lower than in the Southern Alps. Nevertheless, fires probably led to a decline in the occurrence of fire-sensitive taxa such as Ulmus, Fraxinus excelsior or Tilia at lower altitudes (Fagus silvatica-Quercus belt). First evidences from the Central Alps suggest that forest fires were naturally more frequent in this continental region and that the vegetation might be better fire-adapted than the original (partly or completely vanished) plant communities of the Swiss Plateau, the Northern Alps and Southern Switzerland
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