Ara, Mostarin
- Southern Swedish Forest Research Centre, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
Research article2022Peer reviewedOpen access
Ara, Mostarin; Barbeito, Ignacio; Kalen, Christer; Nilsson, Urban
How seedling mortality and browsing affects species composition of regenerating forests has been mostly studied on a small scale. Yet, large-scale analyses based on extensive data are essential for robust prediction of species composition in young forests. In this study, we used a dataset from a national inventory of young forests (1-4 metres in height) to investigate the species composition of young forests across Sweden. We found that most of the regenerated forest area (almost 90%) was planted with Norway spruce (southern Sweden) and Scots pine (northern Sweden). Regeneration of Norway spruce was generally relatively successful but as a consequence of seedling mortality and browsing, almost 40% of the area regenerated with Scots pine will probably not develop into pine-dominated stands. Thus, low survival of Scots pine seedlings and trees can profoundly change the trajectory of species composition of the young forest from what was originally intended, and a large proportion of the young stands may develop into mixtures of conifers and broadleaves. While such mixtures may benefit certain biodiversity and ecosystem services, a loss of Scots pine dominated stands may also have adverse impacts on the economic returns as well as pine-dependent biodiversity and recreational values.
browsing damage; Scots pine; Norway spruce; mixed forest
Scandinavian Journal of Forest Research
2022, Volume: 37, number: 1, pages: 1445-1457 Publisher: TAYLOR AND FRANCIS AS
SLU Forest Damage Center
SDG15 Life on land
Forest Science
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/02827581.2021.2005133
https://res.slu.se/id/publ/114698