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The Effect of Topography on Long-Term Spontaneous Development of Soil and Woody Cover on Graded and Untreated Overburden

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Author
Vicentini, FabioORCiD Profile - 0000-0003-4433-7177Scopus Profile - 57196355720
Hendrychova, Marketa
Tajovsky, Karel
Pazl, Vaclav
Frouz, JanORCiD Profile - 0000-0002-0908-8606WoS Profile - P-4388-2016Scopus Profile - 7004742264

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Publication date
2020
Published in
Forests [online]
Volume / Issue
11 (5)
ISBN / ISSN
ISSN: 1999-4907
ISBN / ISSN
eISSN: 1999-4907
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  • Faculty of Science

This publication has a published version with DOI 10.3390/f11050602

Abstract
We studied the development of soil and soil fauna, as well as selected vegetation parameters important for litter input into soil, in two chronosequences of postmining sites after opencast lignite mining near the town of Most (Czechia). Both chronosequences did not have tree planting. On the first chronosequence, no leveling or any other measures had taken place after heaping, and the site kept the wavelike appearance created by the dumping process. The second chronosequence was formed by sites levelled by earthmoving machinery and in which shallow topsoil layers were spread. Both chronosequences were about 30 years old, and consisted of 8 and 11 sites for wavelike and levelled sites, respectively. In addition, samples were taken from a birch site outside of the heaps. Results showed differences in the development of tree and herb layers in both chronosequences. In the levelled sites, herb and tree cover increased after levelling, and woody cover developed much slower. In ungraded sites, woody cover developed faster, and the herb layer slower. Soil chemistry showed a similar pattern in both sites over time, characterized by a decrease in pH and sodium ion content. Soil macrofauna in levelled sites showed random oscillations, while it gradually increased with time in wavelike sites. The study suggested that site levelling alters long-term ecosystem development in postmining sites. Wavelike sites tend to develop towards pioneer forests, while leveled sites tend to be covered by grass and herb vegetation.
Keywords
biodiversity conservation, restoration ecology, habitat heterogeneity, vegetation dynamics, fauna colonization
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https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14178/2484
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WOS:000542736000078
SCOPUS:2-s2.0-85086501436
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Full text of this result is licensed under: Creative Commons Uveďte původ 4.0 International

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