Three hundred years of spatio-temporal development in a primary mountain Norway spruce stand in the Bohemian Forest, central Europe

2014 ◽  
Vol 330 ◽  
pp. 304-311 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pavel Janda ◽  
Miroslav Svoboda ◽  
Radek Bače ◽  
Vojtěch Čada ◽  
JeriLynn E. Peck
Biologia ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 61 (20) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jiří Kopáček ◽  
Jaroslav Vrba

AbstractThe Bohemian Forest (Šumava, Böhmerwald) is situated in Central Europe and is among the most acidified lake districts in the world. Deposition of S and N compounds in the area rapidly increased between 1950 and 1980, and reached a maximum in the 1980s. During the 1990s, acid deposition decreased substantially, and current levels are comparable to the early 20th century for SO42− and NH4+, and to the mid 1960s for NO3−. These changes in acid deposition have led to a partial recovery of the Bohemian Forest lakes. This paper provides an overview of previous research, and details on the organization and aims of current research on the Bohemian Forest lakes. Available historical data and regular monitoring (since 1984) provide a valuable background for long-term ecological research of the catchment-lake ecosystems that currently focuses on (i) chemical reversal and biological recovery of the lakes, (ii) acidification impacts on in-lake nutrient cycling, (iii) climatic effects on water chemistry, and (iv) catchment processes, including soil biogeochemistry and acidification impacts on vegetation.


Boreas ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 44 (4) ◽  
pp. 769-784 ◽  
Author(s):  
Klára Vočadlová ◽  
Libor Petr ◽  
Pavla Žáčková ◽  
Marek Křížek ◽  
Lenka Křížová ◽  
...  

Biologia ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 64 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
František Gregor ◽  
Rudolf Rozkošný

AbstractCoenosia bohemica sp. n. is described from the Bohemian Forest in the Czech Republic. Its relationships to similar species are discussed and its diagnostic characters are illustrated.


The Holocene ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 095968362098806
Author(s):  
Alice Moravcová ◽  
Anna Tichá ◽  
Vachel A Carter ◽  
Daniel Vondrák ◽  
Martina Čtvrtlíková ◽  
...  

In this study we aim to investigate millennial-scale dynamics of Isoëtes, a type of macrophyte well adapted to oligotrophic and clear-water lakes. Despite its wide distribution during the Early Holocene, nowadays Isoëtes is considered as vulnerable or critically endangered in many Central European countries. Using a multi-proxy palaeoecological reconstruction involving Isoëtes micro- and megaspores, pollen, plant macrofossils, macro-charcoal, diatoms and chironomids from four lakes (Prášilské jezero, Plešné jezero, Černé jezero, Rachelsee) located in the Bohemian Forest Ecosystem mountain region in Central Europe, we reconstruct Isoëtes dynamics and discuss how local environmental factors impacted its distribution and abundance during the Holocene. Our results show regionally concurrent patterns of Isoëtes colonisation across all lakes beginning 10,300–9300 cal yr BP, and substantially declining around 6400 cal yr BP. Results from Prášilské jezero imply that Isoëtes decline and collapse in this lake reflect gradual dystrophication that led to the browning of lake water. This is evidenced by a shift in diatom assemblages towards more acidophilous taxa dominated by Asterionella ralfsii and by a decrease in total chironomid abundance and taxa sensitive to low oxygen levels. Dystrophication of Prášilské jezero was linked with the immigration of the late-successional tree taxa ( Picea abies and later Fagus sylvatica and Abies alba), peatland expansion, and decreasing fire activity. Multi-site comparison of pollen records suggest that these vegetation-related environmental changes were common for the whole region. Our study demonstrates the sensitivity of Isoëtes to millennial-scale natural environmental changes within the surrounding lake catchment.


PeerJ ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 4 ◽  
pp. e1645 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pawel Wasowicz ◽  
Maxime Pauwels ◽  
Andrzej Pasierbinski ◽  
Ewa M. Przedpelska-Wasowicz ◽  
Alicja A. Babst-Kostecka ◽  
...  

The present study aimed to investigate phylogeographical patterns present withinA. halleriin Central Europe. 1,281 accessions sampled from 52 populations within the investigated area were used in the study of genetic variation based on chloroplast DNA. Over 500 high-quality species occurrence records were used in ecological niche modelling experiments. We evidenced the presence of a clear phylogeographic structure withinA. halleriin Central Europe. Our results showed that two genetically different groups of populations are present in western and eastern part of the Carpathians. The hypothesis of the existence of a glacial refugium in the Western Carpathians adn the Bohemian Forest cannot be rejected from our data. It seems, however, that the evidence collected during the present study is not conclusive. The area of Sudetes was colonised after LGM probably by migrants from the Bohemian Forest.


2003 ◽  
Vol 310 (1-3) ◽  
pp. 73-85 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jaroslav Vrba ◽  
Jiřı&́ Kopáček ◽  
Jan Fott ◽  
Leoš Kohout ◽  
Linda Nedbalová ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel Vondrák ◽  
Gunther Kletetschka ◽  
Eva Svecova ◽  
Jolana Hruba ◽  
Richard Štorc ◽  
...  

<p>Near 12,850 cal. yr. BP, the Younger Dryas cooling (YD) abruptly reversed the warming trend from the last glacial to the present interglacial at high northern latitudes. Subsequent YD-onset-related changes, including hydroclimate shifts, affected ecosystems and human societies worldwide. The main YD trigger – e.g., a massive meltwater input into the North Atlantic Ocean, volcanic gas aerosols from the cataclysmic Laacher See (LS) eruption in the Volcanic Eifel, Germany, or an extraterrestrial body impact or airburst – remains widely debated and unclear. We have obtained lake sediment cores from three sites located in the Bohemian Forest Mts., Czechia-Germany-Austria border area (distance of 450–470 km from the LS volcanic crater). The characteristic LS tephra glass shards were documented in all three cores using X-ray fluorescence scanning, magnetic susceptibility measurements, and direct observation by scanning electron microscopy, and their concentrations were quantified by a TESCAN Integrated Mineral Analyzer (TIMA). Our geochemical results show the closest match with the so-called MLST-B phreatomagmatic phase of the LS eruption. Moreover, a significant amount of LS-(crypto)tephra-related phosphorus (up to 0.15%), often the limiting nutrient in both terrestrial and freshwater ecosystems, was found in the sediments. The discovery of the LS volcanic ash in the Bohemian Forest points to a wider distribution of this (crypto)tephra than has been known so far (evident transport also in the eastern direction). It opens up new potential for tephrochronologically supported research of Late-glacial sediments in eastern Central Europe and exploring the role of the event in human prehistory. In addition to the LS cryptotephra, we observed magnetically extracted iron-rich microspherules with signs of high-temperature melting and quenching in all studied sediment cores. Their maxima (3–36 objects per 1 g of dry sediment) were situated 2.2–3.1 cm above peaks in the LS tephra shard concentrations. Such exotic objects were reported from numerous sites on several continents where more impact-related proxies were documented by proponents of the YD impact hypothesis. Based on this evidence, we hypothesize that the Allerød-Younger Dryas transition in Central Europe was likely affected by more than one extreme event. The LS eruption was followed by an event during which the iron-rich microspherules were formed. The ongoing study is supported by the Czech Grant Foundation (20-08294S – PROGRESS).</p>


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