Post-cultural stand dynamics in an abandoned chestnut coppice at its ecological border

Until the be­ginning of the last century, chestnut has played an important role as staple food and primary wood source. In many cases it was cultivated at the border of its ecological limits where it was planted by man in place of the original and more site-adapted tree species. However, wit...

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Format: Article
Language:Italian
Published: Italian Society of Silviculture and Forest Ecology (SISEF) 2006-01-01
Series:Forest@
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sisef.it/forest@/showPaper.php?action=html(7,340)&lang=en
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spelling doaj-1b04b58d7006498f9ee6f3d83c0c9e412020-11-25T00:56:36ZitaItalian Society of Silviculture and Forest Ecology (SISEF)Forest@1824-01192006-01-01318690Post-cultural stand dynamics in an abandoned chestnut coppice at its ecological borderUntil the be­ginning of the last century, chestnut has played an important role as staple food and primary wood source. In many cases it was cultivated at the border of its ecological limits where it was planted by man in place of the original and more site-adapted tree species. However, with the abandonment of the rural activities, ma­nagement of chestnut forests was progressively left starting from more marginal areas, usually occupied by coppice stands. After the interruption of the traditional coppice management system (usual rotation periods of 10-25 years), natural intra- and interspecific competition dynamics have become the driving force of the stand evolution. This may lead to dramatic changes in both structure and species composition of the stands. The aim of this study is to analyse the post-cultural evolution of an abandoned chestnut coppice in the Pesio Valley (Piedmont, Italy) in order to highlight the competition among different "basic silvi­cultural components" of the forest using a dendroecological approach. The "basic silvicultural components" are intended as the elements defined as groups of trees of the stand that have similar features such as silvi­culturally relevant attributes: species (chestnut, beech, fir), origin (seed, sprout) and cultural age and function (standard/reserve, maiden, shoot, regeneration, dead tree). The mean growth curves of the compo­nents show the different fitness of each category. From a general point of view, the beech and fir components show a better competitive potential in comparison with chestnut. Among chestnut components, maidens from seeds reveal a better growth trend compared to coppice shoots and standards.http://www.sisef.it/forest@/showPaper.php?action=html(7,340)&lang=encoppiceabandonmentstand developmentcompetitiondendroecologychestnutItaly
collection DOAJ
language Italian
format Article
sources DOAJ
title Post-cultural stand dynamics in an abandoned chestnut coppice at its ecological border
spellingShingle Post-cultural stand dynamics in an abandoned chestnut coppice at its ecological border
Forest@
coppice
abandonment
stand development
competition
dendroecology
chestnut
Italy
title_short Post-cultural stand dynamics in an abandoned chestnut coppice at its ecological border
title_full Post-cultural stand dynamics in an abandoned chestnut coppice at its ecological border
title_fullStr Post-cultural stand dynamics in an abandoned chestnut coppice at its ecological border
title_full_unstemmed Post-cultural stand dynamics in an abandoned chestnut coppice at its ecological border
title_sort post-cultural stand dynamics in an abandoned chestnut coppice at its ecological border
publisher Italian Society of Silviculture and Forest Ecology (SISEF)
series Forest@
issn 1824-0119
publishDate 2006-01-01
description Until the be­ginning of the last century, chestnut has played an important role as staple food and primary wood source. In many cases it was cultivated at the border of its ecological limits where it was planted by man in place of the original and more site-adapted tree species. However, with the abandonment of the rural activities, ma­nagement of chestnut forests was progressively left starting from more marginal areas, usually occupied by coppice stands. After the interruption of the traditional coppice management system (usual rotation periods of 10-25 years), natural intra- and interspecific competition dynamics have become the driving force of the stand evolution. This may lead to dramatic changes in both structure and species composition of the stands. The aim of this study is to analyse the post-cultural evolution of an abandoned chestnut coppice in the Pesio Valley (Piedmont, Italy) in order to highlight the competition among different "basic silvi­cultural components" of the forest using a dendroecological approach. The "basic silvicultural components" are intended as the elements defined as groups of trees of the stand that have similar features such as silvi­culturally relevant attributes: species (chestnut, beech, fir), origin (seed, sprout) and cultural age and function (standard/reserve, maiden, shoot, regeneration, dead tree). The mean growth curves of the compo­nents show the different fitness of each category. From a general point of view, the beech and fir components show a better competitive potential in comparison with chestnut. Among chestnut components, maidens from seeds reveal a better growth trend compared to coppice shoots and standards.
topic coppice
abandonment
stand development
competition
dendroecology
chestnut
Italy
url http://www.sisef.it/forest@/showPaper.php?action=html(7,340)&lang=en
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