Transformations of earthworm communities during post-logging successions in the forests of the Northwest Caucasus

The paper presents study findings of the earthworm population at three phases of post-logging succession of coniferous–broad-leaved forests in the Northwest Caucasus (heads of the Pshekha and Belaya rivers). Three types of forest communities corresponding to the stages of forest vegetation successio...

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Main Author: A.P. Geraskina
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Russian Academy of Sciences, Center for Forest Ecology and Productivity 2019-06-01
Series:Вопросы лесной науки
Subjects:
Online Access:http://jfsi.ru/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/2-2-2019-Geraskina1.pdf
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spelling doaj-b54f2e21b74b462393d5cffd8e5c99972020-11-25T03:00:31ZengRussian Academy of Sciences, Center for Forest Ecology and ProductivityВопросы лесной науки2658-607X2019-06-012211110.31509/2658-607x-2019-2-2-1-11Transformations of earthworm communities during post-logging successions in the forests of the Northwest CaucasusA.P. Geraskina0Center for Forest Ecology and Productivity of the RASThe paper presents study findings of the earthworm population at three phases of post-logging succession of coniferous–broad-leaved forests in the Northwest Caucasus (heads of the Pshekha and Belaya rivers). Three types of forest communities corresponding to the stages of forest vegetation succession were examined: early stage – aspen–hornbeam–honeysuckle small-grass forests, intermediate stage – fir–hornbeam small-grass forests, late stage – beech–fir dead-cover forests. Type of soil: brown forest soils. It has been shown that during the post-logging succession significant changes in the earthworm community occur only at the late stage, when the biomass of anecic worms increases significantly. Only at the late stage there are four stable morpho-ecological groups of Lumbricidae, despite the fact that at this stage the structure of ecological-cenotic plant groups becomes simpler and oligodominant dead-cover communities with a predominance of boreal species are formed. At all stages, species with the Crimean-Caucasian type of habitat (D. schmidti, D. mariupolensis) are prevalent. Demographic structure of the earthworm community in all types of forests is stable, represented by different ontogenetic states with a significant predominance of juvenile worms (65–78%).http://jfsi.ru/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/2-2-2019-Geraskina1.pdfnorthwest caucasussuccessionearthwormslumbricidaeforestsoil
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author A.P. Geraskina
spellingShingle A.P. Geraskina
Transformations of earthworm communities during post-logging successions in the forests of the Northwest Caucasus
Вопросы лесной науки
northwest caucasus
succession
earthworms
lumbricidae
forest
soil
author_facet A.P. Geraskina
author_sort A.P. Geraskina
title Transformations of earthworm communities during post-logging successions in the forests of the Northwest Caucasus
title_short Transformations of earthworm communities during post-logging successions in the forests of the Northwest Caucasus
title_full Transformations of earthworm communities during post-logging successions in the forests of the Northwest Caucasus
title_fullStr Transformations of earthworm communities during post-logging successions in the forests of the Northwest Caucasus
title_full_unstemmed Transformations of earthworm communities during post-logging successions in the forests of the Northwest Caucasus
title_sort transformations of earthworm communities during post-logging successions in the forests of the northwest caucasus
publisher Russian Academy of Sciences, Center for Forest Ecology and Productivity
series Вопросы лесной науки
issn 2658-607X
publishDate 2019-06-01
description The paper presents study findings of the earthworm population at three phases of post-logging succession of coniferous–broad-leaved forests in the Northwest Caucasus (heads of the Pshekha and Belaya rivers). Three types of forest communities corresponding to the stages of forest vegetation succession were examined: early stage – aspen–hornbeam–honeysuckle small-grass forests, intermediate stage – fir–hornbeam small-grass forests, late stage – beech–fir dead-cover forests. Type of soil: brown forest soils. It has been shown that during the post-logging succession significant changes in the earthworm community occur only at the late stage, when the biomass of anecic worms increases significantly. Only at the late stage there are four stable morpho-ecological groups of Lumbricidae, despite the fact that at this stage the structure of ecological-cenotic plant groups becomes simpler and oligodominant dead-cover communities with a predominance of boreal species are formed. At all stages, species with the Crimean-Caucasian type of habitat (D. schmidti, D. mariupolensis) are prevalent. Demographic structure of the earthworm community in all types of forests is stable, represented by different ontogenetic states with a significant predominance of juvenile worms (65–78%).
topic northwest caucasus
succession
earthworms
lumbricidae
forest
soil
url http://jfsi.ru/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/2-2-2019-Geraskina1.pdf
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