森林土壤、木炭和历史土地利用

IF 0.7 4区 农林科学 Q3 FORESTRY
Baltic Forestry Pub Date : 2020-12-23 DOI:10.46490/BF478
Pille Tomson, T. Kaart, K. Sepp
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引用次数: 3

摘要

森林土壤中的木炭沉积物主要是在野火的背景下考虑的。然而,直到20世纪初,北欧的刀耕火种种植一直很普遍,大片以前的雨燕现在被森林覆盖。研究地点位于爱沙尼亚南部的卡鲁拉国家公园。19世纪的地籍图被用来确定历史上的土地使用情况。对57个土坑中的宏观(可见)木炭进行了研究,这些土坑位于历史上的刀耕火种遗址、森林、以前的耕地、最近的森林火灾遗址和实验性刀耕火种地。记录了木炭在土壤剖面中的位置。在四个地点,对木炭样本进行了年代测定。木炭广泛分布在北方森林土壤中。其中相当一部分可能源于历史上的刀耕火种。木炭深度与不同强度下农业用地的持续时间和方法有关。富含木炭层的位置最好地反映了历史耕种,尽管不均匀的空间分布和不同火灾事件中木炭的明显迁移使木炭模式的解释变得复杂。并不是所有的易位机制都得到了解释。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Forest soil charcoal and historical land use
Charcoal deposits in forest soils have been considered mainly in the context of wildfires. However, slash-and-burn cultivation has been widespread in Northern Europe until the beginning of the 20th century and extensive areas of former swiddens are now covered by forests. The study sites were in Karula National Park in Southern Estonia. 19th-century cadastral maps were used to identify the historical land use. Macroscopic (visible) charcoal was studied in 57 soil pits, located in historical slash-and-burn sites, forests, former arable fields, recent forest fire sites, and experimental slash-and-burn fields. The locations of charcoal in the soil profile were recorded. In four sites, the charcoal samples were dated. Charcoal is widespread in boreal forest soils. A considerable proportion of this could originate from historical slash-and-burn cultivation. The charcoal depth was related to agricultural land use duration and methods at different intensities. The location of the charcoal-rich layer reflected the historical cultivation best, though patchy spatial distribution and the evident translocation of charcoal from different fire events complicates the interpretation of the charcoal pattern. Not all translocation mechanisms have yet been explained.
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来源期刊
Baltic Forestry
Baltic Forestry 农林科学-林学
CiteScore
1.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
23
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: The journal welcomes the original articles as well as short reports, review papers on forestry and forest science throughout the Baltic Sea region and elsewhere in the area of boreal and temperate forests. The Baltic Sea region is rather unique through its intrinsic environment and distinguished geographical and social conditions. A temperate climate, transitional and continental, has influenced formation of the mixed coniferous and deciduous stands of high productivity and biological diversity. The forest science has been affected by the ideas from both the East and West. In 1995, Forest Research Institutes and Universities from Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania joined their efforts to publish BALTIC FORESTRY.
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