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  3. Present-day vegetation and the Holocene and recent development of Egelsee-Moor, Salzburg province, Austria
 

Present-day vegetation and the Holocene and recent development of Egelsee-Moor, Salzburg province, Austria

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BORIS DOI
10.7892/boris.82040
Publisher DOI
10.1007/s00334-016-0568-9
Description
This paper describes the present-day vegetation, stratigraphy and developmental history of the mire of Egelsee-Moor (Salzburg, Austria; 45°45′N, 13°8.5′E, 700 m a.s.l., 15 ha in area) since the early Late Glacial on the basis of 4 transects with 14 trial borings across the peatland. We present a vegetation map of the mire, a longitudinal section through the peat body based on six cores showing the peat types, overview macrofossil diagrams of six cores showing the local mire development and two pollen diagrams covering the Late Glacial and Holocene. The chronology of the diagrams depends on biostratigraphic dating for the Late Glacial and early Holocene and radiocarbon dating for the remaining Holocene. The northern part of the mire originated through terrestrialisation of nutrient-rich, mostly inundated fen and the southern part through paludification of wet soils. The very small lake of today was a reservoir until recently for providing water-power for timber rafting (‘Holztrift’). The mire vegetation today is a complex of forested parts (mainly planted Pinus sylvestris and Thuja occidentalis, but also spontaneous Picea abies, Betula pubescens and Frangula alnus), reed-lands (Phragmites) and litter meadows (Molinietum, Schoenetum, etc.). The central part has hummock-hollow complexes with regionally rare species of transitional mires (Drosera anglica, D. intermedia, Lycopodiella inundata, Scorpidium scorpioides, Sphagnum platyphyllum, S. subnitens). The results indicate that some of the mid-Holocene sediments may have been removed by the timber-rafting practices, and that water extraction from the hydrological catchment since 1967 has resulted in a partial shift of transitional mire to ombrotrophic bog. The latter potentially endangers the regionally rare species and was used as an argument to stop further water extraction.
Date of Publication
2016-11
Publication Type
Article
Subject(s)
500 Science > 580 Plants (Botany)
Keyword(s)
Mire stratigraphy
•
Pollen
•
Vegetation history
•
Macrofossils
•
Present-day vegetation
•
Nature conservation
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Krisai, Robert
van Leeuwen, Jacqueline Francisca
Institut für Pflanzenwissenschaften (IPS)
van der Knaap, Willem Oscar
Institut für Pflanzenwissenschaften (IPS)
Additional Credits
Institut für Pflanzenwissenschaften (IPS)
Series
Vegetation History and Archaeobotany
Publisher
Springer
ISSN
0939-6314
Related URL(s)
https://rdcu.be/bPytg
Access(Rights)
open.access
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