Late-Holocene fire history as revealed by size, age and composition of the soil charcoal pool in neighbouring beech and spruce forest landscapes in SE Norway

2017 
European beech and Norway spruce are late successional tree species that have become rapidly dominant in northern Europe in late-Holocene. The northern distribution limit for natural beech forests is in SE Norway, where beech forests and boreal spruce forests meet. Here we have estimated the size, composition and age of the macroscopic charcoal pool to infer past fire history and the establishment of neighbouring Norwegian beech- and spruce forests. To encompass landscape level scales of variations in the charcoal pool, we have analysed the charcoal record in 100 soil cores that were collected using a restricted random procedure. The sizes of the soil charcoal pools ranged from 2 to 1214 g m−2, and they were significantly more spatially variable in the beech forest landscape than in the spruce forest landscape. We show that today’s beech forests took over the dominance from Norway spruce in the landscape about 300 years ago, and that fire disturbances on the landscape level preceded the establishment of b...
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