6533b860fe1ef96bd12c301c

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Plant communities of the Czerwona Woda River Valley (Stołowe Mountains National Park)

Mariusz HachułkaMarek MalickiIzabela KałuckaRemigiusz PielechJacek KamczycMichał SmoczykSylwia WierzcholskaAnna GazdaAndrzej M. JagodzińskiPaweł HorodeckiMaciej SkorupskiMarcin K. Dyderski

subject

0106 biological sciencescentral sudetesRiver valley010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesNational parkstołowe mountainsGeneral. Including nature conservation geographical distributionriparian vegetationPlant communityQH1-199.5010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesArchaeologyplant communitiesGeographyriver valleyQH1-278.5Natural history (General)0105 earth and related environmental sciences

description

Abstract The Czerwona Woda River is the main watercourse in the Stołowe Mountains National Park and drains the major part of the Stołowe Mts. It was regulated in the past, but its channel has been spontaneously naturalised. Now, managed spruce forests grow along almost the entire length of this small mountain stream. The aims of the present study were to investigate diversity of plant communities connected with the Czerwona Woda stream and to prepare detailed vegetation maps. The results obtained can potentially be a reference for future restoration projects implemented in the Stołowe Mountains National Park. As a result of vegetation mapping, there were distinguished 20 plant communities representative of the current vegetation and 3 communities representative of the potential vegetation. Phytosociological data on the vegetation was documented by making 62 phytosociological relevés. Based on these, 9 forest communities were distinguished, of which 3 were classified into associations, 1 – into alliance, 5 – into secondary forest communities. Furthermore, there were distinguished 14 non-forest communities, of which 10 were classified into associations. Several of the phytosociological classes distinguished have been reported for the first time in the Stołowe Mountains National Park.

https://doi.org/10.2478/frp-2018-0019