Management of sessile oak (Quercus petraea (Matt.) Liebl.), a major forest species in Europe

被引:0
作者
Valeriu-Norocel Nicolescu [1 ]
Torsten Vor [2 ]
Robert Brus [3 ]
Martina Đodan [4 ]
Sanja Perić [4 ]
Vilém Podrázský [5 ]
Siniša Andrašev [6 ]
Evgeni Tsavkov [7 ]
Sezgin Ayan [8 ]
Cengiz Yücedağ [9 ]
Pande Trajkov [10 ]
Dana Dina Kolevska [10 ]
Cornelia Buzatu-Goanță [11 ]
Michal Pástor [12 ]
Vladimír Mačejovský [13 ]
Juraj Modranský [12 ]
Marcin Klisz [13 ]
Wojciech Gil [14 ]
Vasyl Lavnyy [14 ]
Palle Madsen [15 ]
Nicola La Porta [16 ]
Debbie Bartlett [17 ]
机构
[1] University Transilvania of Brasov,Faculty of Silviculture and Forest Engineering
[2] Hawk University of Applied Sciences and Arts,Biotechnical Faculty
[3] University of Ljubljana,Faculty of Forestry and Wood Sciences
[4] Croatian Forest Research Institute,Department of Dendrology
[5] Czech University of Agriculture in Prague,Department of Silviculture, Faculty of Forestry
[6] Institute of Lowland Forestry and Environment,Faculty of Engineering and Architecture, Department of Landscape Architecture
[7] University of Forestry,Hans Em Faculty of Forest Sciences, Landscape Architecture and Environmental Engineering
[8] Kastamonu University,Department of Silviculture, Faculty of Engineering and Applied Technologies
[9] Burdur Mehmet Akif Ersoy University,Faculty of Ecology and Environmental Sciences
[10] İstiklal Yerleşkesi,Department of Silviculture and Forest Tree Genetics
[11] Ss. Cyril and Methodius University in Skopje (UKIM),Department of Silviculture
[12] University of Life Sciences “King Michael I”,Faculty of Engineering & Science
[13] National Forest Centre–Forest Research Institute Zvolen,undefined
[14] Technical University in Zvolen,undefined
[15] Forest Research Institute,undefined
[16] Ukrainian National Forestry University,undefined
[17] InNova Silva ApS,undefined
[18] Foundation Edmund Mach (FEM),undefined
[19] University of Greenwich,undefined
关键词
Sessile oak; Ecological requirements; Timber; Vulnerabilities; Management;
D O I
10.1007/s11676-025-01868-1
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Sessile oak (Quercus petraea (Matt.) Liebl.) is widely distributed across most of Europe particularly the hills and lower mountain ranges, so is considered “the oak of the mountains”. This species grows on a wide variety of soils and at altitudes ranging from sea level to 2200 m, especially in Atlantic and sub-Mediterranean climates, and it is sensitive to low winter temperatures, early and late frosts, as well as high summer temperatures. Sessile oak forms both pure and mixed stands especially with broadleaves such as European beech, European hornbeam, small-leaved lime and Acer spp. These form the understorey of sessile oak stands, promoting the natural shedding of lower branches of the oak and protecting the trunk against epicormic branches. Sessile oak is a long-lived, light-demanding and wind-firm species, owing to its taproot and heart-shaped root system. Its timber, one of the most valuable in Europe, is important for furniture-making (both solid wood and veneer), construction, barrels, railway sleepers, and is also used as fuelwood. It is one of the few major tree species in Europe that is regenerated by seed (naturally or artificially) and by stump shoots in high forest, coppice-with-standards and coppice forests. Sessile oak forests are treated in both regular and irregular systems involving silvicultural techniques such as uniform shelterwood, group shelterwood, irregular shelterwood, irregular high forest, coppice-with-standards and simple coppice. Young naturally regenerated stands are managed by weeding, release cutting and cleaning-respacing, keeping the stands quite dense for good natural pruning. Plantations are based on (1) 2–4-year old bare-root or container-grown seedlings produced in nurseries using seeds from genetic resources, seed stands and seed orchards. The density of sessile oak plantations (mostly in rows, but also in clusters) is usually between 4000 and 6000 plants ha−1. Sessile oak silviculture of mature stands includes crown thinning, focusing on final crop trees (usually a maximum of 100 individuals ha−1) and targeting the production of large-diameter and high quality trees at long rotation ages (mostly over 120 years, sometimes 250–300 years). In different parts of Europe, conversion of simple coppices and coppice-with-standards to high forests is continuing. Even though management of sessile oak forests is very intensive and expensive, requiring active human intervention, the importance of this species in future European forests will increase in the context of climate change due to its high resistance to disturbance, superior drought tolerance and heat stress resistance.
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