1. Unraveling the naturalness of sweet chestnut forests (Castanea sativa Mill.) in central Spain.
- Author
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Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), López Sáez, José Antonio [0000-0002-3122-2744], Alba Sánchez, Francisca [0000-0003-0387-1533], Pérez Díaz, Sebastián [0000-0002-2702-0058], Abel Schaad, Daniel [0000-0003-3915-8342], Luelmo Lautenschlaeger, Reyes [0000-0002-4505-2416], López Sáez, José Antonio, Glais, Arthur, Robles López, Sandra, Alba Sánchez, Francisca, Pérez Díaz, Sebastián, Abel Schaad, Daniel, Luelmo Lautenschlaeger, Reyes, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), López Sáez, José Antonio [0000-0002-3122-2744], Alba Sánchez, Francisca [0000-0003-0387-1533], Pérez Díaz, Sebastián [0000-0002-2702-0058], Abel Schaad, Daniel [0000-0003-3915-8342], Luelmo Lautenschlaeger, Reyes [0000-0002-4505-2416], López Sáez, José Antonio, Glais, Arthur, Robles López, Sandra, Alba Sánchez, Francisca, Pérez Díaz, Sebastián, Abel Schaad, Daniel, and Luelmo Lautenschlaeger, Reyes
- Abstract
This paper describes the patterns and processes of vegetation change and fire history in the Late Holocene (c. 3,140 cal BP) palaeoecological sequence of El Tiemblo, in a mountainous area in central Spain (Gredos range, Spanish Central System), and provides the first Iberian pollen sequence undertaken within a Castanea sativadominated woodland. These new data reassess not only the autochthonous nature of the species in the region and in the Iberian Peninsula, but also the naturalness of well-developed sweet chestnut forests. The study focuses on anthropogenic dynamics linked both to the effects of livestock husbandry and the use of fire for forest clearance. With this aim, non-pollen palynomorphs (coprophilous fungi ascospores) and charcoal accumulation rate are useful indicators for assessing the increasing role of human influence on vegetation
- Published
- 2017