M. Ohlson et al., HABITAT QUALITIES VERSUS LONG-TERM CONTINUITY AS DETERMINANTS OF BIODIVERSITY IN BOREAL OLD-GROWTH SWAMP FORESTS, Biological Conservation, 81(3), 1997, pp. 221-231
Natural swamp forests are extremely rare in Sweden because of extensiv
e drainage and logging activities. This study reports a total of 517 s
pecies (148 vascular plants, 131 mosses, 64 hepatics, 142 lichens and
32 wood-inhabiting fungi) from 10 small remnants of boreal old-growth
swamp forests. The 195 bryophytes found represent 33% of the total num
ber of bryophyte species in the Swedish boreal flora. As the average a
rea of the forests was only 2 ha, this figure clearly illustrates the
important role of the swamp forests as centres of bryophyte biodiversi
ty. There was no relationship between the occurrence of 33 lichen and
fungi species considered to indicate natural forests with long stand c
ontinuity and the known long-term continuity of the forests. The fores
ts most affected by earlier natural and man-made fires harboured more
of these species than forests less affected by fire disturbance. The m
ost important variable explaining biodiversity as well as presence of
'continuity indicator species' was the amount of dead wood present. A
more critical and careful use of the concept of forest continuity is n
eeded. (C) 1997 Elsevier Science Ltd.