Department of Botany, University of Innsbruck, Innsbruck, Austria.
Amt für Archäologie, Kanton Thurgau, Frauenfeld, Switzerland; Forest History, Institute of Forest Sciences, University of Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany.
Sci Total Environ. 2024 Apr 20;922:171157. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2024.171157. Epub 2024 Feb 25.
Throughout history, humans have relied on wood for constructions, tool production or as an energy source. How and to what extent these human activities have impacted plant abundance and composition over a long-term perspective is, however, not well known. To address this knowledge gap, we combined 44,239 precisely dated tree-ring samples from economically and ecologically important tree species (spruce, fir, pine, oak) from historical buildings, and pollen-based plant cover estimates using the REVEALS model from 169 records for a total of 34 1° × 1° grid cells for Central Europe. Building activity and REVEALS estimates were compared for the entire study region (4-15°E, 46-51°N), and for low (<500 m asl) and mid/high elevations (≥500 m asl) in 100-year time windows over the period 1150-1850. Spruce and oak were more widely used in wooden constructions, amounting to 35 % and 32 %, respectively, compared to pine and fir. Besides wood properties and species abundance, tree diameters of harvested individuals, being similar for all four species, were found to be the most crucial criterion for timber selection throughout the last millennium. Regarding land use changes, from the 1150-1250's onwards, forest cover generally decreased due to deforestation until 1850, especially at lower elevations, resulting in a more heterogeneous landscape. The period 1650-1750 marks a distinct change in the environmental history of Central Europe; increasing agriculture and intense forest management practices were introduced to meet the high demands of an increasing population and intensifying industrialization, causing a decrease in palynological diversity, especially at low elevations. Likely the characteristic vegetation structure and composition of contemporary landscapes originated from that period. We further show that land use has impacted vegetation composition and diversity at an increasing speed leading to a general homogenization of landscapes through time, highlighting the limited environmental benefits of even-aged plantation forestry.
纵观历史,人类一直依赖木材进行建筑、工具生产或作为能源。然而,人类活动在长期内对植物丰度和组成的影响方式和程度尚不清楚。为了解决这一知识空白,我们结合了来自历史建筑的经济和生态上重要的树种(云杉、冷杉、松树、橡树)的 44239 个精确日期的树木年轮样本,以及使用 REVEALS 模型从 169 个记录中得出的花粉基植物覆盖估计值,总计 34 个 1°×1°的网格单元格,涵盖了中欧地区。我们将建筑活动和 REVEALS 估计值与整个研究区域(4-15°E,46-51°N)进行了比较,并在 1150-1850 年期间,在 100 年的时间窗口内,对低海拔(<500m 海拔)和中/高海拔(≥500m 海拔)地区进行了比较。与松树和冷杉相比,云杉和橡树在木质建筑中应用更广泛,分别占 35%和 32%。除了木材特性和物种丰度外,被采伐个体的树木直径在过去一千年中被发现是木材选择的最关键标准,所有四个物种的树木直径都相似。关于土地利用变化,从 1150-1250 年开始,由于森林砍伐,森林覆盖面积总体减少,直到 1850 年,特别是在较低的海拔地区,导致景观更加多样化。1650-1750 年标志着中欧环境历史的一个明显变化;为了满足人口增长和工业化的高强度需求,引入了农业和密集的森林管理实践,导致孢粉多样性下降,特别是在低海拔地区。可能当代景观的典型植被结构和组成就是从那个时期开始的。我们还表明,土地利用对植被组成和多样性的影响速度正在加快,导致景观随着时间的推移逐渐同质化,突出了即使是同龄人工林也存在的有限的环境效益。