Long-Term Changes in the Structural and Functional Composition of Spruce Forests in the Center of the East European Plain

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Abstract

Norway spruce (Picea abies (L.) H. Karst.) is a primary forest-forming species in the European part of Russia, both in terms of its distribution and economic importance. A number of studies indicate that one of the reasons for the disturbance of spruce forests is linked to rising temperatures, particularly the detrimental effects of extreme droughts. The aim of our research is to identify changes in the structural and functional organization of mature spruce forests at the center of the East European Plain. The study was conducted in intact spruce forests using resurveyed vegetation relevés within the Smolensk–Moscow Upland, with relevés repeated after 40 years (in 1985 and 2025). Changes in structural and functional parameters of spruce communities were analyzed. The results showed that significant disturbances of the tree layer led to changes in the vegetation of subordinate layers, as well as the successional dynamics of spruce forests. It was found that following the collapse of old-growth spruce stands, two types of secondary succession developed: (1) with the renewal of spruce and (2) with active development of shrubs (hazel and rowan) and undergrowth of broadleaved species. It was also demonstrated that the typological diversity of the studied communities changed over 40 years not only due to the loss of the tree layer and the formation of new “non-forest” types but also because several mixed spruce-broadleaved communities transitioned into broadleaved ones, and pine–spruce communities of boreal origin shifted to nemoral types. An analysis of the complete species composition of spruce forests based on Ellenberg’s scales scoring revealed changes in habitat conditions over the 40-year period. A noticeable trend was an increase in the proportion of thermophilic and alkaliphilic species, indicating a shift toward a nemoral vegetation spectrum. It is expected that under the current forest management regime, the next 40 to 60 years will see a decline in the proportion of spruce within mixed stands, potentially culminating in the complete collapse of monospecific spruce forests in the center of the East European Plain.

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