Hydrochemical Resilience of Mountain Forest Catchments to Bark Beetle Disturbance: A Central European Study
Discuss this preprint
Start a discussion What are Sciety discussions?Listed in
This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.Abstract
Over the last decade, bark beetle outbreaks have significantly impacted forests in Central Europe, causing extensive loss of forest cover. We evaluated the impact of partial deforestation in three mountain forest catchments in the Jeseníky Mountains, comparing them with the unaffected Červík catchment (Beskydy Mountains) and the severely affected Pekelský stream catchment (Czech-Moravian Highlands). Atmospheric deposition in the catchments was similar, with total element input driven primarily by precipitation volumes rather than ion concentrations. We did not observe the hypothesized increase in DOC and nitrogen export, although nitrate outflow was slightly higher than atmospheric input in two cases. Significant export of calcium, magnesium, and bicarbonates was driven mainly by the geology of the individual catchments. The limited impact of bark beetle outbreaks on DOC dynamics can be attributed to the relatively low proportion of clear-cut areas and the rapid development of ground vegetation on impacted sites.