Structural Dynamics and Disturbance Regime in an Old-Growth Oak–Beech Forest: Integrating Long-Term Observations, Dendroecology and Canopy Gap Analysis

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Abstract

The Muški bunar old-growth forest on Mount Psunj represents one of the rare preserved mixed ecosystems of sessile oak (Quercus petraea (Matt.) Liebl.) and European beech (Fagus sylvatica L.) in Southeastern Europe, providing an important reference for understanding natural forest dynamics. This study aimed to analyse stand structure, age distribution, growth dynamics, and disturbance regime based on repeated field surveys conducted in 1979 and 2021. The results revealed pronounced structural heterogeneity and clear interspecific differences. European beech dominates smaller- and medium-diameter classes, as well as a wider range of age classes, whereas sessile oak is primarily present in older and larger diameter classes. A very high growing stock (1155.81 m3 ha−1) indicates exceptional stand productivity, with maximum cambial ages of 295 years for oak and 253 years for beech. Basal area increment analysis showed that both species maintain substantial growth at advanced ages. However, recent decades show divergence, with increasing growth in beech and stagnation or decline in oak. Importantly, growth releases in sessile oak were not accompanied by successful regeneration, indicating a decoupling between growth response and recruitment. Stand dynamics are mainly driven by low-intensity disturbances. These findings highlight the importance of old-growth forests as reference systems and improve understanding of species-specific responses to disturbance.

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