Zur Vegetationsdynamik im mediterranen Südfrankreich: Internationaler Forschungsstand und erste Skizze zur Vegetationsdynamik im Raum Nîmes (Frankreich/Dept. Gard) (Vegetation Dynamics in Mediterranean France. The International State of the Art in Research and a Preliminary Sketch of the Vegetation Dynamics in the Nîmes Region (Dept. Gard, France))

The climax-concept of a sclerophyllous oak forest, with Quercus ilex as dominant species in the Mediterranean area, is more and more brought into doubt within international ecosystem research. But those results have not found a substantial reception in German vegetation geography. In German manuals...

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Veröffentlicht in:Erdkunde 1995-07, Vol.49 (3), p.232-244
Hauptverfasser: Neff, Christophe, Frankenberg, Peter
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng ; ger
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Zusammenfassung:The climax-concept of a sclerophyllous oak forest, with Quercus ilex as dominant species in the Mediterranean area, is more and more brought into doubt within international ecosystem research. But those results have not found a substantial reception in German vegetation geography. In German manuals the zonal vegetation of the Mediterranean region is still defined as sclerophyllous oak forest with Quercus ilex, in accordance with Braun-Blanquet (1936). More recent research, such as that published by Romane a. Terradas (1992), has not gained much attention in Germany. Romane a. Terradas explain the dominance of Quercus ilex as a consequence of human impacts during the Neolithic period. For the Bas-Languedoc the authors have found similar results from analysis of the literature and from their own investigations. Those investigations are based on L. Trabaud's model, which is internationally recognized, but which is largely unknown in Germany. For those reasons L. Trabaud's model is briefly described (Fig. 1). In the two following models, the authors try to describe the principal processes in the dynamics of the vegetation and cultural landscape of the Nîmes region. During the Neolithic period, the image of the landscape was substantially changed by human impacts. Those processes were probably reinforced during the Chasséen, and their consequences mainly affected the character of the landscape until the Industrial Revolution. During the Chasséen, the fertile and moist lands had been transformed into arable land, dislodging Quercus pubescens. In the remaining areas, which were episodically or periodically used for hunting, ranging and exploiting fuelwoods, Quercus ilex was pushed into a dominant position. This process is also related to the large ecological performances of Quercus ilex. The rural exodus, one of the consequences of industrialization, was mainly reinforced by the melioration of the coastal plains for the returning colonists from the former French Algeria and by the consequences of coastal mass tourism at the seaside. This reinforced exodus not only attained the peripheral mountains, but also reached other large areas; and this reinforced rural exodus provided large areas of partly inhabited bush land. The first results of this "large natural succession experiment" are often in contradiction to classical climax theories. Following the climax theory, those areas should have been recolonised by Quercus ilex. For the Nîmes region, the authors found ex
ISSN:0014-0015
DOI:10.3112/erdkunde.1995.03.05