Pflanzengesellschaft des Jahres 2025: Flechten-Kiefernwald (Cladino-Pinetum sylvestris)

Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

Authors

  • Karsten Horn
  • Wolfgang von Bracke
  • Jörg Ewald
  • Thilo Heinken
  • Thomas Becker
  • Erwin Bergmeier
  • Steffen Boch
  • Werner Härdtle
  • Norbert Hölzel
  • Silke Lütt
  • Dominique Remy
  • Simone Schneider
  • Sabine Tischew
  • Petra Fischer

One of the most endangered plant communities in Germany, and one that is on the verge of extinction, is the lichen pine forest (Cladino-Pinetum sylvestris, syn. Cladonio-Pinetum sylvestris). For this reason, it has been selected by the Floristisch-soziologische Arbeitsgemeinschaft as the “Plant Community of the Year 2025”. Lichen pine forests are unproductive, sparse and understorey-poor coniferous forest ecosystems, mainly in the planar and colline altitudinal zone. The soils are extremely nutrient-poor and acidic, usually very dry with a poorly developed humus layer. Lichen pine forests occur on outwash plains, moraines, dunes and valley sands, but also in mountainous areas with granite, quartzite or sandstone as parent rock. In Germany, this forest type is currently found only in small areas, mainly in sub-continental regions. Lichen pine forests occur mainly in the northeastern German inland lowlands from the Elbe valley in Lower Saxony eastward (Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania, Saxony-Anhalt, Brandenburg) as well as in Middle Franconia and Upper Palatinate (Bavaria). In addi-tion to open woodlands with species of grey hair-grass swards (Corynephorion), there are lichen pine forests with almost no vascular plants and others with Vaccinium species, transitioning to the more widespread blueberry pine forests. Lichen pine forests represent a biodiversity hotspot in Central Europe for ground-dwelling fruticose lichens, especially reindeer lichens and other members of the genus Cladonia. They also host a variety of other lichens, bryophytes and macrofungi, and are impor-tant for faunal biodiversity. They represent an Annex I habitat type under the EU Habitats Directive (code 91T0). Lichen pine forests are at the beginning of natural forest development on immature soils on sand or quartz-rich rocks and have been strongly promoted by litter-raking and sod-cutting, and sometimes by grazing. They probably reached their greatest extent in the 19th and early 20th centuries. After the abandonment of the historical forest use, current stands are highly endangered, mainly by eutrophication due to natural succession and airborne nitrogen loads. Since the 1990s lichen pine forests in Germany have lost about 90 % of their former area. With an increased nutrient availability, com-petitive pleurocarpous mosses, sometimes dwarf shrubs and the wavy hair-grass, spread and displace the typical lichens and small-growing bryophytes. Other threats include land use (sand and stone mining, building areas), active forest conversion, a lack of morphodynamics and, in recent years, prolonged periods of heat and drought. Existing stands, some of which on the verge of extinction, must not only be protected from direct destruction, but also require active protection measures, similar to many open-land habitats. The restoration of lichen pine forests is only possible by removing the litter (together with the humus layer) and subsequently inoculating the raw soil with lichen fragments. First results from restoration projects in the Elbe valley of Lower Saxony and in Middle Franconia are presented. With these, we would like to encourage local and regional actors and conservationists to take appropriate action. In sand pits and quarries, refraining from recultivation measures can promote the formation of new lichen pine forests.

Translated title of the contributionPlant Community of the Year 2025: Lichen pine forest (Cladino-Pinetum sylvestris)
Original languageEnglish
JournalTuexenia
Volume44
Pages (from-to)177-213
Number of pages37
ISSN0722-494X
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2024

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© (2024), (Floristisch - Soziologische Arbeitsgemeinschaft). All rights reserved.

    Research areas

  • conservation management, eutrophication, historical land use, pine forest, plant community, restoration, species conservation, syntaxonomy

DOI

Recently viewed

Publications

  1. Dominik Perler, Transformationen der Gefühle. Philosophische Emotionstheorien 1270-1670
  2. Zwischen Reiz und Regel liegt die Lust
  3. Komplexität und asymmetrische Informationsverteilung
  4. Regulierung der Sustainable Board Governance – das fehlende Glied in der Kette des "EU Green Deal"-Projekts?
  5. Middle Pleistocene lake shore environments and archaeological sites of Schöningen, Lower Saxony, Germany
  6. Offene Rituale in der Gruppenarbeit mit Kindern
  7. Do sustainable institutional investors contribute to firms’ environmental performance? Empirical evidence from Europe
  8. Sprachliches Handeln von Lernenden im Sachfachunterricht
  9. Die Weiterbildung zum "Zertifikat Waldpädagogik" in Sachsen-Anhalt 2007 - 2008
  10. Souveränität und Entscheidung
  11. "Im Westen nichts Neues". Remarques Roman in Text und Bild
  12. Schutz von Buchenwäldern in einem System von Naturwäldern
  13. Permanente Temporarität - Brachflächennutzung als Potenzial für den öffentlichen Stadtraum
  14. Ordnungsverantwortung
  15. Rohölmarkt: Iran-Sanktionen dürften zu moderatem Preisanstieg führen
  16. Wertesysteme von Kulturmanagern
  17. Museutopia
  18. Sprachdiagnostik im Mathematikunterricht der Grundschule
  19. Bilanzielle Kapitalerhaltung in der EU vor einer Neuausrichtung?
  20. Dingliche Ansprüche und das allgemeine Schuldrecht
  21. Fahndungssendungen im deutschsprachigen Fernsehen
  22. Können Schutzgebiete ihre Schutzgüter verlieren?
  23. Folgenbeseitigungsanspruch bei unwirksamen Allgemeinen Geschäftsbedingungen
  24. Palynological evidence of younger middle Pleistocene interglacials (Holsteinian, Reinsdorf and Schoningen) in the Schoningen open cast lignite mine (eastern Lower Saxony, Germany)
  25. Hannah Arendt - Philosophie der Praxis als Welteröffnung
  26. Konzeptionelle Überlegungen zur Peer-to-Peer-Schreibberatung an der berufsbildenden Schule im Fachbereich Sozialpädagogik
  27. Partizipation, Öffentlichkeitsbeteiligung, Nachhaltigkeit