Human impacts on environment in the preindustrial forest landscapes in Poland-An overview (original) (raw)
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Multidimensional tracking and consequences of the usage of forest products in Early Modern Poland
The quantification of human impacts on past forest ecosystems becomes more challenging as one goes deeper into the past. This is primarily due to a scarcity of appropriate source material. It is well known that the inclusion of the Polish lands in the zone of economic ties with Western Europe at the end of the 15th century enabled intensive export of cereal and forest products. In this paper, we have used place names established before 1600 to demonstrate how ancient forests were exploited. By analyzing the naming material, we distinguished three basic types of names related to logging, industrial production, and beekeeping. In addition, we have included several theoretical considerations related to the environmental consequences of forest exploitation. Thus, our article provides a strong basis for further research into the environmental effects of past landscape changes.
Quaternary Science Reviews, 2021
We explored the past environmental history inferred from a fen located in northwestern Poland, in a historically important location. Pollen, plant macrofossils, micro- and macrocharcoal particles, and non-pollen palynomorphs were analyzed continuously in a 1-cm resolution, supplemented with archeological data and historical written sources. The last 1200-year environmental history of the fen was supported with accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS) radiocarbon (14C) dating (19 dates per 172 cm of the profile) and validated by 59 210 Pb dates. Our research showed that primeval oak–hornbeam forests near the Kazanie mire disappeared gradually, starting from 1035 ± 20 cal. yr CE, due to the economic development of the newly formed Polish (Piast) statehood. The pollen data revealed no shortage of oak timber during the 11th century, as recorded by previous studies in the area between Poznań and Gniezno. The Czech invasion in 1039 CE, which was associated with mass depopulation and domestic crisis, seemed to be manifested by the increase of pioneer Betula taking advantage of weaker human impact. Substantial land-use changes started with the further development of Polish statehood between the 15th and the 16th century CE, as reflected by cultivated land, ruderal, and meadow and pasture pollen indicators, as well as the rise of microcharcoal influx. The economy of Poland was disrupted by a noticeable socioeconomic collapse in the 17th century CE, which caused depopulation (by approximately 67.5%) and a decline in arable land (by 35%). Paleoecological data reflect this socio-environmental crisis with a decrease in all anthropogenic indicators, rapid forest regeneration, and secondary succession of pine on the abandoned land. According to palynological data, rapid landscape transformation due to agricultural reforms and industrialization commenced in the 19th century CE and was associated with the expansion of pastures, meadows, and arable lands. The following rapid decrease of cultivated land pollen indicators in 1940 ± 10 cal. yr CE is linked with the economic collapse after World War II and/or the implementation of new crops which produce less pollen.
Białowieża Forest—A Relic of the High Naturalness of European Forests
Forests
In Europe only some small isolated patches of forests with a high degree of naturalness still exist. These are forests, whose structure, composition and function has been shaped by natural dynamics without substantial anthropogenic influence over the long period. In this respect, Białowieża Forest is a unique location in Europe, with continuous forest cover for close to 12,000 years. The palynological, archaeological and historical data document only a weak anthropogenic fingerprint compared to other European lowland forests in Holocene history. Due to long-lasting protection, a large portion of the forest is still composed of stands originating from the pre-silvicultural period. Moreover, the stands of Białowieża Forest converted by silvicultural activities during the 20th century have the potential to recover owing to patches of stands with high naturalness, scattered throughout the forest. As conflict over management of the forest has recurred regularly for close to century, ther...
Scandinavian Journal of Forest Research, 2023
The former royal forests of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania present a unique example of centuries-old protection. Based on archival documents and published literature, we analyzed the evolution of the management and protection system of Białowieża Forest in the fourteenth-eighteenth century. The timeframe of our analysis (1386-1795) covers the period of the union of the Kingdom of Poland and the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. The Białowieża Forest (BF, now on the borderland of Poland and Belarus) has been the most prominent example of successful long-term protection efforts. The results present: (1) the evolution of the legal status of BF in 1386-1795, (2) the role this woodland played for the monarchs, (3) the goals of protecting BF's resources, (4) types of threats to the forest environment and methods of counteracting risks and enforcing protection, and (5) the development of the hunting and forest personnel of BF and their duties. The egalitarian character and horizontal structure of that personnel, which existed since the fourteenth century (beaters), by the years 1765-1795 developed into a five-level, hierarchical structure (beaters, rangers, guards, subordinate foresters, and a forester), with differentiated tasks and a high complexity of responsibilities and duties.
PLOS ONE
Studies of past forest use traditions are crucial in both understanding the present state of the oldest European forests, and in guiding decisions on future forest conservation and management. Current management of Poland's Białowieża Forest (BF), one of the bestpreserved forests of the European lowlands, is heavily influenced by anecdotal knowledge on forest history. Therefore, it is important to gain knowledge of the forest's past in order to answer questions about its historical administration, utilisation, and associated anthropogenic changes. Such understanding can then inform future management. This study, based on surveys in Belarussian and Russian archives and a preliminary field survey in ten forest compartments of Białowieża National Park, focuses on culturally-modified trees (CMTs), which in this case are by-products of different forms of traditional forest use. Information about the formation of the CMTs can then be used to provide insight into former forest usage. Two types of CMTs were discovered to be still present in the contemporary BF. One type found in two forms was of 1) pine trees scorched and chopped in the bottom part of the trunk and 2) pine trees with carved beehives. A second type based on written accounts, and therefore known to be present in the past (what we call a 'ghost CMT'), was of 3) lime-trees with strips of bark peeled from the trunk. Written accounts cover the period of transition between the traditional forest management (BF as a Polish royal hunting ground, until the end of the eighteenth century) and modern, "scientific" forestry (in most European countries introduced in the second half of the nineteenth century). These accounts document that both types of CMTs and the traditional forest uses responsible for their creation were considered harmful to "rational forestry" by the nineteenth-century forest administration. Thus the practices which created CMTs were banned and the trees gradually removed from the forest. Indeed, these activities drew the attention of forest administrators for several decades, and in our view delayed the introduction of new, timber-oriented, forest management in the BF.
Białowieża Primeval Forest as a remnant of culturally modified ancient forest
European Journal of Forest Research, 2012
The present and past population status of oak (Quercus robur) in the Białowie_ za National Park preserve (BNP) was analyzed with respect to the historic use of the ecosystem. I assessed average parameters (density, dbh distribution, differences between habitat categories) of the oak population in the whole BNP preserve, and performed detailed analyses of local populations on three 26.5-ha and one 3.5-ha plots, representing eutrophic sites of deciduous forest (3) and a mesotrophic site of mixed forest (1). Based on the tree ring data, I reconstructed the historic dbh distribution back to 1750-1825. The results of the reconstruction confirm the early 1800s expert account and the 1889 forestry survey report. The high oak concentration in eutrophic habitats are legacies of either active game management (e.g., bison habitat improvement measures, supplementary feeding), forest recovery after the ban on forest industries (baking potash, tar, charcoal), or abandonment of inner small farms. The emergence of oak on poorer sites in the mid 1800s coincides with the ban on use of fire-a common practice that earlier had perpetuated the dominating position of fire-resistant pine. The present oak regeneration in declining spruce stands is a further step of the forest natural adaptation to environmental changes. The study supports the view that BNP is a remnant of an ecosystem substantially shaped by human uses. Modern forestry, as practiced in the managed part of the Białowie_ za forest, does not mimic either natural processes (as observed in BNP) or historic forest uses.
Quaternary International, 2014
An 880 cm-long core retrieved from a peat bog adjacent to Lake Czarne, a small dystrophic lake (1.5 ha) in northeastern Poland, was investigated in terms of woodland changes and human impact. Palaeobotanical proxies including pollen, macrofossils, and non-pollen palynomorphs (NPPs) were used for the reconstruction. The profile was additionally supplemented by an age-depth model based on AMS 14 C dates of good resolution, which reveals that it spanned the period between the Allerød/Younger Dryas and present. The patterns of arboreal taxa succession in the Holocene were rather similar to those from northeastern Poland, but some distinct differences were recorded. Among them were the very early appearance of Taxus baccata (detected as pollen, ca. 10,930 cal. BP), the relatively late Holocene decline of Ulmus not connected with an increase in human impact (ca. 4550 cal. BP), and the Late Holocene optimum of Picea abies (ca. 3660e2800 cal. BP) revealing trends opposite to Betula and to a lesser degree to Carpinus betulus. The process of the late Holocene expansion of Betula (ca. 2420 cal. BP) and its continuous occurrence on the peat bog was probably not related to climate and human factors, but to natural processes of ecological succession. Birch, in spite of being listed as a potential host of Kretzschmaria deusta, clearly revealed poor susceptibility to infection of this fungus. Agricultural activity detected from the Neolithic period until the La Tené period was irregular and probably not significant for local woodland development. From the La Tené period, there was a slight increase in human pressure on the environment, and fire intensity and/or frequency rose. The acceleration of human activity manifested in the strongest deforestations was recorded from the Middle Ages up to the downfall of the local state farms in the 1990s.
Scientific Reports
Human impact on Central European forests dates back thousands of years. In this study we reanalyzed 36 published pollen data sets with robust chronologies from Polish Lowlands to determine the patterns of large-scale forest decline after the Migration Period (fourth to sixth century CE). The study revealed substantial heterogeneity in the old-growth forest decline patterns. Using new high-resolution studies, we could better understand the timing of this transition related to increasing economic development. After the Migration Period, forest expansion continued until the seventh to ninth centuries cal. CE, when the dawn of Slavic culture resulted in large-scale forest decline, especially in north-western and north-central Poland. Later, forest decline was recorded mainly in north-eastern Poland and was related to Prussian settlements, including activities associated with the Teutonic Order, as well as with new settlements from the fourteenth century. The composite picture shows a va...