The Herald

Attempts to conserve ancient forest may be doomed to fail

- LUCINDA CAMERON NEWS REPORTER

ATTEMPTS to conserve the remaining fragments of a forest that once stretched across Scotland may be doomed to fail unless a new strategy is rapidly adopted, new research suggests.

Fragments from the Great Forest of Caledon are characteri­sed by the dominance of Scots pine and are a unique feature of the Highlands.

They are categorise­d as a Priority Habitat under the EU Habitats and Species Directive with 10 of the remaining areas designated Special Areas of Conservati­on by Scottish Natural Heritage.

However, a team led by Professor Brian Huntley of Durham University found that the present climate is more suitable for oak trees than the Scots pine.

Using a computer modelling approach researcher­s showed that there is an imbalance between the present warmer climate and the dominance of Scots pine in these forest fragments, with the present climate more favourable for the growth of oak trees at these sites.

If the present forests were to be disturbed or destroyed, perhaps as a result of fire or an outbreak of a pathogen such as the Dothistrom­a needle blight, they would be replaced by oak woodlands, the researcher­s found.

Mr Huntley, in Durham University’s Department of Bioscience­s, said: “The climatic debt will be repaid when the pines forming the present forest canopy die or are killed, when oaks and other trees better adapted to the climatic conditions now prevailing will replace them.

“Such an outcome is inevitable; the only question is how soon it will come about, and that is mainly a matter of chance, and hence unpredicta­ble. A forest fire could happen this year, or may not occur for decades.

“Pathogen outbreaks are similarly unpredicta­ble, as past experience with Dutch elm disease and the recent outbreak of ash dieback disease have shown.”

Scots pine trees came to dominate these forests under the cooler conditions that pre-dated the Industrial Revolution, with many establishe­d more than 200 years ago.

Once establishe­d, the Scots pine was able to hold off the threat from other trees, such as the oak, which are better adapted to warmer conditions.

As humans rapidly added carbon dioxide to the atmosphere through industrial­isation, the annual mean temperatur­e in the Scottish Highlands has increased by about 0.7C since 1800, with larger increases during the winter months.

According to the researcher­s this means a “climatic debt” has been accumulate­d – which means that if the Scots pines die or are destroyed, they will be replaced by oak trees more suited temperatur­es.

The researcher­s said that their findings have implicatio­ns for the future conservati­on of Caledonian pinewoods, and their associated species such as the endemic Scottish crossbill.

They recommend that sites that are now, and will be in future, more favourable for the growth of Scots pine than for oaks need to be identified and conserved.

The results of the study also have more general global significan­ce. to today’s higher

‘‘ Such an outcome is inevitable - the only question is how soon it will come about and that is mainly a matter of chance

 ??  ?? ROOT OF CHANGE: Scots pine which once dominated the Highlands in the Great Forest of Caledon are less suited in today’s warmer weather.
ROOT OF CHANGE: Scots pine which once dominated the Highlands in the Great Forest of Caledon are less suited in today’s warmer weather.

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