Hudewald (hutewald) Pastoral woodland dominated by tall old-growt

Hudewald (hutewald) Pastoral woodland dominated by tall old-growth C188-9 mouse oaks (Quercus petraea, Q. robur), beech (Fagus sylvatica) hornbeam (Carpinus betulus) or other deciduous trees, often with pollarded or shredded, but not coppiced trees. Kratt (click here krattskogar) Deciduous coppiced woodland dominated by oaks (Quercus petraea, Q. robur) in northern central Europe and in southern Fennoscandia. Lövängar Fennoscandian deciduous or semi-deciduous low-intensity pastures and meadows

with open scrub and groves dominated by Betula spp., Corylus avellana, Fraxinus excelsior and Populus tremula. Macchia (makija, maquis) Dense sclerophyllous broadleaved or ericaceous Mediterranean scrub derived from coppicing and burning of evergreen Quercion ilicis woodland. A Spanish equivalent is matorral, which is sometimes used in a wider sense (e.g. in the Interpretation Manual of European Union Habitats, European Commission 2007) comprising all open or dense Mediterranean tall scrub. Park (game park, wildpark) Enclosed woodland or grassland with scattered trees, scrub or groves, used to keep deer or other animals in quantities that require additional feeding. Popular in Europe and beyond since ancient times. Pseudomacchia Semi-sclerophyllous scrub of the southern Balkans dominated

by kermes oak (Quercus coccifera s.l.) selleck compound resulting from long-term grazing and harvesting of submediterranean Quercetalia pubescentis woodlands (Adamović 1906). Shibliak (šibljak, Шибљaк) Thermophilous deciduous or semi-deciduous scrub of the Balkans and the Black Sea area resulting from long-term grazing and forest degradation. Shibliak may be composed or dominated by a variety of shrubs, notably Carpinus orientalis, Paliurus spina-christi, Prunus tenella, Quercus trojana, Syringa vulgaris and others (Adamović pheromone 1901). Streuobst Low-intensity orchards with tall standard (Hochstamm) fruit-crop trees close to villages in temperate Europe. Most common are apple, pear, plum and cherry trees. Underneath is usually grassland which

is cut or grazed. Wacholderheide Nutrient-poor grasslands and heathlands interspersed with open scrub of tall, often columnar, Juniperus communis in central and western Europe. It occurs both on calcareous and siliceous soils. Weidfeld Non-intensive pastures with scrub of Cytisus scoparius and browsed trees, with scattered single- or multi-stemmed Fagus trees, especially in the Schwarzwald (Germany) (Schwabe-Braun 1980). Diversity of wood-pasture: a geobotanical classification of habitats in Europe Wood-pasture occupies a spatial level between ecosystem and landscape, namely that of an ecosystem complex. Ecosystem complexes may be serial, describing a range of plant communities or ecosystems along a successional gradient, or they may be catenal, describing a predictable range of spatially close plant communities (sigmeta).

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