Applied Sciences, Vol. 15, Pages 4525: Natural Regeneration Pattern and Driving Factors of Mixed Forest in the Reclaimed Area of Antaibao Open-Pit Coal Mine, Pingshuo


Applied Sciences, Vol. 15, Pages 4525: Natural Regeneration Pattern and Driving Factors of Mixed Forest in the Reclaimed Area of Antaibao Open-Pit Coal Mine, Pingshuo

Applied Sciences doi: 10.3390/app15084525

Authors:
Jia Liu
Donggang Guo

This study was conducted at a fixed monitoring site in the southern dump of the large-scale Antaibao open-pit coal mine of China Coal Pingshuo, using long-term monitoring methods. Based on data from 2019 and 2024 in the reclaimed area of the Pingshuo open-pit coal mine, all seedlings and saplings within the Robinia pseudoacacia L. + Ulmus pumila L. + Ailanthus altissima (Mill.) Swingle mixed forests were studied to analyze changes in their abundance and the driving factors influencing their survival rates from 2019 to 2024. The main conclusions are as follows: (1) The species composition of seedlings and saplings remained unchanged but the number of seedlings increased significantly. The majority of newly recruited seedlings were U. pumila., accounting for 92.22% of the total new seedlings, whereas R. pseudoacacia had the highest mortality rate among seedlings. The distribution patterns of seedling-to-sapling transition, sapling-to-tree transition, and seedling–sapling mortality were generally consistent with the overall distribution of seedlings and saplings at the community level. (2) At both the community and species levels, the optimal models for seedling and sapling survival were the height model and the biological factor model. Overall, survival rates of both seedlings and saplings showed a significant positive correlation with height. (3) The biological factors affecting the survival of U. pumila saplings were the basal area (BA) at breast height and the number of conspecific adult trees. The former was significantly negatively correlated with U. pumila seedling survival, while the latter was positively correlated. For R. pseudoacacia seedlings, the key biological factors were the number of heterospecific adult trees and the number of heterospecific seedlings. The former was significantly negatively correlated with survival, whereas the latter was significantly positively correlated. The primary factor influencing sapling survival was sapling height, which showed a significant positive correlation.



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