Landscape changes and the vertebrate fauna in Sweden during the last 150 years

The Swedish countryside at the beginning of the nineteenth century was still so varied and rich that there was room for both human beings and animals almost everywhere. It is true that for thousands of years man had struggled with the advancing forests. First the primaeval deciduous forest was clear...

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Main Author: Curry-Lindahl, Kai
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 1961
Subjects:
Online Access:https://repository.naturalis.nl/pub/504377
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spelling ftnaturalis:oai:repository.naturalis.nl:504377 2024-02-11T10:04:45+01:00 Landscape changes and the vertebrate fauna in Sweden during the last 150 years Curry-Lindahl, Kai 1961-01-01 application/pdf https://repository.naturalis.nl/pub/504377 unknown https://repository.naturalis.nl/pub/504377 Bijdragen tot de dierkunde vol. 31 no. 1, pp. 27-44 info:eu-repo/semantics/article 1961 ftnaturalis 2024-01-17T23:22:02Z The Swedish countryside at the beginning of the nineteenth century was still so varied and rich that there was room for both human beings and animals almost everywhere. It is true that for thousands of years man had struggled with the advancing forests. First the primaeval deciduous forest was cleared during the warm period following the last glaciation, and after the great climatic change at the close of the Swedish Bronze Age (ca 700 B.C.) the struggle was against the encroaching spruce on practically all fronts. The struggle resulted in culture steppes, pine heaths, birch groves and wooded meadows. All these types of landscape were gradually filled with the fauna adapted to them. Different types of cultivation have alternated, and as the nature has changed, the fauna has adapted itself. But up to the nineteenth century these changes were not so great that they altered the general picture of the animal world.\nImagine Sweden a century and a half ago! Spruce forests dominated then as now, but they were less uniform; they had kept their individuality and character. Wooded meadows were numerous, for the regular leaf harvest that created them was of great importance in the former agrarian economy. In that way the spruce was kept at bay and the wooded meadows could develop freely, and there the farmers could collect leaves for winter fodder. The young Swedish soil was then still virgin. Thousands of lakes, marshes and fens, the inheritage of the great ice-cap, filled the countryside. Through the country ran the glittering silver bands of streams and brooks. In spring they widened and at times the water flooded the meadows. As summer approached, the low-lying alluvial fields of sedge, horsetail and rush were transformed by the sun into natural meadows, which were mown yearly to make use of everything that could serve as fodder for the livestock during the coming winter. Article in Journal/Newspaper Ice cap Naturalis Institutional Repository
institution Open Polar
collection Naturalis Institutional Repository
op_collection_id ftnaturalis
language unknown
description The Swedish countryside at the beginning of the nineteenth century was still so varied and rich that there was room for both human beings and animals almost everywhere. It is true that for thousands of years man had struggled with the advancing forests. First the primaeval deciduous forest was cleared during the warm period following the last glaciation, and after the great climatic change at the close of the Swedish Bronze Age (ca 700 B.C.) the struggle was against the encroaching spruce on practically all fronts. The struggle resulted in culture steppes, pine heaths, birch groves and wooded meadows. All these types of landscape were gradually filled with the fauna adapted to them. Different types of cultivation have alternated, and as the nature has changed, the fauna has adapted itself. But up to the nineteenth century these changes were not so great that they altered the general picture of the animal world.\nImagine Sweden a century and a half ago! Spruce forests dominated then as now, but they were less uniform; they had kept their individuality and character. Wooded meadows were numerous, for the regular leaf harvest that created them was of great importance in the former agrarian economy. In that way the spruce was kept at bay and the wooded meadows could develop freely, and there the farmers could collect leaves for winter fodder. The young Swedish soil was then still virgin. Thousands of lakes, marshes and fens, the inheritage of the great ice-cap, filled the countryside. Through the country ran the glittering silver bands of streams and brooks. In spring they widened and at times the water flooded the meadows. As summer approached, the low-lying alluvial fields of sedge, horsetail and rush were transformed by the sun into natural meadows, which were mown yearly to make use of everything that could serve as fodder for the livestock during the coming winter.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Curry-Lindahl, Kai
spellingShingle Curry-Lindahl, Kai
Landscape changes and the vertebrate fauna in Sweden during the last 150 years
author_facet Curry-Lindahl, Kai
author_sort Curry-Lindahl, Kai
title Landscape changes and the vertebrate fauna in Sweden during the last 150 years
title_short Landscape changes and the vertebrate fauna in Sweden during the last 150 years
title_full Landscape changes and the vertebrate fauna in Sweden during the last 150 years
title_fullStr Landscape changes and the vertebrate fauna in Sweden during the last 150 years
title_full_unstemmed Landscape changes and the vertebrate fauna in Sweden during the last 150 years
title_sort landscape changes and the vertebrate fauna in sweden during the last 150 years
publishDate 1961
url https://repository.naturalis.nl/pub/504377
genre Ice cap
genre_facet Ice cap
op_source Bijdragen tot de dierkunde vol. 31 no. 1, pp. 27-44
op_relation https://repository.naturalis.nl/pub/504377
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