Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Anna Orczewska is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Anna Orczewska.


Landscape Research | 2009

Age and Origin of Forests in South-western Poland and their Importance for Ecological Studies in Man-dominated Landscapes

Anna Orczewska

Abstract The aim of the research was to describe the former and current distribution of forests from the first topographical map available, dated 1780, until the end of the twentieth century, in two geographical regions in south-western Poland, and to present those changes as graphs. Forests differing in their continuity in the landscape, namely ancient and recent, were identified and their area and percentage share among other land use forms present in the landscape were calculated. In both regions, the proportion of forested land exceeds the average for the whole country, since the latter reached 28.8% in 2005, whereas in the study areas they were 33.7% and 41.2%. In both situations, ancient forests predominate (76.7% and 70.1%, respectively). Maps representing the history of forests may be useful in environmental studies, focusing on floral diversity, water table changes and landscape transformations, but also in afforestation strategies and conservation plans.


Central European Journal of Biology | 2014

Chemical composition of the leaves of Reynoutria japonica Houtt. and soil features in polluted areas

Oimahmad Rahmonov; Andrzej Czylok; Anna Orczewska; Leszek Majgier; Tomasz Parusel

The study was conducted on six sites that are dominated by Japanese knotweed (Reynoutria japonica) and that vary in the level of industrialization and habitat transformation by humans. The aim of the research was to investigate the chemical-physical features of soil under a closed and dense canopy of R. japonica, the chemical composition of the R. japonica leaves, and to compare the content of certain elements in the soil-plant-soil system. The soil organic carbon (Corg) content varied from 1.38±0.004% to 8.2±0.047% and the maximum in leaves was 49.11±0.090%. The lowest levels of total nitrogen (Ntot) in soil were recorded on the heavily disturbed sites (till 0.227±0.021%). Soil pH varied greatly, ranging from acidic (pH=4.0) to neutral (pH=7.7). Heavy metal content differed significantly among the study sites. At all of the sites, both in the case of soil and plant leaves, Zn was a dominant element and its concentration ranged from 41.5 to 501.2 mg·kg−1 in soils and from 38.6 to 541.7 mg·kg−1 in leaves. Maximum accumulations of P (2103.3±15.3 mg·kg−1) and S (2571.7±17.6 mg·kg−1) were observed on the site that had been influenced by agricultural practices. The results obtained showed that R. japonica is able to accumulate high levels of heavy metals.


Folia Geobotanica | 2018

Plant species composition shifts in the Tatra Mts as a response to environmental change: a resurvey study after 90 years

Patryk Czortek; Jutta Kapfer; Anna Delimat; Amy E. Eycott; John-Arvid Grytnes; Anna Orczewska; Halina Ratyńska; Antoni Zięba; Bogdan Jaroszewicz

Mountain vegetation is often considered highly sensitive to climate and land-use changes due to steep environmental gradients determining local plant species composition. In this study we present plant species compositional shifts in the Tatra Mts over the past 90 years and discuss the potential drivers of the changes observed. Using historical vegetation studies of the region from 1927, we resurveyed 76 vegetation plots, recording the vascular flora of each plot using the same methodology as in the original survey. We used an indirect method to quantify plant species compositional shifts and to indicate which environmental gradients could be responsible for these shifts: by calculating shifts in estimated species optima as reflected in shifts in the ecological indicator values of co-occurring species. To find shifts in species composition, focusing on each vegetation type separately, we used ordination (DCA). The species optimum changed significantly for at least one of the tested environmental gradients for 26 of the 95 plant species tested; most of these species changed in terms of the moisture indicator value. We found that the strongest shifts in species composition were in mylonite grassland, snowbed and hygrophilous tall herb communities. Changes in precipitation and increase in temperature were found to most likely drive compositional shifts in vegetation resurveyed. It is likely that the combined effect of climate change and cessation of sheep grazing has driven a species composition shift in granite grasslands communities.


Science | 2018

Białowieża Forest: A new threat

Michał Żmihorski; Przemysław Chylarecki; Anna Orczewska; Tomasz Wesołowski

In the Science Insider story “Logging in Europes primeval forest ruled illegal” (18 April, [https://scim.ag/EuroLogging][1]), E. Stokstad reports that the extensive logging in Polands Bialowieza Forest has finally ceased, thanks to a decision by the European Court of Justice. However, the


Journal of Ecology | 2017

Biological Flora of the British Isles : Milium effusum

Pieter De Frenne; Jörg Brunet; Mathias Cougnon; Guillaume Decocq; Bente J. Graae; Jenny Hagenblad; Martin Hermy; Annette Kolb; Isgard Lemke; Shiyu Ma; Anna Orczewska; Jan Plue; Guy Vranckx; Monika Wulf; Kris Verheyen

1. This account presents information on all aspects of the biology of Milium effusum L. (Wood Millet) that are relevant to understanding its ecological characteristics and behaviour. The main topic ...


Forest Research Papers | 2016

The Białowieża Forest – a UNESCO Natural Heritage Site – protection priorities

Anna Kujawa; Anna Orczewska; Michał Falkowski; Malgorzata Blicharska; Lech Buchholz; Przemysław Chylarecki; Jerzy M. Gutowski; Małgorzata Latałowa; Robert W. Mysłajek; Sabina Nowak; Wiesław Walankiewicz; Anna Zalewska

Abstract Despite the fact that only parts of the Białowieża Forest are protected as a national park and nature reserves, the forest is nevertheless as a whole considered a UNESCO Natural Heritage Site, Biosphere Reserve and an integrated Natura 2000 site. In the presently ongoing debate on the conservation priorities regarding the natural value of this forest and the current bark beetle outbreak, two distinct approaches can be recognized: (1) management assumed to involve considerable interference with the forest ecosystems; (2) maintenance of ecological processes and spontaneous restoration of the forest communities. The Białowieża Forest - especially its strictly protected parts - is a “bastion” where species characteristic of ancient forests (including so-called primeval forest relicts) have survived until today. This has been achieved by maintaining the forest’s complexity in areas with considerably reduced human influence, but most of all by maintaining a full spectrum of forest communities, naturally developing forests diverse in age, species composition and spatial structure including stand dieback and breakdown. The following factors need to be taken into account in the protection of the Natural Heritage Site: (1) the internationally recognized value of the Białowieża Forest including its biodiversity, the level of preservation of forest communities and the ongoing natural processes; (2) existing documents and policies concerning nature conservation; (3) research findings from the Białowieża Forest and other natural forest complexes. The key priority is to limit any activities in this forest to an indispensable minimum, mostly concerning security close to roads and tourist tracks as well as collection of fire wood by locals. Without this strict protection, successive and slow anthropogenic transformation will result in the Białowieża Forest sharing the same fate as other forest complexes of the temperate climate zone in Europe or America and lose its globally appreciated value.


Ecological Research | 2016

Recovery of the herbaceous layer in the young silver birch and black alder stands that developed spontaneously after a forest fire

Anna Orczewska; Marcin Prukop; Adriana Strzelczyk

The studies, which were conducted in southern Poland, focused on the recovery of the herb layer in 17-year-old post-fire silver birch and black alder forests. Although both types of stands, which are of the same age, developed spontaneously, the alder stands occupied damper sites (with thicker A horizons that survived the fire) than those in the birch forests. We surveyed the migration rates of 44 woodland species, primarily ancient woodland indicators, into both forests and the potential differences in these rates depending on their moisture regime and the community type represented by unburned forests, which were treated as the source of the woodland species pool. Additionally, the role of local depressions with high humidity that were covered by post-fire alder woods in the colonization process, as well as species survivorship and recolonisation, were estimated. Woodland species showed diverse migration paces among the sites; most of them migrated faster on more fertile sites with a higher humidity. Small patches of post-fire alder woods contributed to the recolonisation process since many woodland species in the herb layer survived the fire due to its high humidity, which inhibited the intensity of the forest fire. The recovery of woodland species in post-fire woods is the combined effect of regeneration, which relies on autochthonic propagules, and secondary succession, which is based on allochthonic propagules. Local depressions, which provide refuges for fire-sensitive, dispersal-limited species, contribute to their survivorship and thus to the successive recovery of herbaceous layers after a fire.


Journal of Ecology | 2010

Interregional variation in the floristic recovery of post-agricultural forests

Pieter De Frenne; Lander Baeten; Bente J. Graae; Jörg Brunet; Monika Wulf; Anna Orczewska; Annette Kolb; Ivy Jansen; Aurélien Jamoneau; Hans Jacquemyn; Martin Hermy; Martin Diekmann; An De Schrijver; Michele De Sanctis; Guillaume Decocq; Sara A. O. Cousins; Kris Verheyen


Plant Ecology | 2009

Migration of herbaceous woodland flora into post-agricultural black alder woods planted on wet and fertile habitats in south western Poland

Anna Orczewska


New Phytologist | 2014

Plant movements and climate warming: intraspecific variation in growth responses to nonlocal soils.

Pieter De Frenne; David A. Coomes; An De Schrijver; Jeroen Staelens; Jake M. Alexander; Markus Bernhardt-Römermann; Jörg Brunet; Olivier Chabrerie; Alessandro Chiarucci; Jan den Ouden; R. Lutz Eckstein; Bente J. Graae; Robert Gruwez; Radim Hédl; Martin Hermy; Annette Kolb; Anders Mårell; Samantha M. Mullender; Siri Lie Olsen; Anna Orczewska; George Peterken; Petr Petřík; Jan Plue; William D. Simonson; Cezar V. Tomescu; Pieter Vangansbeke; Gorik Verstraeten; Lars Vesterdal; Monika Wulf; Kris Verheyen

Collaboration


Dive into the Anna Orczewska's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Martin Hermy

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jörg Brunet

Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Bente J. Graae

Norwegian University of Science and Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Przemysław Chylarecki

Museum and Institute of Zoology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jan Plue

Stockholm University

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge