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Featured researches published by Lubomír Šálek.


International Journal of Biodiversity Science, Ecosystems Services & Management | 2016

Relation between forest stand diversity and anticipated log quality in managed Central European forests

Ján Merganič; Katarína Merganičová; Róbert Marušák; L. Tipmann; Lubomír Šálek; Lukáš Dragoun; Radka Stolariková

ABSTRACT This study examined the influence of tree species and structural diversity on the production of high-quality logs. The data were from the regional forest inventory of the University Forest Enterprise, Czech Republic, performed from 2009 to 2011 on 1188 sample plots. For every sample plot, we quantified 38 diversity indicators. The plots were divided into four age groups (young, middle-aged, old and uneven-aged stands). The anticipated proportion of high-quality logs was determined using local assortment tables. For each age group, the impact of species and structural diversity indicators on the volumetric proportion of high-quality logs was assessed using backwards multiple regression. The relationship between diversity measures and log quality changed with stand age. In old stands, horizontal structure had a more profound effect on the proportion of high-quality logs. In young stands, species diversity and vertical structure were more influential. In middle-aged stands, the impact of stand diversity on log quality was most complex. In uneven-aged stands, vertical structure was the diversity component most affecting the proportion of high-quality logs. Overall, the proportion of best quality logs increased with the increasing stand diversity in all age classes, suggesting that timber production and stand diversity are not contradictory management goals. EDITED BY Sheila Ward


Journal of Sustainable Forestry | 2012

Contribution to the Restoration of Mixed Forests in Central Vietnam

Lubomír Šálek; Oldřich Výlupek

This article investigates options for reforestation in degraded forests in Central Vietnam within the context of sustainable forestry and presents a forest management plan for the forests around the community of Phong My. In the past, the area was damaged during the war between Vietnam and the United States and after that by overcutting. Forests have gradually been degraded and now they are replaced by plantations of fast-growing Acacia (Acacia mangium). After final harvests, the stand remnants are burnt and the burnt area is again regenerated via artificial regeneration of Acacia. Here, we propose several mixtures in which Acacia stands can be augmented with other tree species. A proposed system of afforestation and subsequent management is given here with the goal of encouraging mixed species, multiple cohort stands, and disincentivizing the method of slash-and-burn. The proposed afforestation patterns were also used to calculate the future number of seedlings required to enable the enlargement of quality forests at the expense of degraded ones.


Entomological News | 2014

New host plant for the species Agapanthia lateralis Gangl. (Coleoptera; Cerambycidae).

Lubomír Šálek; Kerim Güney

ABSTRACT We have found a new host plant for the long-horn beetle Agapanthia lateralis Gangl. in the north Turkey in the city Kastamonu and in its surroundings. The adults hatched from stalks of herb Onobrychis hypargyrea Boiss. where larvae were found. The diet of Agapanthia lateralis is broader than previously thought and a larger diversity of host plants can probably enable them to occur in more diverse habitats.


Moravian Geographical Reports | 2015

Potential geo-ecological impacts of the proposed Danube–Oder–Elbe Canal on alluvial landscapes in the Czech Republic

Ivo Machar; Karel Kirchner; Vilém Pechanec; Jan Brus; Helena Kilianová; Lubomír Šálek; Antonín Buček

Abstract The project of a canal connecting the three major Central European Rivers: the Danube, Oder and Elbe, is incorporated into a planned trans-European transport network system. Geographically, the course of the planned canal stretches into the territory of four Central European countries, predominantly that of the Czech Republic. The environmental impacts of the potential construction and operation of the Danube–Oder–Elbe (DOE) Canal is currently widely discussed by experts from various fields. This paper aims to assess some potential impacts of the canal on the alluvial landscapes in the Czech Republic. The method of geo-ecological assessment presented here applies GIS analyses at the larger landscape scale. The results of the geo-ecological assessment of potential impacts of the DOE Canal on the land-use of river floodplains, the fluvial dynamics of streams and the extent of their alluvial plains, and the quantified DOE Canal impact on protected areas and groundwater sources, are presented. The hydrological impact of the DOE Canal will affect a total of 1,975.4 km2 of river basins in the Czech Republic. The DOE Canal will affect 157 sites significant from the perspective of landscape and nature conservation, 7 nature parks and 113 existing water points which are used as groundwater sources. The results show that the most significant disruption of fluvial dynamics of the stream sediment regime would occur in the Protected Landscape Area of Litovelské Pomoraví. In general, the geo-ecological impact of the DOE Canal on the landscape will be very important.


Scandinavian Journal of Forest Research | 2014

Comparison of tree volume equations for small-leaved lime (Tilia cordata Mill.) in the Czech Republic

Radka Stolariková; Lubomír Šálek; D. Zahradník; Lukáš Dragoun; Lucie Jeřábková; Róbert Marušák; Ján Merganič

Although the small-leaved lime (Tilia cordata Mill.) is a native tree in the Czech Republic, there are no volume tables, and its volume has so far been estimated according to beech (Fagus sylvatica L.) tables. In order to increase accuracy of timber volume calculations, the most appropriate volume equations should be selected to develop volume tables specifically for lime. Based on literature sources eight volume equations were selected, and their accuracy was tested by statistical evaluation of assessed parameters and differences between calculated and sampled lime tree volume. Eighty-one sample trees were randomly selected for this study. The most suitable equation was Børsets equation according to the evaluation of equation parameters and comparison of the results obtained from the volume formula and from sample trees (difference of mean value 0.000009 m3). Finally, the calculated lime volumes were compared with the beech tables. The lime volumes are higher than beech volumes according to beech tables and positive differences for the lime, which varied from 0.05 m3 to 0.35 m3, support the need for new lime volume table.


Forest Ecology and Management | 2013

Forest edges in managed riparian forests in the eastern part of the Czech Republic

Lubomír Šálek; D. Zahradník; Róbert Marušák; Lucie Jeřábková; Ján Merganič


Forests | 2017

Modelling of Climate Conditions in Forest Vegetation Zones as a Support Tool for Forest Management Strategy in European Beech Dominated Forests

Ivo Machar; Veronika Vlčková; Antonín Buček; Vit Vozenilek; Lubomír Šálek; Lucie Jerabkova


Nature and Conservation | 2018

Effectiveness of Natura 2000 system for habitat types protection: A case study from the Czech Republic

Vilém Pechanec; Ivo Machar; Tomáš Pohanka; Zdeněk Opršal; Frantisek Petrovič; Juraj Švajda; Lubomír Šálek; Karel Chobot; Jarmila Filippovová; Pavel Cudlín; Jitka Málková


Journal of Agriculture and Rural Development in the Tropics and Subtropics | 2012

Economic evaluation of proposed pure and mixed stands in Central Vietnam highlands

Lubomír Šálek; Roman Sloup


Pakistan Journal of Zoology | 2017

Predation Efficacy of the Predator Coccinella septempunctata L. on the Aphid Species Macrosiphum rosae (L.) in Kastamonu Province, Turkey

Sabri Ünal; Aşır Er; Erol Akkuzu; Lubomír Šálek

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Róbert Marušák

Czech University of Life Sciences Prague

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Ján Merganič

Czech University of Life Sciences Prague

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L. Tipmann

Czech University of Life Sciences Prague

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Lukáš Dragoun

Czech University of Life Sciences Prague

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Radka Stolariková

Czech University of Life Sciences Prague

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D. Zahradník

Czech University of Life Sciences Prague

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Katarína Merganičová

Czech University of Life Sciences Prague

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Lucie Jeřábková

Czech University of Life Sciences Prague

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