Milan Kobal
University of Ljubljana
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Publication
Featured researches published by Milan Kobal.
Ecological Applications | 2014
Thomas A. Nagel; Miroslav Svoboda; Milan Kobal
Much of our understanding of natural forest dynamics in the temperate region of Europe is based on observational studies in old-growth remnants that have emphasized small-scale gap dynamics and equilibrium stand structure and composition. Relatively little attention has been given to the role of infrequent disturbance events in forest dynamics. In this study, we analyzed dendroecological data from four stands and three windthrow patches in an old-growth landscape in the Dinaric Mountains of Bosnia and Herzegovina to examine disturbance history, tree life history traits, and compositional dynamics. Over all stands, most decades during the past 340 years experienced less than 10% canopy loss, yet each stand showed evidence of periodic intermediate-severity disturbances that removed > 40% of the canopy, some of which were synchronized over the study area landscape. Analysis of radial growth patterns indicated several life history differences among the dominant canopy trees; beech was markedly older than fir, while growth patterns of dead and dying trees suggested that fir was able to tolerate longer periods of suppressed growth in shade. Maple had the fastest radial growth and accessed the canopy primarily through rapid early growth in canopy gaps, whereas most beech and fir experienced a period of suppressed growth prior to canopy accession. Peaks in disturbance were roughly linked to increased recruitment, but mainly of shade-tolerant beech and fir; less tolerant species (i.e., maple, ash, and elm) recruited successfully on some of the windthown sites where advance regeneration of beech and fir was less abundant. The results challenge the traditional notions of stability in temperate old-growth forests of Europe and highlight the nonequilibrial nature of canopy composition due to unique histories of disturbance and tree life history differences. These findings provide valuable information for developing natural disturbance-based silvicultural systems, as well as insight into maintaining less shade-tolerant, but valuable broadleaved trees in temperate forests of Europe.
European Journal of Forest Research | 2016
Thomas A. Nagel; Dejan Firm; Dusan Rozenbergar; Milan Kobal
Ice storms are important natural disturbances in temperate forests, yet have received little attention outside North America. Following an extreme ice storm in Slovenia, we examined patterns of ice damage within and among temperate forest sites and quantified differences in susceptibility to damage with respect to tree species and size across a gradient of storm intensity and site conditions. Based on a damage survey of 60 plots distributed across six unmanaged forest sites, ordinal logistic regression was used to examine patterns of ice damage as a function of storm intensity, species, tree size, and slope steepness. Our findings indicate that a complex interaction among these drivers gave rise to substantial variation in damage type and severity among species, plots, and stands. Fagus sylvatica, the most dominant species, was one of the most susceptible species to severe ice damage, while conifers (Abies alba and Picea abies) were least susceptible. Crown damage was the most common damage type at low storm intensity, while uprooting increased at higher intensity, particularly for large trees on steep slopes. Differences in species susceptibility to ice damage, combined with variation in storm intensity and site conditions, gave rise to heterogeneous damage patterns that have the potential to alter successional pathways. Based on an analysis of historical records, moderate-to-severe ice storms recur relatively frequently in the region, suggesting that they play a more important role in forest dynamics than previously thought.
Urban Forestry & Urban Greening | 2018
Mojca Nastran; Milan Kobal; Klemen Eler
Gozdarski vestnik | 2017
Barbara Žabota; Milan Kobal; Mitja Skudnik
Archive | 2015
Giorgio Matteucci; Bruno De Cinti; Andrej Verlič; Janez Pirnat; Primož Oven; Ida Poljanšek; Viljem Vek; Milan Kobal; Janja Zule; Mija Sežun; Domen Finžgar; Marjana Westergren; Hojka Kraigher; Marina Katanić; Saša Orlović; Tine Grebenc; Bratislav Matović; Marko Bajc; Martina Lavrič; Mitja Ferlan; Klemen Eler; Dominik Vodnik; Gal Fidej; Andrej Rozman; Thomas A. Nagel; Igor Dakskobler; Jurij Diaci; Daniel Žlindra; Urša Vilhar; Katarina Čufar
Archive | 2014
Daniela Tonti; Gherardo Chirici; Marco Marchetti; Andrej Kobler; Andreja Ferreira; Boštjan Mali; Marko Kovač; Lado Kutnar; Milan Kobal; Andrej Grah; Laura Žižek Kulovec; Saša Vochl
Archive | 2014
Lado Kutnar; Igor Dakskobler; Milan Kobal
Archive | 2014
Aleksander Marinšek; Mateja Cojzer; Lado Kutnar; Matjaž Čater; Nenad Zagorac; Andrej Breznikar; Matjaž Zupanič; Milan Kobal
Archive | 2014
Marko Kovač; Mitja Skudnik; Anže Japelj; Špela Planinšek; Saša Vochl; Franc Batič; Damijana Kastelec; Dušan Jurc; Maja Jurc; Primož Simončič; Milan Kobal
Archive | 2014
E. D'Andrea; Matjaž Čater; Mitja Ferlan; Milan Kobal; M. Micali; F. Sicuriello; Primož Simončič; Giorgio Matteucci