iForest - Biogeosciences and Forestry (Aug 2016)

500 years of coppice-with-standards management in Meerdaal Forest (Central Belgium)

  • Vandekerkhove K,
  • Baeté H,
  • Van Der Aa B,
  • De Keersmaeker L,
  • Thomaes A,
  • Leyman A,
  • Verheyen K

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3832/ifor1782-008
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 1
pp. 509 – 517

Abstract

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For centuries, coppice and coppice-with-standards were the main forest management systems in the northern and central parts of present Belgium. A high population density and a low forest cover in the whole region resulted in a high demand for wood, therefore strict regulations and management regimes were necessary to prevent overexploitation. We illustrate this with a well-documented case, that of Meerdaal Forest in Central Belgium, with reference to other sites in the region. Meerdaal Forest is a woodland 30 km east of Brussels. For centuries its high quality timber stands, especially oak, were managed as coppice-with-standards, with a gradually increasing share of standard trees. Using archive documents and ancient maps, we have reconstructed how this coppice-with-standard management has been developed and optimized over a period of about 500 years. Changes in cutting cycles and configurations were discerned, with a gradual increase of the importance of the standard layer over time. The analysis also showed how wood production could be successfully combined with other sources of income like grazing and pannage. We conclude that former managers of Meerdaal Forest, notwithstanding their lack of scholarship and reference works, developed a state-of-the-art sustainable and flexible management regime that allowed to provide high revenues during many centuries.

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