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How High Is the Recreation Value of Successional Forests Growing Spontaneously on Coal Mine Spoil Heaps?

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Author
Braun Kohlová, MarkétaORCiD Profile - 0000-0002-1501-4873WoS Profile - P-4433-2016Scopus Profile - 56755272400
Máca, VojtěchORCiD Profile - 0000-0001-7069-443XWoS Profile - P-4525-2016Scopus Profile - 36696761900
Melichar, JanORCiD Profile - 0000-0003-1688-3752WoS Profile - I-8494-2012Scopus Profile - 56862011400
Pavelčík, Petr

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Publication date
2021
Published in
Forests [online]
Volume / Issue
12 (2)
ISBN / ISSN
ISSN: 1999-4907
ISBN / ISSN
eISSN: 1999-4907
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This publication has a published version with DOI 10.3390/f12020160

Abstract
Recreation value increases with the age of replanted as well as successional forests. Successional forests are not systematically less valuable for recreation than replanted forests. Succession may be used as a viable and low-cost reclamation practice of spoil heaps. Afforestation has been a popular practice in post-mining land reclamation in the Czech Republic. To expand the current evidence on the recreation values of reclaimed forests, we conducted a valuation study for most typical reclaimed forests, as well as for successional forests spontaneously growing on surface coal mine deposit heaps. Using two distinct measurement methods, we also explore whether the estimated recreation value of forests is robust. An online survey was conducted in 2016 on a sample of residents living in the vicinity of coal mine deposit heaps, residents of the adjacent region of Karlovy Vary, and a control population from the central Bohemian region. Participants evaluated visual representations of forest stands typical for reclamation and succession, along with commercial spruce forest as a reference type. In the direct measurement, we measured the attractiveness of a respective forest for a walk using a 5-point scale. In the indirect measurement, a hypothetical choice between two forests for a walk was elicited in a discrete choice experiment. Both direct and indirect measurements provide similar results. All reclaimed forests have a lower recreation value than the reference spruce forest. Successional forests are not systematically less valuable for recreation than replanted forests and the recreation value of both types increases with their age. The age, gender, and education of the participants did not affect the recreation value of a forest. We demonstrate that succession may be used as a viable and low-cost reclamation practice of spoil heaps emerging as a by-product of open-cast coal mining. With recreation as only one of many forest uses, our findings need to be interpreted vis-a-vis the objectives and expected results for individual sites and their habitat conditions.
Keywords
post-mining land reclamation, recreation value, successional forests
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https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14178/3048
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WOS:000622526600001
SCOPUS:2-s2.0-85100470822
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Full text of this result is licensed under: Creative Commons Uveďte původ 4.0 International

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