preboreal climate birch was the dominant vegetation, and large areas reminiscent of these ancient times still survive in many parts, particularly in the north of Scotland. Native Scots pine, which preceded the southern deciduous forests, is now confined to the ‘black woods’ of the Highlands. This, like birch, provides a more uniform habitat than oak and supports a less rich, but none the less interesting, avifauna.
After systematically spoiling almost all the native woodland, man has replanted the landscape with comparatively few small stands of hardwoods, a fairly considerable acreage of trees in orchard and hedgerow, and an increasing area of exotic conifers, from the Japanese larch to the north American Sitka spruce and Douglas fir. These new woods have been colonised in varying degrees by our native sylvan birds. Deafforestation, reafforestation (often with new and exotic species) and afforestation (the planting of trees where none previously grew, at least in recent times) have certainly altered the bird fauna, as we shall see in the next chapter. Here our task is to discover whether the birds have any clear effect on man’s interests. The more general question of the role played by birds in the ecosystem is much more difficult to answer, because the interactions involved are complex and not readily measured. There have been many general statements made about the whole plant and animal community, which can be neither refuted nor proved. For example, it is often claimed that some birds, by eating forest seeds, may hinder natural regeneration and, conversely, that birds actually help to distribute seeds and fruit. While it is undoubtedly true that many plants have evolved dispersal mechanisms which rely on animals (the mistletoe is a good example), no quantitative data on such inter-relationships are available. Turček considers that jays, which are specialist feeders on acorns, are practically the only agents able to move acorns uphill. Mellanby (1968) has also considered the role of animals in this respect and disagrees with the many ecologists who consider that most animals prevent natural regeneration of oak woodland. Those animals which destroy the most acorns by feeding on them also appear to be of most importance in causing oak regeneration. Turček also has data to show the importance of birds, particularly jays and blackbirds, in disseminating the sweet cherry in some spruce forests in the central Slovakian mountains. During the summer a mean of 18 casted seeds and 7 seedlings were found per square metre, most within 50 metres of the fruiting tree. Similarly, nutcrackers transport the seeds of Pinus cembra
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