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habitatstructuur

Habitatstructuur is the arrangement of physical elements in an ecosystem that define the available space and resources for organisms. It encompasses the vertical and horizontal distribution of vegetation, the composition and arrangement of substrates, water features, and debris, and the availability of microhabitats such as cavities, leaf litter, and rough surfaces. The structure develops through natural processes and human actions and is a key determinant of habitat quality.

Components include vegetation structure (canopy height, layering, density, and basal area), woody debris (snags and logs),

Impact and function: Habitat structure influences which species can persist, their abundances, movement, foraging and breeding

Measurement and management: Ecologists assess structure with metrics such as vertical complexity, density of vegetation layers,

In practice, sustaining or restoring habitatstructuur involves retaining dead wood and multiple vegetation layers, promoting age

ground
cover
(soil,
litter,
moss),
substrate
characteristics
(texture
and
roughness),
and
hydrological
features
(depth
and
flow)
as
well
as
microhabitat
features.
Together
these
elements
create
niches
and
refugia
for
a
wide
range
of
species.
success,
and
mediates
microclimate
and
predator–prey
interactions.
Higher
structural
complexity
generally
supports
greater
biodiversity
and
offers
resilience
to
disturbance.
snag
density,
volume
of
coarse
woody
debris,
and
ground-cover
diversity.
Techniques
include
field
plots,
remote
sensing,
LiDAR
and
drone
imagery.
and
size
diversity,
preserving
hedgerows
or
refugia,
and
creating
habitat
mosaics.
Plans
should
balance
structural
goals
with
other
land
uses
and
site-specific
constraints.