kantbredd
Kantbredd is a term in landscape ecology describing the width of the edge zone around a habitat boundary where edge effects influence conditions and organisms. It is not a fixed distance; its value depends on the landscape, edge type, and the ecological variable measured. In practice, kantbredd is estimated by examining how microclimate, vegetation structure, or species composition change with distance from the edge, usually along transects perpendicular to the boundary. The boundary is often defined where a chosen variable returns to interior reference levels or reaches a predefined threshold.
Several factors affect kantbredd. The contrast between adjoining habitats, sun exposure, wind, and topography all matter.
Understanding kantbredd is useful for biodiversity conservation, forestry, and land-use planning. A wider edge zone can
Related concepts include edge effect, ecotone, and habitat fragmentation. In practice, kantbredd is assessed with field
Etymology: kantbredd combines the Swedish words kant (edge) and bredd (width).