Shrub encroachment in Mediterranean mountain grasslands: Rate and consequences on plant diversity and forage availability
Question Shrub encroachment has been confirmed in the past decades all over the world and is currently viewed as a “global process” threatening many grass‐dominated biomes. In southern Europe has generally been related to rural depopulation, land‐use changes and grazing abandonment. Nevertheless, in...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of vegetation science 2023-01, Vol.34 (1), p.n/a |
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Shrub encroachment has been confirmed in the past decades all over the world and is currently viewed as a “global process” threatening many grass‐dominated biomes. In southern Europe has generally been related to rural depopulation, land‐use changes and grazing abandonment. Nevertheless, in several mountain ranges of the Iberian Peninsula with secular pastoralism and high shrub cover, neither stocking rate nor traditional management has substantially altered in the past decades. Within this framework, to deepen our knowledge of shrub encroachment and to adopt, if necessary, appropriate control measures, we aim to discover: (i) the overall expansion rate in the main grassland–shrub communities; (ii) the course of shrub expansion; and (iii) the consequences for grassland floristic composition, plant diversity and frequency of the main forage functional groups throughout the period of woody expansion.
Location
This study was undertaken in Moncayo Natural Park (Spain), a climate and vegetation crossroads with remarkable presence of four widespread Mediterranean shrubs: Cytisus oromediterraneus, Erinacea anthyllis, Juniperus communis and J. sabina.
Methods
To determine the expansion rates of those shrubs, we examined four distinct and sufficiently separated grazing areas (and different shrub combinations), each with four different stages of shrub cover, over a 6‐year period. To assess changes in vegetation structure between 2008 and 2014 during the different stages of shrub encroachment, we used a paired t‐test comparing 14 parameters related to the diversity, life‐form spectra and abundance of grazing plants. The influence of year, cover category and zone was jointly assessed using a Linear Mixed Model.
Results
For the whole territory, we found an increase in average yearly cover of 1.3% (with high variation between the four species), although at the zone scale (areas with a particular shrub dominance) this increase was significant in only half of them. When the four shrubs occur together, Juniperus species show faster expansion rates than the other two species, although in only a few cases was the increase significant over the 6 years of the study. We found a significant decrease in total plant diversity and a significant increase in dominance between cover categories and years. Looking at the vegetation life‐forms, the increase in chamaephytes and phanerophytes, which include invader shrubs, caused a decrease in therophytes and hemicryptophytes. Fin |
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ISSN: | 1100-9233 1654-1103 |
DOI: | 10.1111/jvs.13174 |