PL EN


Preferencje help
Widoczny [Schowaj] Abstrakt
Liczba wyników
Tytuł artykułu

Functional differentiation of Central Apennine grasslands under mowing and grazing disturbance regimes

Identyfikatory
Warianty tytułu
Języki publikacji
EN
Abstrakty
EN
This research dealt to two grasslands potentially developing the same vegetation type because sited in the same environmental contest (bioclimate, substratum, soil, slope, altitude) but under diverse management regimes (grazing and mowing) for many decades. The evidenced differentiation between the two pastoral vegetations can be attributed to disturbance type and the statistical functional analysis performed through seven plant traits (prostrate form, early flowering, storage organs, clonal ability, basal meristems, chemical defences and hairs), revealed the distinguishing patterns. Discriminant analysis pointed out typical biological attributes for each disturbance conditions, while from correlation analysis emerged different possible traits combinations which do not follow the previous traits separation. Such outcomes are explainable because both grazing and mowing provoke aboveground phytomass removal, although grazing is a selective pressure, while mowing gives to all the species the same development chances. It is reasonable to conclude that convergent strategies within the two systems are possible and frequent.
Rocznik
Strony
115--128
Opis fizyczny
Bibliogr. 98 poz.,Rys., tab.,
Twórcy
autor
autor
autor
autor
Bibliografia
  • 1. Adler P., Raff R., Lauenroth W. K. 2001 The effect of grazing on the spatial heterogeneity of vegetation – Oecologia, 128: 465–479.
  • 2. Altesor A., Piñero G., Lezama F., Jackson R. B., Sarasola M., Paruelo J. M. 2006 Ecosystem changes associated with grazing in sub-humid South American grasslands – J. Veg. Sci. 17: 323–332.
  • 3. Armstrong R. H.,Robertson E., Lamb C. S., Gordon I. J., Elston D. A. 1993 Diet selection by lambs in ryegrass-white clover swards differing in the horizontal distribution of clover (In: Proceeding of the XVIIth International Grassland Congress) – New Zealand, pp. 715–716.
  • 4. Bagella S. 2001 – Valore pastorale delle associazioni vegetali: un esempio di applicazione nell’Appennino Umbro-Marchigiano (Italia) – Fitosociologia, 38: 153–165.
  • 5. Baker H. 1937 – Alluvional meadows: A comparative study of grazed and mown meadows J. Ecol. 25: 408–420.
  • 6. Bakker J. P., Olff H., Willems J. H., Zobe l M. 1996 – Why do we need permanent plots in the study of long-term vegetation dynamics? – J. Veg. Sci. 7:147–156.
  • 7. Ballelli S., Bellomaria B. 2005 – La flora officinale delle Marche – Arte Lito, Camerino, 997 pp.
  • 8. Bergström R. 1992 – Browse characteristics and impact of browsing on trees and shrubs in African savannas – J. Veg. Sci. 3: 315–324.
  • 9. Biondi E., Baldoni M. A. 1995 – The climate and vegetation of peninsular Italy – Colloq. Phytosociol. 23: 675–721.
  • 10. Biondi E., Baldoni M. A., Talamonti M. C. 1995 – Il fitoclima delle Marche (In: Salvaguardia e gestione dei beni ambientali nelle Marche), Tipolit Trifogli, Ancona, pp. 21–70.
  • 11. Biondini M. E., Patton B. D., Nyren P. E. 1998 – Grazing intensity and ecosystem processes in a northern mixed-grass prairie, USA – Ecol. Appl. 8: 469–479.
  • 12. Braun-Blanquet J. 1964 – Pflanzensoziologie (Third Edition) – Springer, Wien, New York.
  • 13. Briemle G., Schreiber K. F. 1994 – Zur Frage der Beeinflussung pflanzlicher Lebensund Wuchsformen durch unterschiedliche Landschaftspflegemaßnahmen – Tuexenia, 14: 229–244.
  • 14. Briske D.D. 1996 – Strategies of plant survival in grazed systems: a functional interpretation (In: The Ecology and Management of Grazing Systems, Eds: J. Hodgson, A.W. Illius) – CAB International, Wallingford, pp. 37–68.
  • 15. Bullock J. M., Franklin J., Stevenson M. J., Silvertown J., Coulson S. J., Gregory S.J., Tofts R. 2001 – A plant trait analysis of responses to grazing in a long-term experiment – J. Appl. Ecol. 38: 253–267.
  • 16. Campbell B. D., Stafford Smith D. M., Ash A.J. 1999 – A rule-based model for the functional analysis of vegetation change in Australasian grasslands – J. Veg. Sci. 10: 723–730.
  • 17. Catorci A., Cesaretti S., Gatti R. 2009 – Biodiversity conservation: geosynphytosociology as a tool of analysis and modelling of grassland systems – Hacquetia, 8: 129–146.
  • 18. Collins S. L., Knapp A. K., Briggs J. M., Blairs J. M., Steinauer E. M. 1998 – Modulation of diversity by grazing and mowing in native tallgrass prairie – Science, 280: 745–747.
  • 19. Conti F., Abbate G., Alessandrini A., Blasi C. 2005 – An annotated checklist of the Italian vascular flora – Palombi Editori, Roma, 420 pp
  • 20. Curll M. L., Wilkins R. J. 1982 – Frequency and severity of defoliation of grass and clover by sheep at different stocking rates – Grass and Forage Science 37: 291–297.
  • 21. Daget P. H., Poissonet J. 1972 – Un procédé d’estimation de la valeur pastorale des pâturages – Fourrages 49: 31–40.
  • 22. Davies A. 2001 – Competition between grasses and legumes in established pastures – (In: Competition and succession in pastures, Eds: P.G. Tow, A. Lazenby) – CABI Publishing, Wallingford, pp. 63–83.
  • 23. de Bello F., Lepš J., Sebastià M. T. 2006 Variations in species and functional plant diversity along climatic and grazing gradients Ecography, 29: 801–810.
  • 24. de Bello F., Lepš J., Sebastià M. T. 2007 Grazing effect on species and functional diversity along a climatic gradient – J. Veg. Sci. 18: 25–34.
  • 25. Di H. J., Cameron K. C. 2004 – Effects of the nitrification inhibitor dicyandiamide on potassium, magnesium and calcium leaching in grazed grassland – Soil Use and Management, 20: 2–7.
  • 26. Díaz S., Acosta A., Cabido M. 1992 – Morphological analysis of herbaceous communities under different grazing regimes – J. Veg. Sci. 3: 689–696.
  • 27. Díaz S., Cabido M., Zak M., Martinez Carretero E., Araníbar J. 1999 – Plant functional traits, ecosystem structure and land-use history along a climatic gradient in central-western Argentina – J. Veg. Sci. 10: 651–660.
  • 28. Díaz S., Noy-Meir I., Cabido M. 2001 – Can grazing response of herbaceous plants be predicted from simple vegetative traits? – J. Appl. Ecol. 38: 497–508.
  • 29. Dupré C., Diekmann M. 2001 – Differences in species richness and life-history traits between grazed and abandoned grasslands in southern Sweden – Ecography, 24: 275–286.
  • 30. Ellenberg H. 1974 – Zeigerwerte der Gefässpflanzen Mitteleuropas – Scripta Geobotanica, 9. Göttingen
  • 31. Fernández-Alès R., Laffarga J. M., Ortega F. 1993 – Strategies in Mediterranean grassland annuals in relation to stress and disturbance – J. Veg. Sci. 4: 313–322.
  • 32. Fischer M., Wipf S. 2002 – Effect of low-intensity grazing on the species-rich vegetation of traditionally mown subalpine meadows – Biol. Conserv. 104: 1–11.
  • 33. Frank D. A. 2005 – The interactive effects of grazing ungulates and aboveground production on grassland diversity – Oecologia, 143: 629–634.
  • 34. Gatti R., Carotenuto L., Catorci A. 2007a – Sinfenologia di alcuni syntaxa prativi dell’Appennino Umbro-Marchigiano (Italia centrale) (In: Le praterie montane dell’Appennino maceratese, Eds: A. Catorci, R. Gatti) – Braun-Blanquetia, 42: 179–202.
  • 35. Gatti R., Galliano A., Catorci A. 2007b Valore pastorale delle praterie montane dell’Appennino maceratese (In: Le praterie montane dell’Appennino maceratese, Eds: A. Catorci, R. Gatti) – Braun-Blanquetia, 42: 247–253.
  • 36. Gillison A. N., Carpenter G 1997 – A generic plant functional attribute set and grammar for dynamic vegetation description and analysis – Funct. Ecol. 11: 775–783.
  • 37. Gitay H., Noble I. R. 1997 – What are functional types and how should we seek them? (In Plant Functional Types – Their Relevance to Ecosystem Properties and Global Change, Eds: T.M. Smith, H.H. Shugart, F.I. Woodward) – Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, pp 3–19.
  • 38. Givnish T.J. 1982 – On the adaptive significance of leaf height in forest herbs – Am. Nat. 120: 353–381.
  • 39. Grime J.P. 2001 – Plant Strategies, Vegetation Processes and Ecosystem Properties (Second Edition) – John Wiley and Sons, Chichester, 417 pp.
  • 40. Grime J.P. 2006 – Trait convergence and trait divergence in herbaceous plant communities: Mechanisms and consequences – J. Veg. Sci. 17: 255–260.
  • 41. Grime J. P., Hodgson J. G., Hunt R. 1988 Comparative plant ecology A functional approach to common British species – Unwin Hyman, London, 742 pp.
  • 42. Grubb P.J., Kelly D., Mitchley J. 1982 – The control of relative abundance in communities of herbaceous plants (In: The Plant Community as a Working Mechanism, Ed: E. Newman) – British Ecological Society No.1, Blackwell, Oxford, pp. 77–97.
  • 43. Hadar L., Noy-Meir I., Perevolotsky A. 1999 – The effect of shrub clearing and grazing on the composition of a Mediterranean plant community: functional groups versus species – J. Veg. Sci. 10: 673–683.
  • 44. Hansson M., Fogelfors H. 2000 – Management of a seminatural grassland; results from a 15–year old experiment in southern Sweden – J. Veg. Sci. 11: 31–38.
  • 45. Ilmarinen K., Mikola J. 2009 – Soil feedback does not explain mowing effects on vegetation structure in a semi-natural grassland – Acta Oecol. 35: 838–848.
  • 46. Jefferson R. G. 1999 – Mowing and cutting (In: The lowland grassland management handbook, Eds: A. Crofts, R.G. Jefferson) – English nature/The wildlife trusts of the Royal society for nature conservation, London, chapter 6: 1–27.
  • 47. Kahmen S., Poschlod P. 2008 – Effects of grassland management on plant functional trait composition – Agric. Ecosyst. Environ. 128: 137–145.
  • 48. Kaligarič M., Culiberg M., Kramberger B. 2006 – Recent vegetation history of the North Adriatic grasslands – expansion and decay of an anthropogenic habitat – Folia Geobot. 41: 241–258.
  • 49. Keddy P. A. 1992 – A pragmatic approach to functional ecology – Funct. Ecol. 6: 621–626.
  • 50. Kelly C. K. 1996 – Identifying plant functional types using floristic data bases: Ecological correlates of plant size – J. Veg. Sci. 7: 417–424.
  • 51. Kleyer M. 1999 – The distribution of plant functional types on gradients of disturbance intensity and resource supply in an agricultural landscape – J. Veg. Sci. 10: 697–708.
  • 52. Klimek S., Richter Kemmermann A., Hofmann M., Isselstein J. 2006 – Plant species richness and composition in managed grasslands: The relative importance of field management and environmental factors – Biol. Conserv. 134: 559–570.
  • 53. Klimešová J., Klimeš L. 2006 – Clo-Pla3: A database of clonal growth architecture of Central-European plants – http://clopla.butbn.cas.cz/
  • 54. Klotz S., Kühn I., Durka W. 2002 – Biolflor: Eine Datenbank zu biologisch-ökologischen Merkmalen der Gefäßpflanzen in Deutschland – Schriftenreihe für Vegetationskunde 38, Bonn, Bundesamt für Naturschutz – http://www.ufz.de/biolflor/index.jsp
  • 55. Köhler B., Gigon A., Edwards P. J., Krusi B., Langenauer R., Luscher A., Ryser P. 2005 – Changes in the species composition and conservation value of limestone grasslands in Northern Switzerland after 22 years of contrasting managements – Perspect. Plant Ecol. Evol. Syst. 7: 51–67.
  • 56. Kramberger B., Kaligaric M. 2008 – Seminatural grasslands: the effects of cutting frequency on long-term changes of floristic composition – Pol. J. Ecol. 56: 33–43.
  • 57. Lack A.J. 1982 – Competition for pollinators in the ecology of Centaurea scabiosa L. and Centaurea nigra L. I. Variation in flowering time New Phytol. 91: 297–308.
  • 58. Landsberg J., Lavorel S., Stol J. 1999 – Grazing response groups among understorey plants in arid rangelands – J. Veg. Sci. 10: 683–696.
  • 59. Lavorel S., McIntyre S., Landsberg J., Forbes T. D. A. 1997 – Plant functional classifications: from general groups to specific groups based on response to disturbance – Trends Ecol. Evol. 12: 474–478.
  • 60. Lavorel S., McIntyre S., Grigulis K. 1999a Plant response to disturbance in a Mediterranean grassland: How many functional groups? – J. Veg. Sci. 10: 661–672.
  • 61. Lavorel S., Rochette C., Lebreton J. D. 1999b – Functional groups for response to disturbance in Mediterranean old fields – Oikos 84: 480–498.
  • 62. Lemaire G., Chapman D. 1996 – Tissue flows in grazed plant communities (In: The Ecology and Management of Grazing Systems, Eds: J. Hodgson, A.W. Illius) – CAB International, Wallingford, pp. 3–36.
  • 63. Lepš J. 1999 – Nutrient status disturbance and competition: an experimental test of relationships in a wet meadow – J. Veg. Sci.10: 219–230.
  • 64. Liira J., Zobel K. 2000 – Vertical structure of a species-rich grassland canopy, treated with additional illumination, fertilization and mowing – Plant Ecol. 146: 185–195.
  • 65. Magurran A. E. 1988 – Ecological diversity and its measurement – Chapman and Hall, London, 197 pp.
  • 66. McIntyre S., Lavorel S., Tremont R. M. 1995 – Plant life-history attributes: their relationship to disturbance response in herbaceous vegetation – J. Ecol. 83: 31–44.
  • 67. McNaughton S. J., Chapin F. S. 1985 – Effects of phosphorus nutrition and defoliation on C4 graminoids from the Serengeti plains – Ecology, 66: 1671–1629.
  • 68. Milchunas D. G., Lauenroth W. K. 1993 – Quantitative effects of grazing on vegetation and soils over a global range of environments – Ecol. Monogr. 63: 327–366.
  • 69. Moog D., Poschlod P., Kahmen S., Schreiber K.F. 2002 – Comparison of species composition between different grassland management treatments after 25 years – Appl. Veg. Sci. 5: 99–106.
  • 70. Myklestad Ǻ., Sætersdal M. 2004 – The importance of traditional meadow management techniques for conservation of vascular plant species richness in Norway – Biol. Conserv. 118: 133–139.
  • 71. Navas M. L., Violle C. 2009 – Plant traits related to competition: how do they shape the functional diversity of communities? – Community Ecol. 10: 131–137.
  • 72. Noble I., Gitay H. 1996 – A functional classification for predicting the dynamics of landscapes – J. Veg. Sci. 7: 329–336.
  • 73. Norderhaug A., Ihse M., Pedersen O. 2000 – Biotope patterns and abundance of meadow plant species in a Norwegian rural landscape – Landsc. Ecol. 15: 201–218
  • 74. Noy-Meir I., Gutman M., Kaplan Y. 1989 Responses of Mediterranean grassland plants to grazing and protection – J. Ecol. 77: 290–310.
  • 75. Olff H., Ritchie M. E. 1998 – Effects of herbivores on grassland plant diversity – Trends Ecol. Evol. 13: 261–265.
  • 76. Pärtel M., Mändla R., Zobel M. 1999 Landscape history of a calcareous (alvar) grassland in Hanila, western Estonia during the last three hundred years – Landsc. Ecol. 14: 187–196.
  • 77. Pausas J. G. 1999 – Response of plant functional types to changes in the fire regime in Mediterranean ecosystems: a simulation approach – J. Veg. Sci. 10: 717–722.
  • 78. Perevolotsky A., Seligman N. G. 1998 – Role of grazing in Mediterranean rangeland ecosystems – inversion of a paradigm – BioScience, 48: 1007–1017.
  • 79. Pickett S. T. A., White P. S. 1985 – Patch dynamics: A synthesis (In: The ecology of natural disturbance and patch dynamics, Eds: S.T.A. Pickett, P.S. White) – Academic Press, New York, NY, pp. 371–384.
  • 80. Pignatti S. 1982 – Flora d’Italia, 1–3 – Edagricole, Bologna, 2302 pp.
  • 81. Pignatti S 2005 – Valori di bioindicazione delle piante vascolari della flora d’Italia – BraunBlanquetia 39: 1–97.
  • 82. Podani J. 2001 – Syn-tax 2000 Computer program for data analysis in ecology and systematics – Budapest.
  • 83. Riecken U., Finck P., Schröder E. 2002 Significance of pasture landscape for nature conservation and extensive agriculture (In: Pasture landscape and nature conservation, Eds: B. Redecker, P. Finck, W. Härdtle, U. Riecken, E. Schröder) – Springer, Verlag, Berlin, Heidelberg, pp. 423–435.
  • 84. Rivas-Martinez S. 2004 – Global bioclimatics – http://www.globalbioclimatics.org
  • 85. Rodwell J. S. 1992 – British plant communities Volume 3 – Grassland and montane communities – Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 523 pp.
  • 86. Roberts D.W. 1996 – Landscape vegetation modelling with vital attributes and fuzzy system theory – Ecol. Model. 90: 175–184.
  • 87. RoggeroP. P., Bagella S., Farina R. 2002 – Un archivio dati di Indici specifici per la valutazione integrata del valore pastorale – Rivista di Agronomia, 36: 149–156.
  • 88. Sebastià M. T., de Bello F., Puig L., Taull M. 2008 – Grazing as a factor structuring grasslands in the Pyrenees – Appl. Veg. Sci. 11: 215–222.
  • 89. Skarpe C. 2001 – Effects of Large Herbivores on Competition and Succession in Natural Savannah Rangelands (In: Competition and succession in pastures, Eds: P.G. Tow, A. Lazenby) CABI Publishing, Wallingford, pp. 175–192.
  • 90. Simms E. L. 1992 – Costs of plant resistance to herbivory (In: Plant resistance to herbivory and pathogens, Eds: R.S. Fritz, E.L. Simms) – University of Chicago Press, Chicago, pp 392–425.
  • 91. SPSS Inc. 2005 – SPSS for Windows – Version 13.0, Chicago, Illinois, NJ, USA.
  • 92. Sternberg M., Gutman M., Perevolotsky A., Ungar E. D., Kigel J. 2000 – Vegetation response to grazing management in a Mediterranean community: a functional group approach – J. Appl. Ecol. 37: 224–237.
  • 93. Thompson K., Hillier S. H., Grime J. P., Bossard C. C., Brand S. R. 1996 – A functional analysis of a limestone grassland community – J. Veg. Sci. 7: 371–380.
  • 94. Tomaselli R. 1956 – Introduzione allo studio della fitosociologia – Industria Poligrafica Lombarda, Milano, 319 pp.
  • 95. Walker B. H., Steffen W. L., Canadell J., Ingram J. S. I. 1999 – Implications of global change for natural and managed ecosystems: a synthesis of GCTE and related research – IGBP Book Series 4, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.
  • 96. Watkinson A.R., Ormerod S.J. 2001 – Grasslands, grazing and biodiversity: editors’ introduction – J. Appl. Ecol. 38: 233–237.
  • 97. Wells T. C. E., Cox R. 1993 – The long-term effects of cutting on the yield, floristic composition and soil nutrient status of chalk grassland – Peterborough, English Nature Research Report, No. 71.
  • 98. Wilson W. L., Abernethy V. J., Murphy K. J., Adam A., McCracken D. I., Downie I. S., Foster G. N., Furness R. W., Waterhouse A., Ribera I. 2003 – Prediction of plant diversity response to landuse change on Scottish agricultural land – Agric. Ecosyst. Environ. 94: 249–263.
Typ dokumentu
Bibliografia
Identyfikator YADDA
bwmeta1.element.baztech-article-BGPK-3205-2388
JavaScript jest wyłączony w Twojej przeglądarce internetowej. Włącz go, a następnie odśwież stronę, aby móc w pełni z niej korzystać.