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Mediterranean cork oak wooded grasslands: synergies and trade-offs between plant diversity, pasture production and soil carbon

TitleMediterranean cork oak wooded grasslands: synergies and trade-offs between plant diversity, pasture production and soil carbon
Publication TypeArticolo su Rivista peer-reviewed
Year of Publication2018
AuthorsSeddaiu, G., Bagella S., Pulina A., Cappai C., Salis L., Rossetti Ivo, Lai R., and Roggero P.P.
JournalAgroforestry Systems
Volume92
Pagination893-908
ISSN01674366
KeywordsAnimalia, Biodiversity, carbon sequestration, deciduous tree, dry matter, ecosystem service, forage, grassland, habitat structure, heterogeneity, Italy, Mediterranean region, pastoralism, pasture, Quercus suber, Sardinia, silviculture, soil carbon, species richness, trade-off
Abstract

Mediterranean wooded grasslands that emerge from silvopastoral activities are multifunctional systems that result in high biodiversity and offer ecosystem services such as forage production and soil carbon sequestration. During 3 years, ten grazed wooded grassland fields were studied in the Berchidda–Monti long-term observatory, located in NE Sardinia, Italy, with the aim of exploring the synergies and trade-offs between biodiversity and selected ecosystem services. Positions below and outside the canopy of three cork oak trees in each field were randomly selected to compare seasonal pasture production, pasture utilization rate by animals, botanical composition, biodiversity indicators (Shannon index and plant species richness) and soil organic carbon. In autumn, dry matter production of pasture was similar in the two positions; in two winters out of three it was greater below the trees than outside, and in spring it was greater outside than below the trees. While plant species richness and Shannon index were not significantly influenced by the position, the overall wooded grassland plant species richness was 31% higher than that outside of the tree crown. The soil organic carbon content in the 0–40-cm soil layer was also higher below the trees. Our findings highlight that if the main purpose of the wooded grasslands is to provide forage for grazing animals rather than conserving and/or enhancing plant diversity and soil fertility, the presence of trees constrains the overall forage productivity, although the greater forage availability in winter under the trees can contribute to improve the seasonal distribution of forage production. © 2018, Springer Science+Business Media B.V., part of Springer Nature.

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URLhttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85044714456&doi=10.1007%2fs10457-018-0225-7&partnerID=40&md5=953d396ee22c71b633380fd34ee8ddcf
DOI10.1007/s10457-018-0225-7
Citation KeySeddaiu2018893