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Effects of long-term management practices on grassland plant assemblages in Mediterranean cork oak silvo-pastoral systems

TitleEffects of long-term management practices on grassland plant assemblages in Mediterranean cork oak silvo-pastoral systems
Publication TypeArticolo su Rivista peer-reviewed
Year of Publication2013
AuthorsBagella, S., Salis L., Marrosu G.M., Rossetti Ivo, Fanni S., Caria M.C., and Roggero P.P.
JournalPlant Ecology
Volume214
Pagination621-631
ISSN13850237
Keywordscanonical analysis, deciduous tree, funding_text 1=Acknowledgements This research was supported by AGRIS Sardegna and by SOILSINK (www.soilsink.entecra.it). We acknowledge the support of Giovanna Seddaiu and Stéphanie Gascón for the statistical analyses. We also acknowledge the farmers, grassland, grazing management, legume, Livestock, management practice, Mediterranean region, pastoralism, pH, Quercus suber, silviculture, species diversity, stocking density, tillage, Trifolium, Trifolium subterraneum
Abstract

The assessment of the effects of long-term management practices is relevant in understanding the current patterns of plant assemblages in semi-natural ecosystems. We hypothesized that the variety of management practices across different farming systems under the same ecological conditions directly and indirectly shapes these patterns via the long-term changes induced in soil features. The aims of this paper were to evaluate the influence of two sets of variables describing long-term management practices and soil features on plant assemblages and their importance in the context of Mediterranean silvo-pastoral systems. The analysis of variance revealed that richness and grazing value were not affected at all by grazing livestock species and soil tillage frequency and that they both showed relatively high absolute values for the specific context under study. Trifolium subterraneum was a key species in contributing to grassland grazing value and habitat biodiversity. The Canonical Correspondence Analysis highlighted the influence of management practices and soil features on plant assemblage composition, which was significantly affected by grazing livestock species and stocking rate and by soil pH and K content. The Redundancy Analysis showed that soil pH and related features were in turn affected by stocking rate, supporting our hypothesis that management practices influenced plant assemblage composition directly and indirectly via their long-term effects on soil features. The results also highlighted that a systemic analytical perspective applied at a grazing system scale can be effective in addressing sustainable grassland management issues in Mediterranean silvo-pastoral systems. © 2013 Springer Science+Business Media Dordrecht.

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URLhttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84876430890&doi=10.1007%2fs11258-013-0194-x&partnerID=40&md5=5b71671dc96e372b4463ea7e064f5229
DOI10.1007/s11258-013-0194-x
Citation KeyBagella2013621