Long‐term cross‐scale comparison of grazing and mowing on plant diversity and community composition in a salt‐marsh system

Land abandonment has been increasing in recent decades in Europe, usually accompanied by biodiversity decline. Whether livestock grazing and mowing can safeguard biodiversity across spatial scales in the long term is unclear. Using a 48‐year experiment in a salt marsh, we compared land abandonment (...

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Published inThe Journal of ecology Vol. 109; no. 10; pp. 3737 - 3747
Main Authors Chen, Qingqing, Bakker, Jan P., Alberti, Juan, Bakker, Elisabeth S., Smit, Christian, Olff, Han
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Oxford Blackwell Publishing Ltd 01.10.2021
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Summary:Land abandonment has been increasing in recent decades in Europe, usually accompanied by biodiversity decline. Whether livestock grazing and mowing can safeguard biodiversity across spatial scales in the long term is unclear. Using a 48‐year experiment in a salt marsh, we compared land abandonment (without grazing and mowing) and seven management regimes including cattle grazing, early season mowing, late season mowing, both early and late season mowing, and grazing plus each of the mowing regimes on plant diversity at the local and larger scales (i.e. aggregated local communities). Also, we compared their effects on community composition (both in identities and abundances) in time and space. Under land abandonment, plant diversity declined in the local communities and this decline became more apparent at the larger scale, particularly for graminoids and halophytes. All management regimes, except for late season mowing, maintained plant diversity at these scales. Local plant communities under all treatments underwent different successional trajectories, in the end, diverged from their initial state except for that under grazing (a cyclic succession). Year‐to‐year changes in local community composition remained at a similar level over time under land abandonment and grazing plus early season mowing while it changed under other treatments. Vegetation homogenized at the larger scale over time under land abandonment while vegetation remained heterogeneous under all management regimes. Synthesis. Our experiment suggests that late season mowing may not be sustainable to conserve plant diversity in salt marshes. Other management regimes can maintain plant diversity across spatial scales and vegetation heterogeneity at the larger scale in the long term, but local community composition may change over time. A 48‐year experiment reveals that, compared with land abandonment, cattle grazing, early season mowing, both early and late season mowing (but not late season mowing), and grazing plus each of the mowing regimes maintained plant diversity across spatial scales.
Bibliography:Handling Editor
A. Randall Hughes
ISSN:0022-0477
1365-2745
DOI:10.1111/1365-2745.13753