Abstract

Agricultural activity replaces natural vegetation with cultivated land and it is a major cause of local and global climate change. Highly specialized agricultural production leads to extensive monoculture farming with a low biodiversity that may cause low landscape resilience. This is the case on the Salento peninsula, in the Apulia Region of Italy, where the Xylella fastidiosa bacterium has caused the mass destruction of olive trees, many of them in monumental groves. The historical land cover that characterized the landscape is currently in a transition phase and can strongly affect climate conditions. This study aims to analyze how the destruction of olive groves by X. fastidiosa affects local climate change. Land surface temperature (LST) data detected by Landsat 8 and MODIS satellites are used as a proxies for microclimate mitigation ecosystem services linked to the evolution of the land cover. Moreover, recurrence quantification analysis was applied to the study of LST evolution. The results showed that olive groves are the least capable forest type for mitigating LST, but they are more capable than farmland, above all in the summer when the air temperature is the highest. The differences in the average LST from 2014 to 2020 between olive groves and farmland ranges from 2.8 °C to 0.8 °C. Furthermore, the recurrence analysis showed that X. fastidiosa was rapidly changing the LST of the olive groves into values to those of farmland, with a difference in LST reduced to less than a third from the time when the bacterium was identified in Apulia six years ago. The change generated by X. fastidiosa started in 2009 and showed more or less constant behavior after 2010 without substantial variation; therefore, this can serve as the index of a static situation, which can indicate non-recovery or non-transformation of the dying olive groves. Failure to restore the initial environmental conditions can be connected with the slow progress of the uprooting and replacing infected plants, probably due to attempts to save the historic aspect of the landscape by looking for solutions that avoid uprooting the diseased plants. This suggests that social-ecological systems have to be more responsive to phytosanitary epidemics and adapt to ecological processes, which cannot always be easily controlled, to produce more resilient landscapes and avoid unwanted transformations.

Highlights

  • Mediterranean landscapes are strongly influenced by human activities that shape the structure and functions of the landscape in consideration of human needs

  • The analysis revealed a pretty small value for the F-recurrences, i.e., the farmland and olive groves Land surface temperature (LST) were only weakly related

  • Xylella fastidiosa effect in diffusion was linked to historical landscape conservation and have slowed down a retrospective way and in the province of Lecce (South Italy), where in situ field variable measurement is not available

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Mediterranean landscapes are strongly influenced by human activities that shape the structure and functions of the landscape in consideration of human needs. The landscapes are the result of millenarian interactions between natural processes and human chose and can be defined as social-ecological systems where there is mutual evolution and adaptation between ecological processes, social, and economic components of the landscape [1,2,3,4] In this context, the evolution of the agricultural economy has a decisive role in determining the characteristics of the landscape [5], mainly through the spatial arrangement and composition of vegetation [6,7]. Decision-makers and institutions that drive economic and social processes need to adapt their strategies and policies to influence the ability of the land to respond to disasters and stimulate the landscape regeneration [5,12,13]. This can be useful following epidemic phytosanitary events that caused mass mortality

Objectives
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.