Abstract

Abstract Both, agricultural intensification and abandonment caused a strong decline in plant species richness in semi-natural grasslands in Central Europe within the last decades. At a global scale, the Convention on Biological Diversity targeted at halting the decline of biodiversity by the end of 2010. Agri-environmental schemes (AES) have been developed at the national level to reach this biodiversity target in agricultural areas. We evaluated the effectiveness of Austrian agro-environmental schemes on species-rich grasslands within the UNESCO Biosphere Reserve Wienerwald. We found a general decrease of vascular plant species richness at 95 sites, from an average of 43 species in 1990/92 to 31 species in 2011. The average decrease of species classified as threatened according to the national Red List from 12 to 7 and the parallel increase of widespread, nitrophilous species indicates a reduced conservation value of observed meadows. Species losses did not differ between mesic meadows of the Arrhenatherion type (EU habitat type 6510) and more nutrient-poor, semi-dry Brometalia grasslands (EU habitat type 6210), indicating the sensitivity to changes in agricultural management regimes even for more intensively used grassland types. AES decelerated this overall trend but could not stop biodiversity losses over the past two decades. Although the maintenance of grassland management through AES prevented biodiversity loss in areas which otherwise would have been abandoned, adaptations of the Austrian AES are desirable to effectively conserve biodiversity at agricultural sites.

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