Abstract

This long - term rehabilitation experiment is located near Menzel Habib, in the arid zone of southern Tunisia in a site with unambiguously degraded vegetation and soil, caused by a decades - old practice of overexploitation (grazing and plow agriculture). The fundamental premise is that by reintroducing an appropriate combination of native perennial plants, a simplified version of a previously occurring vegetation (and ecosystem) could be reinstated that would utilize the sparse and irregular water resources available in an efficient and complementary fashion, while also showing considerable resistance and resilience to moderate livestock grazing. The long - term goal is, on the basis of such a simplified system, to progressively achieve, through additional reintroductions and other manipulations, a state similar to that of the "ecosystem of reference," an example of which is provided in the nearby Bou Hedma National Park. In this paper we report various aspects of the experiment related to germination and establishment of four supposed keystone species (Rhanterium suaveolens, Plantago albicans, Stipa lagascae, and Cenchrus ciliaris) sown in field conditions, and compared to the ecosystem of reference for a number of parameters related to the structure and functioning of the ecosystems under study. Over a 4 - year period, distinct changes in the desired direction were observed in the experimental plots, and positive effects of controlled grazing were also recorded.

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