Abstract

BackgroundForests are used for multiple purposes worldwide, which often include timber harvest, firewood extraction and livestock raising. An excessive pressure on multipurpose systems may decrease soil cover, promoting soil erosion and causing the loss of other resources, as litter and seeds. Retention forestry practices can help to decrease or mitigate resource loss in the managed stands. Specifically, retaining and redistributing biological legacies (e.g. logs, branches, woody debris) at strategic locations can create sediment, litter, and seed-sinks in the silvopastoral systems. In addition, grazing management could increase or, even, decrease the success of this practice. In this study, we assessed the effect of branch barriers and grazing management on resource run-off/run-on processes in silvopastoral systems of Arid Chaco (Córdoba, Argentina). To do this, a 2-ha area was divided in two paddocks that were randomly assigned to different grazing managements: winter vs. continuous grazing. We randomly selected 22 water run-off paths in each paddock, and in the half of them, we build elongated branch piles. In each run-off path (with and without branch barriers), we recorded the amount of accumulated and lost sediment (during the rainy season), litter biomass, germinable seed bank, richness and cover of plant species, and richness and density of seedlings and saplings of woody species.ResultsBranch barriers promoted sediment accumulation during the first and the second year of the study, depending on grazing management. The temporal and spatial scale of the effect of the branch barriers also depended on grazing management. Branch barriers also trapped litter and seeds, which may have increased the richness and density of seedlings and saplings of woody species.ConclusionsBy intercepting the dominant flow of erosive agents, branch barriers trapped sediment, litter, and propagules of different species. A greater amount of sediment and litter would have improved microsite quality, favouring seed germination and seedling emergence of tree and shrub species, which are key to maintain and/or reconstitute the structure and composition of the forest community in the long term. Therefore, redistributing biological legacies at strategic locations can be a useful and cost-less retention forestry practice to be applied in multipurpose forest management and conservation strategies.

Highlights

  • Forests are used for multiple purposes worldwide, which often include timber harvest, firewood extraction and livestock raising

  • Branch barriers promoted sediment accumulation, but the temporal and spatial scale of their effect depended on grazing management (p = 0.003)

  • The amount of sediment captured by branch barriers was 17 times higher than that recorded in control run-off paths (Fig. 2a, t = p < 0.001)

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Summary

Introduction

Forests are used for multiple purposes worldwide, which often include timber harvest, firewood extraction and livestock raising. An excessive pressure on multipurpose systems may decrease soil cover, promoting soil erosion and causing the loss of other resources, as litter and seeds. In each run-off path (with and without branch barriers), we recorded the amount of accumulated and lost sediment (during the rainy season), litter biomass, germinable seed bank, richness and cover of plant species, and richness and density of seedlings and saplings of woody species. Increasing proportions of soil exposed to erosive agents, as water and wind, can induce resource loss at soil level (Pimentel 2006). This is because erosion causes the loss of structuring soil particles, and nutrients, litter, organic matter, seeds, and beneficial microorganisms, among others, decreasing in turn, soil moisture, and water infiltration capacity. Soil erosion can drastically decrease forest’s productivity (Pimentel and Kounang 1998), and their ability to provide many environmental goods and services

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