Abstract

Land abandonment represents a major threat to the conservation of European semi-natural dry grasslands. To ensure biodiversity and habitat conservation, in this study, sheep grazing was reintroduced in abandoned Festuco-Brometea dry grasslands of a western Italian alpine valley. The experimental design included three treatments, along a gradient of increasing disturbance: (i) not-grazed, (ii) grazed, and (iii) penning areas. Unexpectedly, two years after grazing reintroduction, a wildfire hit the study area. To investigate the short-term effects of grazing and wildfire disturbances on vegetation, 62 permanent transects were monitored from 2014 to 2018. Vegetation cover, plant diversity, and richness and abundance of three functional groups of species were analyzed through generalized linear mixed models. Grazing caused little changes in vegetation, with the greatest effects observed in penning areas: the pioneer xerothermic species group, including many rare plant species, benefited from the reduction in the litter layer and the opening of gaps in the sward induced by trampling. The wildfire led to an increase in plant diversity and to changes in plant composition: dry grassland species decreased, while pioneer xerothermic and ruderal species increased their abundance. Short-term results suggest that both disturbances may foster the conservation of alpine dry grasslands.

Highlights

  • Since the 1950’s, socio-economic transformations have resulted in a pronounced migration of people from rural to industrialized urban areas, resulting in widespread abandonment of managed semi-natural habitats [1,2]

  • The richness of dry grassland species did not vary throughout time as well, while some variations within treatments were found for pioneer xerothermic and ruderal species (Figure 3c–h)

  • The richness of ruderal species did not change during grazing, but it increased after the wildfire in every treatment in Xerobromion

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Summary

Introduction

Since the 1950’s, socio-economic transformations have resulted in a pronounced migration of people from rural to industrialized urban areas, resulting in widespread abandonment of managed semi-natural habitats [1,2]. The negative effects of this agropastoral abandonment are widely recognized as crucial issues affecting the conservation of European semi-natural grasslands [3], and are two-fold. The lack of biomass removal in semi-natural grasslands leads to litter accumulation and the modification of plant interspecific competition [4,5]. The processes of natural succession result in a gradual but widespread shrub and tree encroachment [6,8,9]. Both changes in interspecific competition and woody species encroachment lead to a dramatic decrease in plant diversity [4,10]

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