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Positive long-term effect of mulching on species and functional trait diversity in a nutrient-poor mountain meadow in Central Europe
Authors:Ji?í Dole?al  Zuzana MaškováJan Lepš  Daniela SteinbachováFrancesco de Bello  Jitka KlimešováOliver Tackenberg  František ZemekJan Květ
Institution:a Institute of Botany, Section of Plant Ecology, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic, Dukelská 135, CZ-379 82 T?eboň, Czech Republic
b Administration of the Šumava National Park and Protected Landscape Area, Na Burince 339, CZ-342 01 Sušice, Czech Republic
c Faculty of Science, University of South Bohemia, Branišovská 31, CZ-370 05 ?eské Budějovice, Czech Republic
d Institute of Ecology, Evolution & Diversity, University of Frankfurt, 60323 Frankfurt, Germany
e Institute of Systems Biology and Ecology, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic, Na Sádkách 7, CZ-370 05 ?eské Budějovice, Czech Republic
Abstract:Oligotrophic mountain meadows are threatened biodiversity hotspots throughout Europe. The traditional summer hay-making followed by autumn grazing is no longer economic and question is whether alternative managements can maintain both plant species and functional diversity typical of these habitats. In the Bohemian Forest Mts., we applied three treatments (mowing once a year - i.e., cutting and removing the biomass, mulching once a year - cutting and leaving the crushed biomass to decompose in situ, fallowing - no cutting) in order to assess temporal changes in meadow vegetation, plant trait composition and biomass production in a 13-year experiment. We recorded for each species twenty-five traits as to be most informative of plant strategies related to growth, resource acquisition and carbon-water economy. We compared different components of trait composition (community averages that mostly reflect traits of dominant species vs. the Rao index of functional diversity that reflects trait dissimilarity among species) and their impact on biomass production. We show that mulching promotes species and functional diversity by facilitating heliophilous forbs and legumes with more acquisitive strategies in resource use and release, e.g., higher foliar N and P content. This occurs at the expense of tall grasses (with resource-retentive strategies, e.g., high leaf dry matter content) which dominate the mown and fallow plots. The divergence in most quantitative traits indicates that niche complementarity is the dominant assembly process in mulched plots, which can prevent competitive exclusion and enable species coexistence. The divergent development was detected only after 5-6 years. This slow floristic and functional response is caused by acidity of soil and severe mountain climate that preclude rapid responses of vegetation to land-use changes. We conclude that mulching represents a good compromise maintaining both plant species and functional diversity as well as a relatively high biomass production. Mowing without grazing leads to gradual nutrient loss and thus reduces the productivity and diversity in these oligotrophic ecosystems. Fallowing causes gradual loss in diversity by increased grass competition and litter accumulation.
Keywords:Community weighted means  Ecosystem function  Functional diversity  Meadow management  Niche space  Redundancy analysis  Traits
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