Short-term abandonment versus mowing in a mediterranean-temperate meadow: effects on floristic composition, plant functionality, and soil properties - a case study
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2022
abstract:
Hay meadows are secondary grasslands maintained by mowing, and their ecological
importance resides in the inherent biodiversity and carbon stocking. We investigated the plant
community and soil properties of a sub humid acid grassland near the Fucecchio marshes (Italy),
managed as a hay meadow, mowed once a year, and not fertilized. Part of the meadow had been
abandoned for three years. We analysed the soil properties (i.e., organic carbon and total nitrogen
content, available phosphorus, pH, cation-exchange capacity, texture, and conductibility) and the
plant community structure (composition, functionality, and species richness) of the two sides of the
meadow (mowed and abandoned). Our aim was to highlight the changes in soil properties and
vegetation community, and to find out to what extent abandonment can affect those dynamics. Our
results showed that after short-term abandonment, soil pH, C and N increased; litter biomass and
perennial forbs increased; and annual forbs decreased. New species colonising after abandonment,
thus enriching the flora, may keep spreading and eventually hinder the growth of the specialists
if mowing is not resumed. Certain valuable meadow habitats need constant human intervention
to maintain their peculiar vegetation, most especially if they are a buffer zone in the proximity of
natural protected areas.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Anthoxanthum odoratum; Plant cover; Species richness; Soil nitrogen; Soil pH; Plant functional types; Fucecchio marshes
List of contributors:
Vannucchi, Francesca; Bretzel, Francesca; Rosellini, Irene; Caudai, Claudia; Scatena, Manuele
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