Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10174/25327

Title: Progress in identifying High Nature Value Montados: relating biodiversity to grazing and stock management.
Authors: Pinto-Correia, Teresa
Guiomar, Nuno
et al
Keywords: Biodiversity
Conservation
Silvo-pastoral systems
Grazing
Incentives
Cork Oak
Issue Date: May-2018
Publisher: Rangeland Ecology and Management
Citation: Pinto-Correia T., Guiomar N., Ferraz-de-Oliveira M.I., Sales-Baptista E., Rabaça J., Godinho C., Ribeiro N., Sá Sousa P., Santos P., Santos-Silva C., Simões M.P., Belo A., Catarino L., P. Costa P., Fonseca E., Godinho S., Azeda C., Almeida M., Gomes L., Lopes de Castro J., Louro R., Silvestre M., Vaz M., 2018. Progress in identifying High Nature Value Montados: relating biodiversity to grazing and stock management. Rangeland Ecology and Management, 71: 612-625, doi.org/10.1016/j.rama.2018.01.004
Abstract: Due to their complex structure and traditional low intensity management, Portuguese oak woodland rangelands known as montado are often considered High Nature Value (HNV) Farming Systems, and as such, they may be deemed eligible for subsidies and incentives by governmental and non-governmental agencies. Too little is known about how the HNV concept might be applied to conserve complex silvo-pastoral systems. These systems, due to their structural and functional complexity at multiple scales tend to support high levels of biodiversity. Montado is in sharp decline as a result of the rapid specialization of land management that, through simplification, undermines multifunctionality. Understanding how changes in management influence these systems and their biodiversity is needed for prioritizing conservation efforts, and for assuring they remain High Nature Value systems. Based on a field survey in 58 plots distributed among 29 paddocks on 17 farms, we conducted an integrated analysis of the relationship between grazing intensity and biodiversity in montados of similar biophysical and structural characteristics. Data on management was obtained through interviews; biodiversity data (vegetation, macrofungi, birds, herpetofauna) through specific field protocols. Additional spatial data, such as soil characteristics, slope, land cover and linear landscape elements, were also analyzed. The results show no overall biodiversity variation as result of different management practices. However different groups of species react differently to specific management practices, and within a pasture, grazing impacts are heterogenous. In low grazing intensity plots, macrofungi species richness was found to be higher, while bird species richness was lower. Using tree regeneration as proxy for montado sustainability, results show less tree regeneration in areas with higher forage quality and more intense grazing. Pathways for future progress are proposed, including creating areas within a paddock that attract grazing away from where regeneration is desired.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10174/25327
Type: article
Appears in Collections:MED - Publicações - Artigos em Revistas Internacionais Com Arbitragem Científica

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