P-removal for restoration of Nardus grasslands on former agricultural land : cutting traditions
- Author
- Stephanie Schelfhout (UGent) , Jan Mertens (UGent) , Michael Perring (UGent) , Maud Raman, Lander Baeten (UGent) , Andreas Demey (UGent) , Bert Reubens, Simon Oosterlynck, Paul Gibson-Roy, Kris Verheyen (UGent) and An De Schrijver (UGent)
- Organization
- Abstract
- Past intensive land use complicates the successful restoration of oligotrophic species-rich grassland types. One of the major bottlenecks are the elevated nutrient levels due to fertilization, especially residual phosphorus (P). Aiming to deplete nutrients, managers often reintroduce traditional haymaking management, sometimes combined with grazing. Here, we evaluate whether this technique restores the abiotic and biotic boundary conditions for restoration of Nardus grassland. Seven grasslands were selected in Flanders, Belgium, which had elevated nutrient levels after the cessation of intensive agriculture 16 to 24 years ago, and which have been mown and grazed since. We compared soil and vegetation data of these post-fertilization grasslands with 34 well-developed oligotrophic Nardus grasslands. Mowing and grazing did not cause community composition to resemble that of Nardus grassland. Furthermore, bioavailable P-concentrations were significantly higher in the post-fertilization grasslands and P-limitation was not obtained. Restoring P-poor soil conditions through continued mowing and grazing management would take at least decades. Phosphorus-mining can shorten the restoration time by increased P-removal. Given our results, we propose a decision framework to aid planners and managers in their choice of interventions. Cost-effective efforts for restoration should be well-prepared including measurements of important initial soil characteristics. This allows for an evaluation of “distance to target” and the selection of an effective restoration technique. These techniques may involve cutting with mowing tradition and utilizing P-mining or topsoil removal.
- Keywords
- abiotic ecological restoration, bioavailable phosphorus, mowing and grazing, P-mining, seminatural grassland, topsoil removal, SEMINATURAL GRASSLANDS, SOIL-PHOSPHORUS, ECOSYSTEM RESTORATION, NUTRIENT LIMITATION, NITROGEN-FERTILIZER, PLANT-COMMUNITIES, SPECIES RICHNESS, TOPSOIL REMOVAL, BIODIVERSITY, AVAILABILITY
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Citation
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication: http://hdl.handle.net/1854/LU-8529720
- MLA
- Schelfhout, Stephanie, et al. “P-Removal for Restoration of Nardus Grasslands on Former Agricultural Land : Cutting Traditions.” RESTORATION ECOLOGY, vol. 25, no. suppl. 2, 2017, pp. S178–87, doi:10.1111/rec.12531.
- APA
- Schelfhout, S., Mertens, J., Perring, M., Raman, M., Baeten, L., Demey, A., … De Schrijver, A. (2017). P-removal for restoration of Nardus grasslands on former agricultural land : cutting traditions. RESTORATION ECOLOGY, 25(suppl. 2), S178–S187. https://doi.org/10.1111/rec.12531
- Chicago author-date
- Schelfhout, Stephanie, Jan Mertens, Michael Perring, Maud Raman, Lander Baeten, Andreas Demey, Bert Reubens, et al. 2017. “P-Removal for Restoration of Nardus Grasslands on Former Agricultural Land : Cutting Traditions.” RESTORATION ECOLOGY 25 (suppl. 2): S178–87. https://doi.org/10.1111/rec.12531.
- Chicago author-date (all authors)
- Schelfhout, Stephanie, Jan Mertens, Michael Perring, Maud Raman, Lander Baeten, Andreas Demey, Bert Reubens, Simon Oosterlynck, Paul Gibson-Roy, Kris Verheyen, and An De Schrijver. 2017. “P-Removal for Restoration of Nardus Grasslands on Former Agricultural Land : Cutting Traditions.” RESTORATION ECOLOGY 25 (suppl. 2): S178–S187. doi:10.1111/rec.12531.
- Vancouver
- 1.Schelfhout S, Mertens J, Perring M, Raman M, Baeten L, Demey A, et al. P-removal for restoration of Nardus grasslands on former agricultural land : cutting traditions. RESTORATION ECOLOGY. 2017;25(suppl. 2):S178–87.
- IEEE
- [1]S. Schelfhout et al., “P-removal for restoration of Nardus grasslands on former agricultural land : cutting traditions,” RESTORATION ECOLOGY, vol. 25, no. suppl. 2, pp. S178–S187, 2017.
@article{8529720, abstract = {{Past intensive land use complicates the successful restoration of oligotrophic species-rich grassland types. One of the major bottlenecks are the elevated nutrient levels due to fertilization, especially residual phosphorus (P). Aiming to deplete nutrients, managers often reintroduce traditional haymaking management, sometimes combined with grazing. Here, we evaluate whether this technique restores the abiotic and biotic boundary conditions for restoration of Nardus grassland. Seven grasslands were selected in Flanders, Belgium, which had elevated nutrient levels after the cessation of intensive agriculture 16 to 24 years ago, and which have been mown and grazed since. We compared soil and vegetation data of these post-fertilization grasslands with 34 well-developed oligotrophic Nardus grasslands. Mowing and grazing did not cause community composition to resemble that of Nardus grassland. Furthermore, bioavailable P-concentrations were significantly higher in the post-fertilization grasslands and P-limitation was not obtained. Restoring P-poor soil conditions through continued mowing and grazing management would take at least decades. Phosphorus-mining can shorten the restoration time by increased P-removal. Given our results, we propose a decision framework to aid planners and managers in their choice of interventions. Cost-effective efforts for restoration should be well-prepared including measurements of important initial soil characteristics. This allows for an evaluation of “distance to target” and the selection of an effective restoration technique. These techniques may involve cutting with mowing tradition and utilizing P-mining or topsoil removal.}}, author = {{Schelfhout, Stephanie and Mertens, Jan and Perring, Michael and Raman, Maud and Baeten, Lander and Demey, Andreas and Reubens, Bert and Oosterlynck, Simon and Gibson-Roy, Paul and Verheyen, Kris and De Schrijver, An}}, issn = {{1061-2971}}, journal = {{RESTORATION ECOLOGY}}, keywords = {{abiotic ecological restoration,bioavailable phosphorus,mowing and grazing,P-mining,seminatural grassland,topsoil removal,SEMINATURAL GRASSLANDS,SOIL-PHOSPHORUS,ECOSYSTEM RESTORATION,NUTRIENT LIMITATION,NITROGEN-FERTILIZER,PLANT-COMMUNITIES,SPECIES RICHNESS,TOPSOIL REMOVAL,BIODIVERSITY,AVAILABILITY}}, language = {{eng}}, number = {{suppl. 2}}, pages = {{S178--S187}}, title = {{P-removal for restoration of Nardus grasslands on former agricultural land : cutting traditions}}, url = {{http://doi.org/10.1111/rec.12531}}, volume = {{25}}, year = {{2017}}, }
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