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research article

Recent changes in mountain grasslands: a vegetation resampling study

Gillet, François  
•
Mauchamp, Leslie
•
Badot, Pierre-Marie
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2016
Ecology and Evolution

Understanding how land-use changes affect different facets of plant biodiversity in seminatural European grasslands is of particular importance for biodiversity conservation. As conclusions of previous experimental or synchronic observational studies did not converge toward a general agreement, assessing the recent trends in vegetation change in various grassland systems using a diachronic approach is needed. In this resurvey study, we investigated the recent changes in grassland vegetation of the French Jura Mountains, a region with a long tradition of pastoralism. We compared the floristic composition of 150 grassland plots recorded between 1990 and 2000 with new releves made in 2012 on the same plots. We considered taxonomic, phylogenetic and functional diversity as well as ecological characteristics of the plant communities derived from ecological indicator values and life strategies of the species. PCA of the floristic composition revealed a significant general trend linked to the sampling year. Wilcoxon paired tests showed that contemporary communities were generally more dominated by grass species and presented a higher tolerance to defoliation, a higher pastoral value, and a higher nutrient indicator value. Comparisons revealed a decrease in phylogenetic and functional diversity. By contrast, local species richness has slightly increased. The intensity of change in species composition, measured by Hellinger distance between pairs of releves, was dependent on neither the time lag between the two surveys, the author of the first releve nor its location or elevation. The most important changes were observed in grasslands that previously presented low pastoral value, low grass cover, low tolerance to defoliation, and high proportion of stress-tolerant species. This trend was likely linked to the intensification of grassland management reported in the region, with a parallel increase in mowing frequency, grazing pressure, and fertilization level. More restrictive specifications should be applied to agricultural practices to avoid overexploitation of mountain species-rich grasslands and its negative consequences on their biodiversity and resilience.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1002/ece3.1987
Web of Science ID

WOS:000374568300008

Author(s)
Gillet, François  
Mauchamp, Leslie
Badot, Pierre-Marie
Mouly, Arnaud
Date Issued

2016

Published in
Ecology and Evolution
Start page

2333

End page

2345

Subjects

Anthropogenic changes

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community diversity

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CSR strategies

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diachronic survey

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ecological indicator values

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grassland

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Jura Mountains

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resampling vegetation plots

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vegetation dynamics

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

OTHER

EPFL units
ECOS  
Available on Infoscience
April 12, 2016
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/125650
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