IFEVA   02662
INSTITUTO DE INVESTIGACIONES FISIOLOGICAS Y ECOLOGICAS VINCULADAS A LA AGRICULTURA
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
Floristic and structural changes related to opportunistic soil tilling and pasture planting in grassland communities of the Flooding Pampa
Autor/es:
GHERSA, C.M., PERELMAN, S.B., BURKART, S.E. AND LEON, R.J.C.
Revista:
BIODIVERSITY AND CONSERVATION
Referencias:
Año: 2006 p. 1 - 18
ISSN:
0960-3115
Resumen:
Abstract. The Flooding Pampa natural grassland has an intricate pattern of plant communities, related to small topographic differences that determine important changes in soil characteristics. Despite limitations imposed by soil properties and periodic waterlogging, opportunistic tilling is carried out to plant pastures. There is little information on how pasture planting may affect the structure of the grassland communities. In order to document changes caused by cultural activities on structural and functional characteristics of plant communities in this landscape, we made field surveys in grasslands and very old pastures (grassland communities recovered through secondary succession) using transects located across existing topographic gradients.The patchy structure of this landscape was revealed by the multivariate analysis, by means of which four plant communities could be identified in the natural grassland. Species composition of these communities differed from that of the corresponding old pastures. They lost an important number of exclusive species, but also gained species: some new to the landscape and many already present in other environments.Pasture planting reduced the rate of species replacements along the gradient and produced changes in patchiness, but had no effect on the species–area curve at the landscape scale. Neither did we find differences in total number of species, average number of species/site and proportion of functional types. The new grassland created by opportunistic pasture planting has developed into a structural gradient in which important differences occurred in the lower waterlogged-prone stands, whereas the sites of the other communities experienced less structural changes.The Flooding Pampa natural grassland has an intricate pattern of plant communities, related to small topographic differences that determine important changes in soil characteristics. Despite limitations imposed by soil properties and periodic waterlogging, opportunistic tilling is carried out to plant pastures. There is little information on how pasture planting may affect the structure of the grassland communities. In order to document changes caused by cultural activities on structural and functional characteristics of plant communities in this landscape, we made field surveys in grasslands and very old pastures (grassland communities recovered through secondary succession) using transects located across existing topographic gradients.The patchy structure of this landscape was revealed by the multivariate analysis, by means of which four plant communities could be identified in the natural grassland. Species composition of these communities differed from that of the corresponding old pastures. They lost an important number of exclusive species, but also gained species: some new to the landscape and many already present in other environments.Pasture planting reduced the rate of species replacements along the gradient and produced changes in patchiness, but had no effect on the species–area curve at the landscape scale. Neither did we find differences in total number of species, average number of species/site and proportion of functional types. The new grassland created by opportunistic pasture planting has developed into a structural gradient in which important differences occurred in the lower waterlogged-prone stands, whereas the sites of the other communities experienced less structural changes.