The role of temporal shrub encroachment for the maintenance of Spanish holm oak Quercus ilex dehesas

José Alberto Ramírez, Mario Díaz

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77 Scopus citations

Abstract

Dehesas are man-made systems composed by evergreen oaks (Quercus ilex and Quercus suber) scattered over a grassland understorey. They cover about 3.1 million ha in the southwest of the Iberian Peninsula and are to be preserved under the EU Habitats Directive due to the high levels of plant and animal diversity they maintain. The main current threat to long-term dehesa farming is a chronic absence of natural tree regeneration. We test whether dehesa abandonment would promote natural regeneration, how size structure of tree populations change after abandonment, and whether shrub encroachment would enhance seedling recruitment by measuring the size structure of mature tree populations, shrub cover and seedling density in 17 dehesa farms of known date of abandonment. Size structures were approximately bell-shaped in farms abandoned less than 16 years ago, progressively approaching afterwards the inverse J-shaped distribution typical from holm oak forests. Proportions of young mature trees changed with age of abandonment according to a logistic growth function. Proportions typical from forests (70-80%) were reached 30 years after abandonment, whereas balanced numbers of young and old trees were reached 20-25 years after abandonment. Short-term seedling recruitment was not related to age of abandonment or to covers of most dominant shrubs and was positively related to cover of mature trees and of Cytisus multiflorus, a nurse shrub for holm oak seedlings. Synthesis and applications: Conservation of dehesas and their associated biodiversity values should be based on financing temporal abandonment of productive dehesa farming for 20 years, keeping land in good agricultural condition by re-opening the encroached plots after tree recruitment (i.e. rotational set-aside). The proposed measure has the additional advantages of easy monitoring and straightforward evaluation of its effectiveness.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)1976-1983
Number of pages8
JournalForest Ecology and Management
Volume255
Issue number5-6
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 5 2008
Externally publishedYes

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
We are grateful to the town halls of Hontanar, Mazarambroz and Menasalbas for providing data on farms and their owners. We thank landowners for giving us permission for working in their farms and for providing dates of abandonment. Many shepherds and village neighbours also provided information on such abandonment dates. The idea of this paper started as a practical work for the course ‘Population Dynamics’ belonging to the degree in Environmental Sciences of the University of Castilla-La Mancha. J.A.R. thanks his fellows Beatriz and Yolanda and his professor R. Carbonell for help during field work and constructive discussion. Comments by P. Campos, J. Carranza, F.J. Pulido and C. Smit improved a great deal former versions of the manuscript. Comments by two referees were very helpful during revision. Field work was partially supported by a research grant to J.A.R. given by the Área de Medio Ambiente of the Diputación de Toledo. This paper is a contribution to the projects QLK5-CT-2002-01495 (Fifth EU Framework Programme), 096/2002 and 003/2007 (Organismo Autónomo Parques Nacionales of the Spanish Ministerio de Medio Ambiente) and REN2003-07048/GLO and CGL2006-06647/BOS (Spanish Ministerio de Ciencia y Tecnología).

Keywords

  • Dehesa
  • Quercus ilex
  • Regeneration
  • Rotational set-aside
  • Shrub cover
  • Sustainability

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