The role of livestock grazing in long-term vegetation changes in coastal dunes: a case study from the Netherlands

Harrie van der Hagen, Erik Lammers, F. van der Meulen, Ricarda Pätsch, Nils M. van Rooijen, K. Sykora, J. Schaminée
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Abstract

The vegetation of coastal sand dunes is characterized by high species diversity and comprises some of the rarest vegetation types in North-Western Europe. Among them are dune grassland communities whose species richness relies on grazing. Those communities are assessed as a priority habitat type under the Natura 2000 legislation. In autumn 1990, Galloway cows and Nordic Fjord horses were introduced in the coastal dunes of Meijendel near The Hague (52°7'N, 4°20'E), The Netherlands, to reduce encroachment of tall grasses and shrubs, to develop bare sand patches, and as such facilitating diverse vegetation structures in the dune grasslands. In the 1950s, decades before the introduction of livestock, 41 permanent plots were installed. On average, they were examined every four years. Our study hypothesised that the livestock grazing in the set densities would halt progressive succession and facilitate regressive succession. Up to 1990, we observed an equilibrium between progressive and regressive succession. After 1990, however, our data showed a pronounced progressive succession contradicting the hypothesized effect of the livestock grazing. We relate the main observed patterns with two factors linked to rabbit populations: (i) the myxomatosis outbreak in 1954 and (ii) the rabbit Viral Haemorrhagic Disease (rVHD-1) outbreak in 1989. In addition to livestock grazing, rabbits block progressive succession by feeding on seedlings of shrub and tree species and digging burrows, creating small-scale mosaics of bare sand and initiate blowout development when collapsing. We state that the substantial decrease in rabbit numbers due to the viral diseases likely caused the observed increase of shrubs and trees in the study area's permanent plots. Climate change might have contributed to the observed increase in autonomous blowout development since 2001, as well as a decrease in atmospheric nitrogen deposition since 1990, after a strong increase the decades before.
畜牧业在海岸沙丘长期植被变化中的作用:荷兰的一个案例研究
海岸沙丘的植被具有高度的物种多样性,是西北欧最稀有的植被类型之一。其中包括沙丘草原群落,其物种丰富度依赖于放牧。根据Natura 2000立法,这些群落被评估为优先栖息地类型。1990年秋季,加洛韦奶牛和北欧峡马被引入荷兰海牙(52°7'N,4°20'E)附近梅金德尔的海岸沙丘,以减少对高草和灌木的侵占,开发裸露的沙地,从而促进沙丘草原的多样化植被结构。20世纪50年代,在引入牲畜之前的几十年里,安装了41块永久性地块。他们平均每四年接受一次检查。我们的研究假设,在设定密度下放牧的牲畜会停止渐进演替,促进倒退演替。直到1990年,我们观察到渐进继承和倒退继承之间的平衡。然而,在1990年之后,我们的数据显示了一个明显的渐进演替,这与假设的牲畜放牧效应相矛盾。我们将主要观察到的模式与与兔子种群相关的两个因素联系起来:(i)1954年爆发的粘液瘤病和(ii)1989年爆发的兔子病毒性出血热(rVHD-1)。除了牲畜放牧外,兔子还以灌木和树种的幼苗为食,挖掘洞穴,形成小规模的裸露沙子镶嵌,并在坍塌时开始井喷发育,从而阻止渐进演替。我们指出,由于病毒性疾病,兔子数量的大幅减少可能导致研究区域永久地块中观察到的灌木和树木的增加。自2001年以来,气候变化可能导致了观测到的自主井喷发展的增加,以及自1990年以来大气氮沉积的减少,而几十年前大气氮沉积大幅增加。
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来源期刊
Plant Sociology
Plant Sociology Agricultural and Biological Sciences-Forestry
CiteScore
4.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
7
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