Plant species richness and composition in managed grasslands: The relative importance of field management and environmental factors

2007 | journal article

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​Plant species richness and composition in managed grasslands: The relative importance of field management and environmental factors​
Klimek, S. ; Richter gen. Kemmermann, A. ; Hofmann, M. & Isselstein, J. ​ (2007) 
Biological Conservation134(4) pp. 559​-570​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biocon.2006.09.007 

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Authors
Klimek, Sebastian ; Richter gen. Kemmermann, Anne ; Hofmann, Martina; Isselstein, Johannes 
Abstract
Decline of grassland diversity throughout Europe within the last decades is threatening biological diversity and is a major conservation problem. There is an urgent need to determine the underlying factors that control vascular plant species richness and composition in managed grasslands. In this study, 117 grasslands were sampled using standardised methods. Explanatory variables were recorded for each grassland site, reflecting the local field management, site-specific environmental conditions and large-scale spatial trends. Using variation partitioning methods, we determined the pure and shared effects of these three sets of explanatory variables on the plant species richness and composition in grasslands. Most of the explained variation in plant species richness was related to the joint effect of local field management and environmental variables. However, the applied variation partitioning approach revealed that the pure effect of spatial variables contributed relatively little to explaining variation in both the plant species richness and species composition. The largest fractions of explained variation in plant species composition were accounted for by the pure effects of environmental and local field management variables. Moreover, the results revealed that the main mechanisms by which these sets of explanatory variables affect plant species vary according to the type of management regime under study. From our findings we could conclude that particularly a reduction of nitrogen fertilisation on meadows and grazing at a low stocking rate on pastures can help to conserve biodiversity.
Issue Date
2007
Journal
Biological Conservation 
Organization
Fakultät für Agrarwissenschaften ; Department für Nutzpflanzenwissenschaften ; Abteilung Graslandwissenschaft 
ISSN
0006-3207
Language
English

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