info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Effects of forest preservation, livestock exclusion and use of shrubs as potential nurses on planting success of an endangered tree
Fecha
2021-05-27Registro en:
Torres, Romina Cecilia; Pollice, Julieta; Valfré Giorello, Tatiana Alejandra; Herrero, María Lucrecia; Navarro Ramos, Silvia Elisa; et al.; Effects of forest preservation, livestock exclusion and use of shrubs as potential nurses on planting success of an endangered tree; Wiley Blackwell Publishing, Inc; Restoration Ecology; 27-5-2021
1061-2971
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Torres, Romina Cecilia
Pollice, Julieta
Valfré Giorello, Tatiana Alejandra
Herrero, María Lucrecia
Navarro Ramos, Silvia Elisa
Ibarra Grellet, Ignacio
Renison, Daniel
Resumen
Domestic livestock are widespread in seasonally dry forests, likely causing forest degradation and limiting tree seedling establishment. Shrubs can play an important role in facilitating tree regeneration, by protecting trees from livestock damage and ameliorating unfavorable abiotic conditions. We aimed at disentangling the relative contribution of grazing exclusion, long-term forest conservation, and the potential facilitation effect of shrubs on the performance of saplings of the native tree Kageneckia lanceolata. We planted 400 saplings in grazed and ungrazed areas situated both in a preserved and a degraded forest. In each situation, we established planting plots in three accompanying vegetation treatments: herbs, a non-leguminous spiny shrub and a leguminous spiny shrub. Survival of three-year-old saplings was 10-fold higher in the preserved than in the degraded forest and two-fold higher in the ungrazed than in the grazed site. Differences in survival among accompanying vegetation treatments were much smaller than between grazing treatments. Survival significantly increased with increasing protection by shrubs only in the degraded site. Sapling growth patterns were fairly similar to survival patterns, with no growth in the degraded forest, except for limited growth under both shrubs in the ungrazed site. We conclude that, in selecting plantation sites for the study species, forest condition and grazing exclusion should be prioritized over microsite selection based on neighboring vegetation.