|
|
|
Scientific Research and Essays Vol. 2 (2),
062-070, February 2007
ISSN 1992-2248
© 2007 Academic Journals
Full Length
Research Paper
Effect of forest management
on plant species diversity in Castanea sativa stands in Salamanca
(Spain) and the Cévennes (France)
Hélène
Gondard1, Ignacio Santa Regina2*, Sergio Salazar2,
Alvaro Peix2 and Francois Romane1.
1Cefe
(C.N.R.S.-U.P.R. 9056), 1919 route de Mende, 34293 Montpellier cedex 5,
France.
2
IRNASA-CSIC Apdo. 257 37071 Salamanca, Spain.
*Corresponding author. E-mail:
ignac@usal.es. Phone: +34 923 219606. Fax: +34 923 219609.
Accepted 19 January, 2007
|
|
|
|
For the last centuries, marked land use changes have
taken place throughout the Mediterranean region. These changes have a
great impact on plant diversity, variations of which can affect in
return ecosystem functioning. This is particularly true for sweet
chestnut (Castanea sativa Mill.) stands (groves or coppices) that
have been more or less abandoned since the end of the last century.
Thus, our objective was to analyse the
consequences of various management types on plant species diversity, or
to analyse if the land use changes may affect the diversity of plant
species in chestnut areas of Southern Europe: in chestnut stands
of the Honfría forest, located in the South of
Salamanca province in Spain, and in the Cévennes in Southern France.
Results indicate that plant species diversity is higher in groves
than in coppice stands. Cultivated groves were generally characterized
by small heliophilous therophytes, and abandoned groves by
hemicryptophytes with anemochorous dispersal mode and chamaephytes.
Coppice stands were characterized more particularly by phanerophytes
with zoochorous dispersal mode. Thus, plant species diversity differs
according to management types. The 17% of common species were found
between the two Mediterranean areas studied. This difference can be
explained by different ecological conditions (elevation, soil type),
different management types (grove, coppice stand), and different stand
characteristics (shoot density, diameter at breast height). The
cultivated grove plots were very different from the
other stands that constituted one sub-group. In the Honfría forest, the
values of Jaccard index indicated that the cultivated grove had a plant
species composition very different from the other stands. In the
Cévennes, the lowest values of the Jaccard index were also found between
the cultivated grove and the other stands. One solution could be to
maintain a landscape mosaic constituted of diverse chestnut stands
modified by human activities (chestnut groves, abandoned chestnut
groves and chestnut coppice stands). This could allow the enhancement of
the high regional plant diversity.
Key words:
Functional trait, cultural abandonment, grove, coppice stand,
Castanea sativa, Mediterranean area.
|
|