Arable Land Abandonment in the Czech Villages of Romanian Banat Area and Plant Diversity in Old-Fields

The aim of this study is to differentiate old-field plant communities along the abandonment time and/or environmental gradient in the landscape surrounded villages with established Czech settlers in Romanian Banat area conserving traditional agriculture, and to identify site factors which cause plan...

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Main Authors: Veselý Adam, Vojta Jaroslav, Kovář Pavel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2019-12-01
Series:Journal of Landscape Ecology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.2478/jlecol-2019-0019
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spelling doaj-4ba2052ace0d4c14b2b32459634d29302021-09-06T19:41:38ZengSciendoJournal of Landscape Ecology1805-41962019-12-011239911610.2478/jlecol-2019-0019jlecol-2019-0019Arable Land Abandonment in the Czech Villages of Romanian Banat Area and Plant Diversity in Old-FieldsVeselý Adam0Vojta Jaroslav1Kovář Pavel2Research Institute for Soil and Water Conservation, Žabovřeská 250, 156 27, Praha 5 – Zbraslav, Czech RepublicThe Silva Tarouca Research Institute for Landscape and Ornamental Gardening, Květnové náměstí 391, 252 43, Průhonice, Czech RepublicDepartment of Botany, Faculty of Science, Charles University, Benátská 2, 128 01, Prague, Czech RepublicThe aim of this study is to differentiate old-field plant communities along the abandonment time and/or environmental gradient in the landscape surrounded villages with established Czech settlers in Romanian Banat area conserving traditional agriculture, and to identify site factors which cause plant diversity of particular vegetation types. Study area: Wider territory centered by the village Sfânta Elena, southern Romania ((44°40’ N; 21°43’ E). Methods: We collected 97 phytosociological relevés covered the same number of old-fields in the area and the following habitat parameters were measured: soil pH, available phosphorus, total carbon and nitrogen, Heat Load Index. Software TURBOVEG / JUICE was used to collect and elaborate the data set of relevés. Old-field vegetation was classified into five basic plant communities using TWINSPAN (all the botanical material includes 291 plant species). For each community, we detected diagnostic species according to their fidelity index. The presence of mowing, grazing or burning was registered for recorded stands. Ecological preferences of each community were examined using one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA). Vegetation-environment relationships were analysed using ordination method – Cannonical correspondence analysis (CCA) in CANOCO for Windows (version 4.5) to find the main variability gradients within the dataset. Scatter plot relationships between variables were constructed. Main results and conclusions: Dependence of number of species (alpha diversity) on the abandoned field’s age exhibits an unimodal shape of this relationship with the maximum peak of species diversity in plant stands aged approximately 13 years. The most importnat ecological factors and/or type of management in the relationship to the old-field plant composition show the following significance order: available phosphorus content in the soil (P), total nitrogen content in the soil (N), presence of burning, length of abandonment (old-field age), carbon/nitrogen ratio in the soil (C/N). Other parameters (grazing, mowing, zero management) do not demonstrate effective impact according to our dataset and seem to be equal to the absence of burning.https://doi.org/10.2478/jlecol-2019-0019romanian banattraditional agriculturelandscape changeland abandonmentold-field agegrazingmowingburningsoil chemistrycommunity levelplant species diversityevennesssecondary successiongrasslandshrublandclonal expansive dominants
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Veselý Adam
Vojta Jaroslav
Kovář Pavel
spellingShingle Veselý Adam
Vojta Jaroslav
Kovář Pavel
Arable Land Abandonment in the Czech Villages of Romanian Banat Area and Plant Diversity in Old-Fields
Journal of Landscape Ecology
romanian banat
traditional agriculture
landscape change
land abandonment
old-field age
grazing
mowing
burning
soil chemistry
community level
plant species diversity
evenness
secondary succession
grassland
shrubland
clonal expansive dominants
author_facet Veselý Adam
Vojta Jaroslav
Kovář Pavel
author_sort Veselý Adam
title Arable Land Abandonment in the Czech Villages of Romanian Banat Area and Plant Diversity in Old-Fields
title_short Arable Land Abandonment in the Czech Villages of Romanian Banat Area and Plant Diversity in Old-Fields
title_full Arable Land Abandonment in the Czech Villages of Romanian Banat Area and Plant Diversity in Old-Fields
title_fullStr Arable Land Abandonment in the Czech Villages of Romanian Banat Area and Plant Diversity in Old-Fields
title_full_unstemmed Arable Land Abandonment in the Czech Villages of Romanian Banat Area and Plant Diversity in Old-Fields
title_sort arable land abandonment in the czech villages of romanian banat area and plant diversity in old-fields
publisher Sciendo
series Journal of Landscape Ecology
issn 1805-4196
publishDate 2019-12-01
description The aim of this study is to differentiate old-field plant communities along the abandonment time and/or environmental gradient in the landscape surrounded villages with established Czech settlers in Romanian Banat area conserving traditional agriculture, and to identify site factors which cause plant diversity of particular vegetation types. Study area: Wider territory centered by the village Sfânta Elena, southern Romania ((44°40’ N; 21°43’ E). Methods: We collected 97 phytosociological relevés covered the same number of old-fields in the area and the following habitat parameters were measured: soil pH, available phosphorus, total carbon and nitrogen, Heat Load Index. Software TURBOVEG / JUICE was used to collect and elaborate the data set of relevés. Old-field vegetation was classified into five basic plant communities using TWINSPAN (all the botanical material includes 291 plant species). For each community, we detected diagnostic species according to their fidelity index. The presence of mowing, grazing or burning was registered for recorded stands. Ecological preferences of each community were examined using one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA). Vegetation-environment relationships were analysed using ordination method – Cannonical correspondence analysis (CCA) in CANOCO for Windows (version 4.5) to find the main variability gradients within the dataset. Scatter plot relationships between variables were constructed. Main results and conclusions: Dependence of number of species (alpha diversity) on the abandoned field’s age exhibits an unimodal shape of this relationship with the maximum peak of species diversity in plant stands aged approximately 13 years. The most importnat ecological factors and/or type of management in the relationship to the old-field plant composition show the following significance order: available phosphorus content in the soil (P), total nitrogen content in the soil (N), presence of burning, length of abandonment (old-field age), carbon/nitrogen ratio in the soil (C/N). Other parameters (grazing, mowing, zero management) do not demonstrate effective impact according to our dataset and seem to be equal to the absence of burning.
topic romanian banat
traditional agriculture
landscape change
land abandonment
old-field age
grazing
mowing
burning
soil chemistry
community level
plant species diversity
evenness
secondary succession
grassland
shrubland
clonal expansive dominants
url https://doi.org/10.2478/jlecol-2019-0019
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AT vojtajaroslav arablelandabandonmentintheczechvillagesofromanianbanatareaandplantdiversityinoldfields
AT kovarpavel arablelandabandonmentintheczechvillagesofromanianbanatareaandplantdiversityinoldfields
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