To burn or not to burn? Effect of management strategy on North American prairie vegetation for public urban areas in Germany.

North American prairie vegetation has been a role model for designing highly attractive plantings for German urban green spaces for the past decade. In combination with gravel mulch top layers on planting sites and non-selective maintenance techniques like mowing or burning, prairie plantings are co...

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Main Authors: Anja Schmithals, Norbert Kühn
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4186812?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-b3b2a6e3eaf549c7bcb552dfd4c259af2020-11-24T21:35:43ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-01910e10858810.1371/journal.pone.0108588To burn or not to burn? Effect of management strategy on North American prairie vegetation for public urban areas in Germany.Anja SchmithalsNorbert KühnNorth American prairie vegetation has been a role model for designing highly attractive plantings for German urban green spaces for the past decade. In combination with gravel mulch top layers on planting sites and non-selective maintenance techniques like mowing or burning, prairie plantings are considered to be cost-effective and low-maintenance. This study was undertaken to assess the impact of different maintenance strategies and especially the necessity of fire management on the development success of ornamental prairie plantings in central Europe. A four factorial split-plot-block design was set up for investigation of different mixtures of prairie species under varying management conditions (mow-only, mowing plus selective weeding, mowing plus weeding and burning) on two differing soil types (in-situ topsoil and in-situ topsoil with a graywacke gravel mulch top layer) over three years. Significant effects of maintenance strategy on mortality rates and vitality were documented for a number of target species, which responded species specifically, either being slightly affected by the burning or thriving on it. Those effects were mostly restricted to topsoil sites. A strong impact on weed species presence and abundance and resulting maintenance times was found on both soil types. On topsoil sites, mow-only treatment resulted in a short-term loss of the original planting due to extensive weed growth. Corresponding gravel mulch sites were generally less colonised and visually dominated by weeds. Differences between weeded and weeded plus burned sites were minor. Unexpectedly, weed species populations were mostly unaffected by the additional burning treatment, while maintenance times and costs increased. No overall benefit of fire management for the establishment of prairie plantings was documented. The most effective management combination proved to be mowing plus regular selective weeding measures on gravel mulched planting sites.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4186812?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anja Schmithals
Norbert Kühn
spellingShingle Anja Schmithals
Norbert Kühn
To burn or not to burn? Effect of management strategy on North American prairie vegetation for public urban areas in Germany.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Anja Schmithals
Norbert Kühn
author_sort Anja Schmithals
title To burn or not to burn? Effect of management strategy on North American prairie vegetation for public urban areas in Germany.
title_short To burn or not to burn? Effect of management strategy on North American prairie vegetation for public urban areas in Germany.
title_full To burn or not to burn? Effect of management strategy on North American prairie vegetation for public urban areas in Germany.
title_fullStr To burn or not to burn? Effect of management strategy on North American prairie vegetation for public urban areas in Germany.
title_full_unstemmed To burn or not to burn? Effect of management strategy on North American prairie vegetation for public urban areas in Germany.
title_sort to burn or not to burn? effect of management strategy on north american prairie vegetation for public urban areas in germany.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2014-01-01
description North American prairie vegetation has been a role model for designing highly attractive plantings for German urban green spaces for the past decade. In combination with gravel mulch top layers on planting sites and non-selective maintenance techniques like mowing or burning, prairie plantings are considered to be cost-effective and low-maintenance. This study was undertaken to assess the impact of different maintenance strategies and especially the necessity of fire management on the development success of ornamental prairie plantings in central Europe. A four factorial split-plot-block design was set up for investigation of different mixtures of prairie species under varying management conditions (mow-only, mowing plus selective weeding, mowing plus weeding and burning) on two differing soil types (in-situ topsoil and in-situ topsoil with a graywacke gravel mulch top layer) over three years. Significant effects of maintenance strategy on mortality rates and vitality were documented for a number of target species, which responded species specifically, either being slightly affected by the burning or thriving on it. Those effects were mostly restricted to topsoil sites. A strong impact on weed species presence and abundance and resulting maintenance times was found on both soil types. On topsoil sites, mow-only treatment resulted in a short-term loss of the original planting due to extensive weed growth. Corresponding gravel mulch sites were generally less colonised and visually dominated by weeds. Differences between weeded and weeded plus burned sites were minor. Unexpectedly, weed species populations were mostly unaffected by the additional burning treatment, while maintenance times and costs increased. No overall benefit of fire management for the establishment of prairie plantings was documented. The most effective management combination proved to be mowing plus regular selective weeding measures on gravel mulched planting sites.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4186812?pdf=render
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