Woodcock, B. A.
ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0300-9951; Edwards, A .R.; Lawson, C .S.; Westbury, D. B.; Brook, A .J.; Harris, S .J.; Brown, V .K.; Mortimer, S. R..
2008
Contrasting success in the restoration of plant and phytophagous beetle assemblages of species-rich mesotrophic grasslands.
Oecologia, 154 (4).
773-783.
10.1007/s00442-007-0872-2
Abstract
Over the last 60 years changes to the management
of species-rich mesotrophic grasslands have resulted
in the large-scale loss and degradation of this habitat across
Europe. Restoration of such grasslands on agriculturally
improved pastures provides a potentially valuable approach
to the conservation of these threatened areas. Over a fouryear
period a replicated block design was used to test the
effects of seed addition (green hay spreading and brush
harvest collection) and soil disturbance on the restoration
of phytophagous beetle and plant communities. Patterns of
increasing restoration success, particularly where hay
spreading and soil disturbance were used in combination,
were identified for the phytophagous beetles. In the case of
the plants, however, initial differences in restoration success
in response to these same treatments were not
followed by subsequent temporal changes in plant community
similarity to target mesotrophic grassland. It is
possible that the long-term consequences of the management
treatments would not be the establishment of beetle
and plant communities characteristic of the targets for
restoration. Restoration management to enhance plant
establishment using hay spreading and soil disturbance
techniques would, however, still increase community
similarity in both taxa to that of species-rich mesotrophic
grasslands, and so raise their conservation value.
Keywords Cynosurus–Centaurea Coleoptera
Grassland restoration Hay meadow Resistance
Successional trajectories
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