Native plants for greening Mediterranean agroecosystems

In the upcoming United Nations Decade on Ecosystem Restoration, a global challenge for scientists and practitioners will be to develop a well-functioning seed production sector on the basis of a sound species-selection process. To balance crop production with biodiversity functions in Mediterranean woody crops, agroecological practices suggest the need to move towards the establishment of herbaceous ground covers. However, establishing such plants requires a supply of suitable native seeds, which is currently unavailable. Here, we present a comprehensive process for selecting regionally adapted species that also emphasizes considerations for seed production. Using olive groves as a target system, we found that research on ground covers for regenerative agriculture has largely overlooked native species at the expense of commercial and ill-suited varieties. Our assessment of native annuals showed that 85% of the grasses and forbs evaluated exhibit a suite of ecological and production traits that can be tailored to meet the requirements of farmers, seed producers and environmental agencies. These findings suggest that many native species are neglected in agronomic research, despite being potentially suitable for ground covers and for supporting a nature-based solution in restoration practice. The framework used here may be applied in other agroecosystems to follow global greening initiatives and to support native seed production to scale up restoration.

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Main Authors: Jiménez Alfaro, Borja, Frischie, Stephanie, Stolz, Juliane, Gálvez-Ramírez, Cándido
Other Authors: European Commission
Format: carta al director biblioteca
Published: Springer Nature 2020
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10261/234252
http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100000780
http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100011941
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spelling dig-incar-es-10261-2342522021-04-14T10:27:18Z Native plants for greening Mediterranean agroecosystems Jiménez Alfaro, Borja Frischie, Stephanie Stolz, Juliane Gálvez-Ramírez, Cándido European Commission Principado de Asturias In the upcoming United Nations Decade on Ecosystem Restoration, a global challenge for scientists and practitioners will be to develop a well-functioning seed production sector on the basis of a sound species-selection process. To balance crop production with biodiversity functions in Mediterranean woody crops, agroecological practices suggest the need to move towards the establishment of herbaceous ground covers. However, establishing such plants requires a supply of suitable native seeds, which is currently unavailable. Here, we present a comprehensive process for selecting regionally adapted species that also emphasizes considerations for seed production. Using olive groves as a target system, we found that research on ground covers for regenerative agriculture has largely overlooked native species at the expense of commercial and ill-suited varieties. Our assessment of native annuals showed that 85% of the grasses and forbs evaluated exhibit a suite of ecological and production traits that can be tailored to meet the requirements of farmers, seed producers and environmental agencies. These findings suggest that many native species are neglected in agronomic research, despite being potentially suitable for ground covers and for supporting a nature-based solution in restoration practice. The framework used here may be applied in other agroecosystems to follow global greening initiatives and to support native seed production to scale up restoration. This research was funded by the PEOPLE/Marie Curie Actions of the European Union’s Seventh Framework Programme FP7/2007-2013 under REA grant agreement number 607785 through the ITN project NASSTEC (www.nasstec.eu). B.J.-A. was further supported by the Marie Curie Clarín-COFUND programme of the Principality of Asturias and the European Union (ACB17-26) and the Asturias regional grant number FC-GRUPIN-IDI/2018/000151. 2021-03-11T12:00:19Z 2021-03-11T12:00:19Z 2020 2021-03-11T12:00:20Z carta al director http://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_545b doi: 10.1038/s41477-020-0617-3 issn: 2055-0278 Nature Plants 6(3): 209–214 (2020) http://hdl.handle.net/10261/234252 10.1038/s41477-020-0617-3 http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100000780 http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100011941 Postprint http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41477-020-0617-3 Sí open Springer Nature
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libraryname Biblioteca del INCAR España
description In the upcoming United Nations Decade on Ecosystem Restoration, a global challenge for scientists and practitioners will be to develop a well-functioning seed production sector on the basis of a sound species-selection process. To balance crop production with biodiversity functions in Mediterranean woody crops, agroecological practices suggest the need to move towards the establishment of herbaceous ground covers. However, establishing such plants requires a supply of suitable native seeds, which is currently unavailable. Here, we present a comprehensive process for selecting regionally adapted species that also emphasizes considerations for seed production. Using olive groves as a target system, we found that research on ground covers for regenerative agriculture has largely overlooked native species at the expense of commercial and ill-suited varieties. Our assessment of native annuals showed that 85% of the grasses and forbs evaluated exhibit a suite of ecological and production traits that can be tailored to meet the requirements of farmers, seed producers and environmental agencies. These findings suggest that many native species are neglected in agronomic research, despite being potentially suitable for ground covers and for supporting a nature-based solution in restoration practice. The framework used here may be applied in other agroecosystems to follow global greening initiatives and to support native seed production to scale up restoration.
author2 European Commission
author_facet European Commission
Jiménez Alfaro, Borja
Frischie, Stephanie
Stolz, Juliane
Gálvez-Ramírez, Cándido
format carta al director
author Jiménez Alfaro, Borja
Frischie, Stephanie
Stolz, Juliane
Gálvez-Ramírez, Cándido
spellingShingle Jiménez Alfaro, Borja
Frischie, Stephanie
Stolz, Juliane
Gálvez-Ramírez, Cándido
Native plants for greening Mediterranean agroecosystems
author_sort Jiménez Alfaro, Borja
title Native plants for greening Mediterranean agroecosystems
title_short Native plants for greening Mediterranean agroecosystems
title_full Native plants for greening Mediterranean agroecosystems
title_fullStr Native plants for greening Mediterranean agroecosystems
title_full_unstemmed Native plants for greening Mediterranean agroecosystems
title_sort native plants for greening mediterranean agroecosystems
publisher Springer Nature
publishDate 2020
url http://hdl.handle.net/10261/234252
http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100000780
http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100011941
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AT frischiestephanie nativeplantsforgreeningmediterraneanagroecosystems
AT stolzjuliane nativeplantsforgreeningmediterraneanagroecosystems
AT galvezramirezcandido nativeplantsforgreeningmediterraneanagroecosystems
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