Negative synergistic effects of land-use legacies and climate drive widespread oak decline in evergreen Mediterranean open woodlands

Evergreen oak woodlands in the Western Mediterranean exploited as agrosilvopastoral systems have often been considered as a sustainability paradigm. Yet, these ecosystems show profound symptoms of degradation with widespread tree decline and increased mortality, making them a paradigmatic example of overexploited ecosystems threatened by global change. Understanding the biotic and abiotic, environmental and management factors involved in the current decline of these open woodlands is key to derive sustainable management options. Our goal was to evaluate the potential role of climate and land-use legacies as drivers of tree decline in Quercus ilex open woodlands at the regional level in western Spain. We analysed tree recruitment and health as proxies to the key processes implied in ecosystem decline. Overall, tree health was poor. Levels of tree decline followed a latitudinal gradient, with cooler stands in the North exhibiting better health (i.e. fewer, less severe decline symptoms) and higher sapling and seedling abundance than warmer stands in the South. Warmer conditions and more intense human management, indirectly expressed by stands with lower canopy cover and larger trees, were directly related to both worse plot health and lower tree regeneration. The widespread tree decline and very low recruitment abundance observed in the open oak woodlands studied may be the consequence of negative synergistic effects of a more limiting climate and land-use legacies from human overexploitation of a fragile ecosystem. These results warn of the negative impacts that land-use practices can exert on similar agrosilvopastoral ecosystems with the added risks of ongoing climatic changes, threatening ecological and economical sustainability.

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Main Authors: Moreno Fernández, Daniel, Ledo, A., Martín Benito, Darío, Cañellas, I., Gea Izquierdo, Guillermo
Format: artículo biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2019
Subjects:Ecosystem decline, Global change, Mediterranean woodlands, Dehesas, Agroforestry system, Forest sustainability,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12792/882
http://hdl.handle.net/10261/290816
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spelling dig-inia-es-10261-2908162023-02-17T12:29:42Z Negative synergistic effects of land-use legacies and climate drive widespread oak decline in evergreen Mediterranean open woodlands Moreno Fernández, Daniel Ledo, A. Martín Benito, Darío Cañellas, I. Gea Izquierdo, Guillermo Ecosystem decline Global change Mediterranean woodlands Dehesas Agroforestry system Forest sustainability Evergreen oak woodlands in the Western Mediterranean exploited as agrosilvopastoral systems have often been considered as a sustainability paradigm. Yet, these ecosystems show profound symptoms of degradation with widespread tree decline and increased mortality, making them a paradigmatic example of overexploited ecosystems threatened by global change. Understanding the biotic and abiotic, environmental and management factors involved in the current decline of these open woodlands is key to derive sustainable management options. Our goal was to evaluate the potential role of climate and land-use legacies as drivers of tree decline in Quercus ilex open woodlands at the regional level in western Spain. We analysed tree recruitment and health as proxies to the key processes implied in ecosystem decline. Overall, tree health was poor. Levels of tree decline followed a latitudinal gradient, with cooler stands in the North exhibiting better health (i.e. fewer, less severe decline symptoms) and higher sapling and seedling abundance than warmer stands in the South. Warmer conditions and more intense human management, indirectly expressed by stands with lower canopy cover and larger trees, were directly related to both worse plot health and lower tree regeneration. The widespread tree decline and very low recruitment abundance observed in the open oak woodlands studied may be the consequence of negative synergistic effects of a more limiting climate and land-use legacies from human overexploitation of a fragile ecosystem. These results warn of the negative impacts that land-use practices can exert on similar agrosilvopastoral ecosystems with the added risks of ongoing climatic changes, threatening ecological and economical sustainability. 2023-02-17T12:29:42Z 2023-02-17T12:29:42Z 2019 artículo Forest Ecology and Management 432: 884-894 (2019) 0378-1127 http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12792/882 http://hdl.handle.net/10261/290816 10.1016/j.foreco.2018.10.023 1872-7042 en none Elsevier
institution INIA ES
collection DSpace
country España
countrycode ES
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-inia-es
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Sur
libraryname Biblioteca del INIA España
language English
topic Ecosystem decline
Global change
Mediterranean woodlands
Dehesas
Agroforestry system
Forest sustainability
Ecosystem decline
Global change
Mediterranean woodlands
Dehesas
Agroforestry system
Forest sustainability
spellingShingle Ecosystem decline
Global change
Mediterranean woodlands
Dehesas
Agroforestry system
Forest sustainability
Ecosystem decline
Global change
Mediterranean woodlands
Dehesas
Agroforestry system
Forest sustainability
Moreno Fernández, Daniel
Ledo, A.
Martín Benito, Darío
Cañellas, I.
Gea Izquierdo, Guillermo
Negative synergistic effects of land-use legacies and climate drive widespread oak decline in evergreen Mediterranean open woodlands
description Evergreen oak woodlands in the Western Mediterranean exploited as agrosilvopastoral systems have often been considered as a sustainability paradigm. Yet, these ecosystems show profound symptoms of degradation with widespread tree decline and increased mortality, making them a paradigmatic example of overexploited ecosystems threatened by global change. Understanding the biotic and abiotic, environmental and management factors involved in the current decline of these open woodlands is key to derive sustainable management options. Our goal was to evaluate the potential role of climate and land-use legacies as drivers of tree decline in Quercus ilex open woodlands at the regional level in western Spain. We analysed tree recruitment and health as proxies to the key processes implied in ecosystem decline. Overall, tree health was poor. Levels of tree decline followed a latitudinal gradient, with cooler stands in the North exhibiting better health (i.e. fewer, less severe decline symptoms) and higher sapling and seedling abundance than warmer stands in the South. Warmer conditions and more intense human management, indirectly expressed by stands with lower canopy cover and larger trees, were directly related to both worse plot health and lower tree regeneration. The widespread tree decline and very low recruitment abundance observed in the open oak woodlands studied may be the consequence of negative synergistic effects of a more limiting climate and land-use legacies from human overexploitation of a fragile ecosystem. These results warn of the negative impacts that land-use practices can exert on similar agrosilvopastoral ecosystems with the added risks of ongoing climatic changes, threatening ecological and economical sustainability.
format artículo
topic_facet Ecosystem decline
Global change
Mediterranean woodlands
Dehesas
Agroforestry system
Forest sustainability
author Moreno Fernández, Daniel
Ledo, A.
Martín Benito, Darío
Cañellas, I.
Gea Izquierdo, Guillermo
author_facet Moreno Fernández, Daniel
Ledo, A.
Martín Benito, Darío
Cañellas, I.
Gea Izquierdo, Guillermo
author_sort Moreno Fernández, Daniel
title Negative synergistic effects of land-use legacies and climate drive widespread oak decline in evergreen Mediterranean open woodlands
title_short Negative synergistic effects of land-use legacies and climate drive widespread oak decline in evergreen Mediterranean open woodlands
title_full Negative synergistic effects of land-use legacies and climate drive widespread oak decline in evergreen Mediterranean open woodlands
title_fullStr Negative synergistic effects of land-use legacies and climate drive widespread oak decline in evergreen Mediterranean open woodlands
title_full_unstemmed Negative synergistic effects of land-use legacies and climate drive widespread oak decline in evergreen Mediterranean open woodlands
title_sort negative synergistic effects of land-use legacies and climate drive widespread oak decline in evergreen mediterranean open woodlands
publisher Elsevier
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12792/882
http://hdl.handle.net/10261/290816
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