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Vegetation dynamics on abandoned terraces of Sicily: the course and driving factors of succession
(2007)
Secondary succession processes have been widely studied in Europe for some agroecosystems, but not for terraced ones. The first part of the present study focuses on a description of the plant communities involved in secondary succession processes on Sicily (Italy) a) from a floristic and structural point of view and b) from a species diversity point of view. In order to obtain these results, 129 vegetation relevés (sensu Braun-Blanquet) were made on abandoned terraces in five of the main terraced areas of Siciliy: 1) the Aeolian Islands, 2) Pantelleria Island, 3) Mt. Etna, 4) the Palermo Mts. and 5) the Hyblaean Plateau. Only abandoned vineyards or grain crop fields were selected as sample plots, always 50 m2-sized. The results of biodiversity evaluation by t-tests and ANOVA showed that vascular plant diversity is linked to disturbance regime and to abiotic factors (especially geological substrate). Especially grazing increases species richness. Moreover, it was found that on limestone species richness is higher than on volcanic substrates. Vegetation relevés were also analysed with DCA and TWINSPAN. The resulting 14 sample plot groups (= clusters) were then used to check the dynamic relations. From a floristic point of view, plant communities involved in secondary succession processes on Sicilian terraces are quite different between and within the five study areas. This is mainly due to different substrate and bioclimatic conditions. Moreover, vegetation is strongly influenced by abandonment age and disturbance status. If no disturbance biases succession, then plant communities evolve rather rapidly (30-50 years) to maquis communities. If frequent fires or intense grazing occur, secondary succession is blocked in a "steady state". The second part of the present study focuses on the colonization mechanisms of old fields by woody species. In a first section, the existence of 1) the neighbourhood effect and 2) the safe-site effect are checked by analyzing 51 transect relevés, made up of 357 subplot relevés (1x1m). The transects were made in target fields 1) with older neighbour (i.e. old succession stage characterized by maquis communities) and 2) with older neighbour absent within a 100 m-distance. All woody species individuals were counted, recording if they grew within the influence of a potential safe site (former crop plants of vine and the terrace wall base). Data evaluation by Kruskal-Wallis ANOVA and Mann-Whitney Rank Sum confirmed the existence of the two effects. Moreover, it was shown that animals as dispersal vectors strongly influence these effects. For the neighbourhood effect, seed dispersal distance is the crucial point, while for the safe site effect 1) passive facilitation (i.e. animals tend to create heterogeneous seed rain patterns because they frequent certain microhabitats more often than others) and 2) active facilitation (i.e. the positive influence of an existing woody or herbaceous plant individual on the establishment or the growth of another one) are crucial. The second section describes the performance of establishment of Quercus ilex L. in different microsites of terraced old fields. In November 2004, acorns were buried on a North-facing slope and on a South-facing slope in five different microsites: 1) under vine plants, 2) at wall bases, 3) under the canopies of isolated shrubs, 4) between small rock accumulations and 5) in open spaces (i.e. outside of any of the previously named microsites). In monthly checks, seedling emergence, survival, height and leaf number were recorded. Moreover, in April and July were measured air temperature and air humidity in the different microsites. Overall emergence rate was 52.4% (n = 1,020). More seedlings emerged on the South-facing slope (S; 59.8%) than on the North-facing slope (N; 45.0%). Emergence was higher when acorns were buried under vine plants and at the wall base than in other microsites of the old fields. At the end of the experiment (September 2006), 45.3% of all emerged seedlings were still alive (29.2% on N, 58.9% on S). Survival was higher in general on the South-facing slope, and higher under vine plants and at the wall base than in the open spaces of the old fields. From literature, it is known that seed vitality, seed germination and seedling survival of Quercus ilex are favoured by shady, wet and fresh conditions. The temperature and air humidity measurements showed that at the wall base, under vine plants and under isolated shrubs environmental conditions are milder than in open spaces. However, even if temperature and relative air humidity seem to play an important role for Quercus ilex seedling emergence and survival, they did not unambiguously explain the differences between the safe site types. A factor of major importance is probably soil moisture. As a last part, the present study discusses what does the obtained results mean for terrace landscape conservation and biodiversity management.