Silvicultural management and altitude prevail on soil properties and fungal community in shaping understorey plant communities in a Mediterranean pine forest

View/ Open
Issue date
2022Author
Centenaro, Giada
Miguel, Sergio de
Amouzgar, Laleh
Piñuela, Yasmine
Son, Deokjoo
Martínez de Aragón, Juan
Suggested citation
Centenaro, Giada;
Miguel, Sergio de;
Amouzgar, Laleh;
Piñuela, Yasmine;
Son, Deokjoo;
Bonet Lledos, José Antonio;
...
Alday, Josu G..
(2022)
.
Silvicultural management and altitude prevail on soil properties and fungal community in shaping understorey plant communities in a Mediterranean pine forest.
Science of the Total Environment, 2023, vol. 858, Part 2, art. 159860.
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.159860.
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Understorey vegetation plays a key role in Mediterranean forest ecosystem functioning. However, we still lack a thorough understanding of the patterns and drivers of understorey composition and diversity. As a result, understoreys are often ignored during assessments of forest functioning under climate change. Here we studied the effect of silvicultural management, topography, soil fungal community composition and soil physical and chemical properties on understorey community composition and diversity. The plant cover and number of individuals of understorey perennial plants, shrubs and non-dominant trees was recorded on 24 plots (paired: control-thinned) in a Mediterranean pine-dominated mountainous
area in Northeast Spain. The study area represented a broad thinning intensity gradient (from 0 to 70 % in removed stand basal area) along a 400-m altitudinal range (from 609 m to 1013 m). Our results showed that thinning intensity and topography explained the greatest proportion of the total variance in the understorey species composition, i.e., 18 % and 16 %, respectively. Interestingly, the effects of the silvicultural treatments were significant only when considering the altitudinal effect, so that, the main impacts of thinning on the understorey community composition occurred at low altitudes (between 609 m and 870 m). Moreover, we found a significant decrease in both richness and abundance of understorey species in both the control and thinned plots with increasing altitude, with thinned plots being significantly richer in species compared to the control plots. The difference in the understorey community sensitivity to forest thinning along the altitudinal gradient suggests changes in factors that limit plant growth. Low elevation plots were restrained by light availability while high altitudes plots limited by winter freezing temperature
Is part of
Science of the Total Environment, 2023, vol. 858, Part 2, art. 159860European research projects
The following license files are associated with this item: