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1.
Sci Total Environ ; 954: 176452, 2024 Sep 21.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39312977

RESUMO

Plant-plant interactions are important drivers for the functioning and structuring of dryland plant communities. Stressful conditions, mainly related to water availability, determine whether plant interactions result in net facilitation or competition. Many studies have been conducted on the impacts of mature individuals, trees, shrubs or tussock grasses, on woody seedlings but little is known about the biotic interactions when they all are at the same developmental stage under field conditions. Here we present a spatially replicated study with Olea europaea as the target species and Pistacia lentiscus and Macrochloa tenacissima as neigbors. We also implemented field techniques to increase water availability and, hence, reproduce an abiotic gradient of stress. Wild olive performance was sensitive to neighbors, water availability and site. Improved microcatchments, which in addition to site recreated a gradient of water availability, improved wild olive performance as well as planted neighbors negatively impacted olive seedlings. We observed increasing negative interacting effects as conditions become less stressful. This is in line with the stress-gradient-hypothesis but also provides important knowledge regarding plant interactions in drylands at the same development stage.

2.
Sci Total Environ ; 573: 1232-1241, 2016 Dec 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27156440

RESUMO

Since the mid of the last century, fire recurrence has increased in the Iberian Peninsula and in the overall Mediterranean basin due to changes in land use and climate. The warmer and drier climate projected for this region will further increase the risk of wildfire occurrence and recurrence. Although the impact of wildfires on soil nutrient content in this region has been extensively studied, still few works have assessed this impact on the basis of fire recurrence. This study assesses the changes in soil organic C and nutrient status of mineral soils in two Southern European areas, Várzea (Northern Portugal) and Valencia (Eastern Spain), affected by different levels of fire recurrence and where short fire intervals have promoted a transition from pine woodlands to shrublands. At the short-term (<1year), the amount of soil organic matter was higher in burned than in unburned soils while its quality (represented as labile to total organic matter) was actually lower. In any case, total and labile soil organic matter showed decreasing trends with increasing fire recurrence (one to four fires). At the long-term (>5years), a decline in overall soil fertility with fire recurrence was also observed, with a drop between pine woodlands (one fire) and shrublands (two and three fires), particularly in the soil microsites between shrubs. Our results suggest that the current trend of increasing fire recurrence in Southern Europe may result in losses or alterations of soil organic matter, particularly when fire promotes a transition from pine woodland to shrubland. The results also point to labile organic matter fractions in the intershrub spaces as potential early warning indicators for shifts in soil fertility in response to fire recurrence.

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