Biodiversity change in the Irish uplands - the effects of grazing management


Autoria(s): Anderson, Roslyn Margaret
Contribuinte(s)

Emmerson, Mark C.

O'Halloran, John

Science Foundation Ireland

Data(s)

19/12/2013

2013

2013

Resumo

As a prominent form of land use across much of upland Europe, extensive livestock grazing may hold the key to the sustainable management of these landscapes. Recent agricultural policy reform, however, has resulted in a decline in upland sheep numbers, prompting concern for the biodiversity value of these areas. This study quantifies the effects of varying levels of grazing management on plant, ground beetle and breeding bird diversity and assemblage in the uplands and lowlands of hill sheep farms in County Kerry, Ireland. Farms represent a continuum of light to heavy grazing, measured using a series of field indicators across several habitats, such as the internationally important blanket bog, home to the ground beetle, Carabus clatratus. Linear mixed effects modelling and non-metric multidimensional scaling are employed to disentangle the most influential management and environmental factors. Grazing state may be determined by the presence of Molinia caerulea or Nardus stricta, and variables such as % traditional ewes, % vegetation litter and % scrub prove valuable indicators of diversity. Measures of ecosystem functioning, e.g. plant biomass (nutrient cycling) and % vegetation cover (erosion rates) are influenced by plant diversity, which is influenced by grazing management. Levels of the ecosystem service, soil organic carbon, vary with ground beetle abundance and diversity, potentially influencing carbon sequestration and thereby climate change. The majority of species from all three taxa are found in the lowlands, with the exception of birds such as meadow pipit and skylark. The scale of measurement should be determined by the size and mobility of the species in question. The challenge is to manage these high nature value landscapes using agri-environment schemes which enhance biodiversity by maintaining structural heterogeneity across a range of scales, altitudes and habitats whilst integrating the decisions of people living and working in these marginal areas.

Science Foundation Ireland (Research Frontiers Programme 2006, Proposal Code: 05/RF/EEB039)

Accepted Version

Not peer reviewed

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

Anderson, R. M. 2013. Biodiversity change in the Irish uplands - the effects of grazing management. PhD Thesis, University College Cork.

274

http://hdl.handle.net/10468/1290

Idioma(s)

en

en

Publicador

University College Cork

Direitos

© 2013, Roslyn M. Anderson.

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/

Palavras-Chave #Biodiversity #Upland #Grazing management #Hill sheep farms #Agri-environment scheme #Ecosystem functioning and services #Habitat heterogeneity #Vegetation #Plant diversity #Ground beetle diversity #Breeding bird diversity #Blanket bog #Carbon sequestration #Assemblage #Spatial scale #Sustainable #Ecology #County Kerry #Agricultural ecology--Ireland #Birds--Breeding--Ireland #Sustainable agriculture #Beetles
Tipo

Doctoral thesis

Doctoral

PhD (Science)