Faculty of Science and Technology, Free University of Bozen-Bolzano, Bolzano, Italy.
Faculty of Science and Technology, Free University of Bozen-Bolzano, Bolzano, Italy.
Sci Total Environ. 2019 May 15;665:959-967. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2019.02.086. Epub 2019 Feb 6.
In the Southern Alps, climate warming induced the use of artificial snow since two decades. In this area, two different ski piste management practices prevail: (1) large and medium ski resorts (M), which guarantee a ski season of four to five months using artificial snow, whereas (2) in the small, local ski resorts (S) it usually lasts two or three months. Our research addresses two main questions: 1) what is the impact of the ski pistes on the physico-chemical properties of the snow, on the soil and on the vegetation of mountain grassland ecosystems and 2) does the impact on the mountain grassland ecosystems change between medium and small ski resorts? Our experimental approach follows a pairwise design of plots on mountain grasslands of the ski pistes and control plots on mountain grasslands outside the pistes, where we examined the snow and soil properties and the vegetation composition. Under the long ski-season management (M) we found a significantly lower soil temperature below the snow cover of the ski pistes than the one below the natural snowpack, but this difference was limited to the period of natural snow cover. Only in M, pistes showed a lower biomass production and species richness in the mountain grassland plant communities compared to the controls, while there was no effect in S. The proportions of plant functional groups' cover changed in both ski resort types between piste and control. The most important factors affecting the observed differences in vegetation between pistes and controls were snow duration, snow and soil chemical properties, with more marked differences in the soil properties in M respect to S. The study concludes that reducing the ski season's length, therefore limiting the artificial snow's input, as in S, is more adequate to minimize the environmental impact in a changing climate.
在南阿尔卑斯山,气候变暖导致人工造雪的应用已有二十年之久。在这个地区,两种不同的滑雪道管理实践占主导地位:(1)大型和中型滑雪场(M),它们使用人工造雪来保证四个到五个月的滑雪季,而(2)在小型本地滑雪场(S),滑雪季通常持续两到三个月。我们的研究主要关注两个问题:1)滑雪道对雪的理化性质、土壤和山地草原生态系统的植被有何影响;2)中、小型滑雪场之间对山地草原生态系统的影响是否有所不同?我们的实验方法采用了滑雪场和滑雪场外山地草原对照区的成对设计,在这些区域我们检测了雪和土壤特性以及植被组成。在长期滑雪季管理(M)下,我们发现滑雪道下的积雪覆盖层下的土壤温度明显低于自然积雪覆盖层下的温度,但这种差异仅限于自然积雪覆盖层的时期。只有在 M 中,滑雪道的山地草原植物群落的生物量生产和物种丰富度明显低于对照区,而在 S 中则没有这种影响。滑雪道和对照区之间的植物功能群盖度比例在两种滑雪场类型中都发生了变化。影响植被在滑雪道和对照区之间差异的最重要因素是雪的持续时间、雪和土壤化学性质,在 M 中,土壤性质的差异更为显著。该研究得出的结论是,缩短滑雪季的长度,从而限制人工造雪的投入,如在 S 中那样,更适合在气候变化的情况下最小化环境影响。