Rowney Francis M, Fyfe Ralph M, Baker Leonard, French Henry, Koot Martha B, Ombashi Havananda, Timms Rhys G O
School of Geography, Earth and Environmental Sciences University of Plymouth Plymouth UK.
Department of History University of Exeter Exeter UK.
Ecol Evol. 2023 Mar 8;13(3):e9876. doi: 10.1002/ece3.9876. eCollection 2023 Mar.
Upland moorlands are important landscapes, but many are considered degraded as a result of human activities. Consequently, their protection and restoration are of substantial concern. In Europe, restoration activities are often aimed at reversing the effects of 19th and 20th century "agricultural improvements," which often involved major drainage schemes. However, the ecological effects and long-term ecological context of "agricultural improvement" are not yet fully understood. To develop this understanding, we analyze paleoecological data (pollen, coprophilous fungal spores, microcharcoal) from five upland peatland sites using a range of analytical approaches: cluster analysis, principal component analysis, rate-of-change analysis, and regression analyses incorporating documentary historical data. The sites are located on Exmoor (South West England, UK), a landscape that typifies historic upland degradation. We demonstrate that in this landscape, 19th century drainage is associated with declines in and non-arboreal taxon richness; over longer timescales burning is associated with enhanced graminoid monocot abundance and grazing with lower taxon richness. We also show that rate-of-change in moorland vegetation communities during the 19th century is not distinctive in a long-term context: change has been a constant in this landscape, rather than an exception during the 19th century. Our findings indicate that the aims of "restoration" interventions intended to increase abundances, increase taxon richness and reduce graminoid dominance are consistent with the long-term dynamics of peatland systems, such as those on Exmoor. "Restoration" deemed successful in these terms may or may not resemble pre-drainage conditions, which were themselves a function of millennia of successive moorland management regimes.
高地荒原是重要的景观,但许多因人类活动而被认为已经退化。因此,它们的保护和恢复备受关注。在欧洲,恢复活动通常旨在扭转19世纪和20世纪“农业改良”的影响,这些改良往往涉及大型排水工程。然而,“农业改良”的生态影响和长期生态背景尚未完全明了。为了增进这方面的了解,我们使用一系列分析方法,包括聚类分析、主成分分析、变化率分析以及结合文献历史数据的回归分析,对来自五个高地泥炭地遗址的古生态数据(花粉、粪生真菌孢子、微炭)进行分析。这些遗址位于埃克斯穆尔(英国英格兰西南部),该地区是历史上高地退化的典型代表。我们证明,在这片景观中,19世纪的排水与树木和非树木分类群丰富度的下降有关;在更长的时间尺度上,焚烧与禾本科单子叶植物丰度的增加以及放牧与较低的分类群丰富度有关。我们还表明,19世纪高地植被群落的变化率在长期背景下并无独特之处:变化在这片景观中一直存在,而非19世纪的特例。我们的研究结果表明,旨在增加树木丰度、增加分类群丰富度并减少禾本科植物优势的“恢复”干预目标与泥炭地系统的长期动态相一致,比如埃克斯穆尔的泥炭地系统。从这些方面来看被认为成功的“恢复”可能与排水前的状况相似,也可能不同,而排水前的状况本身也是数千年连续的荒原管理制度的产物。