Predicting the establishment success of introduced target species in grassland restoration by functional traits

Abstract Species‐rich semi‐natural grasslands are highly endangered habitats in Central Europe and numerous restoration efforts have been made to compensate for the losses in the last decades. However, some plant species could become more easily established than others. The establishment success of...

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Main Authors: Karina Engst, Annett Baasch, Helge Bruelheide
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2017-09-01
Series:Ecology and Evolution
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.3268
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spelling doaj-806bf04ddad14e759c5b9c6c5a9540fb2021-03-02T08:16:08ZengWileyEcology and Evolution2045-77582017-09-017187442745310.1002/ece3.3268Predicting the establishment success of introduced target species in grassland restoration by functional traitsKarina Engst0Annett Baasch1Helge Bruelheide2Institute of Biology/Geobotany and Botanical Garden Martin Luther University Halle‐Wittenberg Halle GermanyDepartment for Nature Conservation and Landscape Planning Anhalt University of Applied Sciences Bernburg GermanyInstitute of Biology/Geobotany and Botanical Garden Martin Luther University Halle‐Wittenberg Halle GermanyAbstract Species‐rich semi‐natural grasslands are highly endangered habitats in Central Europe and numerous restoration efforts have been made to compensate for the losses in the last decades. However, some plant species could become more easily established than others. The establishment success of 37 species was analyzed over 6 years at two study sites of a restoration project in Germany where hay transfer and sowing of threshing material in combination with additional sowing were applied. The effects of the restoration method applied, time since the restoration took place, traits related to germination, dispersal, and reproduction, and combinations of these traits on the establishment were analyzed. While the specific restoration method of how seeds were transferred played a subordinate role, the establishment success depended in particular on traits such as flower season or the lifeform. Species flowering in autumn, such as Pastinaca sativa and Serratula tinctoria, became established better than species flowering in other seasons, probably because they could complete their life cycle, resulting in increasingly stronger seed pressure with time. Geophytes, like Allium angulosum and Galium boreale, became established very poorly, but showed an increase with study duration. For various traits, we found significant trait by method and trait by year interactions, indicating that different traits promoted establishment under different conditions. Using a multi‐model approach, we tested whether traits acted in combination. For the first years and the last year, we found that models with three traits explained establishment success better than models with a single trait or two traits. While traits had only an additive effect on the establishment success in the first years, trait interactions became important thereafter. The most important trait was the season of flowering, which occurred in all best models from the third year onwards. Overall, our approach revealed the potential of functional trait analysis to predict success in restoration projects.https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.3268functional traitsGermanygrassland restorationhay transferon‐site threshingseeding
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Karina Engst
Annett Baasch
Helge Bruelheide
spellingShingle Karina Engst
Annett Baasch
Helge Bruelheide
Predicting the establishment success of introduced target species in grassland restoration by functional traits
Ecology and Evolution
functional traits
Germany
grassland restoration
hay transfer
on‐site threshing
seeding
author_facet Karina Engst
Annett Baasch
Helge Bruelheide
author_sort Karina Engst
title Predicting the establishment success of introduced target species in grassland restoration by functional traits
title_short Predicting the establishment success of introduced target species in grassland restoration by functional traits
title_full Predicting the establishment success of introduced target species in grassland restoration by functional traits
title_fullStr Predicting the establishment success of introduced target species in grassland restoration by functional traits
title_full_unstemmed Predicting the establishment success of introduced target species in grassland restoration by functional traits
title_sort predicting the establishment success of introduced target species in grassland restoration by functional traits
publisher Wiley
series Ecology and Evolution
issn 2045-7758
publishDate 2017-09-01
description Abstract Species‐rich semi‐natural grasslands are highly endangered habitats in Central Europe and numerous restoration efforts have been made to compensate for the losses in the last decades. However, some plant species could become more easily established than others. The establishment success of 37 species was analyzed over 6 years at two study sites of a restoration project in Germany where hay transfer and sowing of threshing material in combination with additional sowing were applied. The effects of the restoration method applied, time since the restoration took place, traits related to germination, dispersal, and reproduction, and combinations of these traits on the establishment were analyzed. While the specific restoration method of how seeds were transferred played a subordinate role, the establishment success depended in particular on traits such as flower season or the lifeform. Species flowering in autumn, such as Pastinaca sativa and Serratula tinctoria, became established better than species flowering in other seasons, probably because they could complete their life cycle, resulting in increasingly stronger seed pressure with time. Geophytes, like Allium angulosum and Galium boreale, became established very poorly, but showed an increase with study duration. For various traits, we found significant trait by method and trait by year interactions, indicating that different traits promoted establishment under different conditions. Using a multi‐model approach, we tested whether traits acted in combination. For the first years and the last year, we found that models with three traits explained establishment success better than models with a single trait or two traits. While traits had only an additive effect on the establishment success in the first years, trait interactions became important thereafter. The most important trait was the season of flowering, which occurred in all best models from the third year onwards. Overall, our approach revealed the potential of functional trait analysis to predict success in restoration projects.
topic functional traits
Germany
grassland restoration
hay transfer
on‐site threshing
seeding
url https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.3268
work_keys_str_mv AT karinaengst predictingtheestablishmentsuccessofintroducedtargetspeciesingrasslandrestorationbyfunctionaltraits
AT annettbaasch predictingtheestablishmentsuccessofintroducedtargetspeciesingrasslandrestorationbyfunctionaltraits
AT helgebruelheide predictingtheestablishmentsuccessofintroducedtargetspeciesingrasslandrestorationbyfunctionaltraits
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