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http://hdl.handle.net/10174/17367
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Title: | Assessment of the diversity of epigeous Basidiomycota under different soil-management systems in a Montado ecosystem: a case study conducted in Alentejo. |
Authors: | Santos-Silva, Celeste Louro, Rogério |
Keywords: | Epigeous Basidiomycota Mediterranean ecosystem Shrub clearing Soil tillage Mycorrhizal fungi Portugal |
Issue Date: | 4-Apr-2015 |
Publisher: | Springer |
Citation: | Santos-Silva, C. & Louro, R. 2015. Assessment of the diversity of epigeous Basidiomycota under different soil-management systems in a Montado ecosystem: a case study conducted in Alentejo. Agroforestry Systems (DOI) 10.1007/S10457-015-9800-3. pp 1-10. |
Abstract: | Several management practices that are
employed in Montados are known to affect the
establishment and maintenance of Basidiomycota
communities immediately after disturbances have
occurred, contributing to their development or, conversely,
decreasing their diversity. In this study we
aim to evaluate the effects of the most common
understory and soil-management practices on the
diversity of the epigeous Basidiomycota a long time
after disturbances have taken place. The study was
conducted in a Montado (cork and holm-oak ecosystem)
area in Southern Portugal (Alentejo). In 1998,
four experimental treatments—control (C), mulching
(Mu), mowing (Mo) and ploughing (P)—with three
replicates each were carried out: C—untreated/untouched;
Mu—cutting of shrubs followed by deposition
of plant residues on soil surfaces; Mo—cutting of
shrubs followed by biomass removal and soil tilling;
P—cutting of shrubs followed by the incorporation of
plant biomass into the soil through tillage. Macrofungal
surveys were conducted fortnightly in the experimental
plots between Autumn 2007 and Spring
2012. Significant differences in total and mycorrhizal
richness were found between plots, with higher values
being found for non-tilled plots and lower values for tilled plots. No significant differences were found in
saprotrophic richness between treatments. Regarding
the composition of taxa, Boletus and Russula were the
main taxonomic groups affected by experimental
treatments. Our results showed that soil tillage can
result in a decrease in mycorrhizal taxa even a long
time after disturbances have taken place. |
URI: | http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007%2Fs10457-015-9800-3 http://hdl.handle.net/10174/17367 |
Type: | article |
Appears in Collections: | MED - Publicações - Artigos em Revistas Internacionais Com Arbitragem Científica BIO - Publicações - Artigos em Revistas Internacionais Com Arbitragem Científica
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