Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10174/32683

Title: Effect of Sheep Grazing, Stocking Rates and Dolomitic Limestone Application on the Floristic Composition of a Permanent Dryland Pasture, in the Montado Agroforestry System of Southern Portugal
Authors: Carreira, Emanuel
Serrano, João
Pinto Gomes, Carlos
Shahidian, Shakib
Paniagua, Luis L.
Pilirito, Alexandre
Lopes de Castro, J.
Carvalho, Mário
Pereira, Alfredo
Editors: Bonanno, Adriana
Corazzi, Mirco
Keywords: sheep
deferred grazing
continuous grazing
botanical composition
liming
dryland pasture
Montado
Issue Date: 20-Sep-2022
Publisher: MDPI
Citation: Carreira, E.; Serrano, J.; Gomes, C.J.P.; Shahidian, S.; Paniagua, L.L.; Pilirito, A.; Castro, J.; Carvalho, M.; Pereira, A.F. Effect of Sheep Grazing, Stocking Rates and Dolomitic Limestone Application on the Floristic Composition of a Permanent Dryland Pasture, in the Montado Agroforestry System of Southern Portugal. Animals 2022, 12, 2506. https://doi.org/10.3390/ ani12192506
Abstract: The Montado is a complex agroforestry–pastoral ecosystem due to the interactions be‐ tween soil–pasture–trees–animals and climate. The typical Montado soil has an acidic pH and man‐ ganese toxicity, which affect the pastureʹs productivity and pasture floristic composition (PFC). The PFC, on the other hand, can also be influenced by the type and intensity of grazing, which can lead to significant decreases in the amount of biomass produced and the biodiversity of species in the pasture. The objective of this study was to evaluate the effect of grazing type, by sheep, and different stocking rates on the PFC throughout the vegetative pasture cycle in areas with and without dolo‐ mitic limestone application. Thus, four treatments (P1UC to P4TC) were constituted: P1UC—with‐ out limestone application (U) and continuous grazing (CG); P2UD—U and deferred grazing (DG); P3TD—with the application of limestone (T) and DG; P4TC—T and CG. In DG plots, the placement and removal of the animals were carried out as a function of the average height of the pasture (placement—10 cm; removal—3 to 5 cm). The PFC was characterized in winter, at the peak of spring and in late spring. The PFC data were subjected to a multilevel pattern analysis (ISA). The combi‐ nation of rainfall and temperature influenced the pasture growth rates and consequently the height of the pasture at different times of the year. Therefore, with the different growth rates of the pasture throughout the year, the sheep remain for different periods of time in the deferred grazing treat‐ ments. In the four treatments, 103 plant species were identified. The most representative botanical families in the four treatments were Asteraceae, Fabaceae and Poaceae. ISA identified 14 bioindicator species: eight for the winter period, three for the late spring vegetative period and three for the TC treatment.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10174/32683
Type: article
Appears in Collections:ERU - Publicações - Artigos em Revistas Internacionais Com Arbitragem Científica
MED - Publicações - Artigos em Revistas Internacionais Com Arbitragem Científica

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