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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Ecosystem responses to land abandonment in Western Mediterranean Mountains

Asunción Romero-díazFrancisco Robledano-aymerichJosé Damián Ruiz-sinogaArtemi CerdàArtemi CerdàEric C. Brevik

subject

Mediterranean climate010501 environmental sciencesMediterranean01 natural sciencesSoil qualitySoil retrogression and degradationEcosystemOrganic matterRelleu (Geografia)Water content0105 earth and related environmental sciencesEarth-Surface ProcessesVegetative recoverychemistry.chemical_classificationHydrologyInfiltrationHuman impact04 agricultural and veterinary sciencesBodemfysica en LandbeheerSoil qualitySoil Physics and Land ManagementInfiltration (hydrology)chemistryErosionSoil water040103 agronomy & agriculture0401 agriculture forestry and fisheriesEnvironmental science

description

Agricultural expansion in the Mediterranean resulted in plant and soil degradation due to the intensive use, climate conditions, and rugged terrain. After abandonment, the recovery of vegetation contributed to improvement in soil quality from a hydrological, pedological and geomorphological point of view. This paper shows three examples of ecosystem evolution in abandoned fields in Valencia, Murcia and Andalucia and the application of different methodological approaches that resulted in similar findings. In Valencia, the main responses were the recovery of vegetation after land abandonment and an increase in organic matter and infiltration capacity of soils. In Murcia, with the exception of some terraced areas on marls, where erosion processes following abandonment were important, land abandonment resulted in vegetation recovery, improved soil properties, and reduced surface wash and soil losses. In Andalucia, research along climatological gradients showed the relationship between vegetation patterns and soil moisture and the control that climate exerts on hydrological and erosive behaviour. The experimental research conducted in three different regions in Western Mediterranean demonstrated that abandonment can result in recovery of the geo-ecosystem as vegetation and soil quality improvements were shown. The marls areas in Murcia were the exception with low soil quality and low vegetation cover, and as a consequence showed evidence of high erosion rates after abandonment.

10.1016/j.catena.2016.08.013https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/ecosystem-responses-to-land-abandonment-in-western-mediterranean-