Article

Long-term trends in restored moorland vegetation assemblages

Details

Citation

Littlewood NA, Greenwood S, Quin SLO, Pakeman RJ & Woodin SJ (2014) Long-term trends in restored moorland vegetation assemblages. Community Ecology, 15 (1), pp. 104-112. https://doi.org/10.1556/comec.15.2014.1.11

Abstract
Restoration of moors dominated by Calluna vulgaris is carried out for conservation and sporting reasons. Previous research has shown variable restoration success in the early years of restoration management. In this study we investigated whether restored heather moorland vegetation increasingly resembles long-established moorland vegetation over a longer time period. Vegetation at seven moorland restoration sites (six in northern England and one in Scotland) was sampled in 2003 (to assess short-term restoration success) and 2010 (to assess long-term restoration success). Three of these sites were restored solely by grazing control and four by a suite of more intensive techniques. On each visit, vegetation sampling was carried out in degraded, restored and long-established control areas at each site. Restored vegetation assemblages closely resembled control assemblages. The samples were, though, dominated by the species targeted for management, Molinia caerulea and Nardus stricta in degraded samples and Calluna vulgaris in control samples. Discounting these species and concentrating on the remainder of the vegetation assemblage, areas restored solely by the reduction or removal or sheep grazing more closely resembled control assemblages whilst those managed more intensively were more intermediate between degraded and control assemblages. There was no systematic pattern of change in restored areas between the sampling dates. At two sites restored samples become more similar to control samples whilst restored samples at other sites either showed little change or moved back towards a degraded assemblage. Thus whilst moorland restoration can succeed in re-establishing C. vulgaris, we found no evidence of a systematic shift in the remainder of the vegetation assemblage towards that of a long-established moor over the time period studied.

Keywords
Calluna vulgaris; Grazing; Heather; Heathland; Molinia caerulea; Nardus stricta; Plant community; Upland

Journal
Community Ecology: Volume 15, Issue 1

StatusPublished
FundersScottish Government
Publication date01/06/2014
Publication date online01/05/2014
PublisherSpringer Science and Business Media LLC
ISSN1585-8553
eISSN1588-2756

People (1)

People

Dr Sarah Greenwood

Dr Sarah Greenwood

Lecturer in Global Change Biology, Biological and Environmental Sciences