More stable productivity of semi natural grasslands than sown pastures in a seasonally dry climate
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Date
27-01-2015Author
Ospina, Sonia
Rusch, Graciela M.
Pezo Quevedo, Danilo
Casanoves, Fernando
Sinclair, Fergus L.
Type
Artículo
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In the Neotropics the predominant pathway to intensify productivity is generally thought to be to convert grasslands to
sown pastures, mostly in monoculture. This article examines how above-ground net primary productivity (ANPP) in seminatural
grasslands and sown pastures in Central America respond to rainfall by: (i) assessing the relationships between ANPP
and accumulated rainfall and indices of rainfall distribution, (ii) evaluating the variability of ANPP between and within
seasons, and (iii) estimating the temporal stability of ANPP. We conducted sequential biomass harvests during 12 periods of
22 days and related those to rainfall. There were significant relationships between ANPP and cumulative rainfall in 22-day
periods for both vegetation types and a model including a linear and quadratic term explained 74% of the variation in the
data. There was also a significant correlation between ANPP and the number of rainfall events for both vegetation types.
Sown pastures had higher ANPP increments per unit rainfall and higher ANPP at the peak of the rainy season than seminatural
grasslands. In contrast, semi-natural grasslands showed higher ANPP early in the dry season. The temporal stability
of ANPP was higher in semi-natural grasslands than in the sown pastures in the dry season and over a whole annual cycle.
Our results reveal that, contrary to conventional thinking amongst pasture scientists, there appears to be no increase in
ANPP arising from replacing semi-natural grasslands with sown pastures under prevailing pasture management practices in
seasonally dry climates, while the temporal distribution of ANPP is more even in semi-natural grasslands. Neither sown
pastures nor semi-natural grasslands are productive towards the end of the dry season, indicating the potential importance
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