Abstract
Influenced by the combined action of grazing and forest management, wooded pastures represent a traditional form of multiple use of natural resources in some European mountains. This fragile semi-natural ecosystem is characterized by the coexistence of high biodiversity and extensive land use. Based on experimental and observational studies carried out at various spatial scales in the Swiss Jura Mountains, this chapter provides an insight into patterns and processes occurring in this typical silvopastoral ecosystem. Summer grazing by cattle is the main driving force affecting vegetation dynamics. Large herbivores influence vegetation in three ways: grazing and browsing, dung and urine deposition and trampling. Field observations reveal a high heterogeneity of cattle activities at both fine and large scales. Cattle habitat use controls the dynamics of plant species and functional groups in the herb layer. Natural tree regeneration is also closely affected by cattle activity and related to the heterogeneous environment. Distribution of tree seedlings is spatially associated with specific physical structures or nurse plants that facilitate their survival in the herb and the shrub layers. Moreover, the growth of tree saplings is related to grazing intensity. Knowledge of ecological functioning of wooded pastures has allowed the development of a novel, spatially explicit, mosaic compartment model of the dynamics of silvopastoral ecosystems. This model is able to explain some aspects of the origin of vegetation heterogeneity in pasture-woodland landscapes. The conservation of such ecosystems is an important challenge considering its complexity and the present change in agricultural practices in mountain regions. A better integration of ecological and socio-economic processes into predictive multi-level models will permit the exploration of the conditions for sustainable management schemes compatible with biodiversity conservation.
Access provided by Autonomous University of Puebla. Download to read the full chapter text
Chapter PDF
Similar content being viewed by others
References
Abdelmagid AH, Trlica MJ, Hart RH (1987) Soil and vegetation responses to simulated trampling.J Range Manage 40:303–306
Allcock KG, Hik DS (2004) Survival, growth, and escape from herbivory are determined by habitat and herbivore species for three Australian woodland plants. Oecologia 138:231–241
Bailey DW, Gross JE, Laca EA, Rittenhouse LR, Coughenour MB, Swift DM, Sims PL (1996) Mechanisms that result in large herbivore grazing distribution patterns. J Range Manage 49:386–400
Bakker ES, Olff H (2003) Impact of different-sized herbivores on recruitment opportunities for subordinate herbs in grassland. J Veg Sci 14:465–474
Bakker ES, Olff H, Boekhoff M, Gleichman JM, Berendse F (2004) Impact of herbivores on nitrogen cycling: contrasting effects of small and large species. Oecologia 138:91–101
Béguin D (2007) Tree regeneration and growth in wood pastures: patterns and processes. PhD thesis, University of Neuchâtel, Switzerland
Berkowitz AR, Canham CD, Kelly VR (1995) Competition vs facilitation of tree seedling growth and survival in early successional communities. Ecology 76:1156–1168
Burton PJ, Bazzaz FA (1991) Tree seedling emergence on interactive temperature and moisture gradients and in patches of old-field vegetation. Am J Bot 78:131–149
Canham CD, Hill JD, Wood DS (1993) Demography of tree seedling invasion in rights-of-way. In: Canham CD (ed) Vegetation dynamics along utility rights-of-way: factors affecting the ability of shrub and herbaceous communities to resist invasion by trees. Final Technical Report to the Empire State Electric Energy Research Corporation, Albany, NY
Costa G, Mosimann E, Zagni C (1990) Effet de la présence nocturne au pâturage sur les performances d'un troupeau laitier et sur ses restitutions à l'alpage. Fourrages 123:305–311
Coughenour MB (1991) Spatial components of plant-herbivore interactions in pastoral, ranching, and native ungulate ecosystems. J Range Manage 44:530–542
Davis MA, Wrage KJ, Reich PB, Tjoelker MG, Schaeffer T, Muermann C (1999) Survival, growth and photosynthesis of tree seedlings competing with herbaceous vegetation along a water-light- nitrogen gradient. Plant Ecol 145:341–350
DeSteven D (1991) Experiments on mechanisms on tree establishment in old-field succession: seedling emergence. Ecology 72:1066–1075
Diaz M, Campos P, Pulido FJ (1997) The Spanish dehesas: a diversity of land use and wildlife.In: Pain D, Pienkowski M (eds.) Farming and birds in Europe: the common agricultural policy and its implications for bird conservation. Academic press, London
Douard R (1994) Litières et lessivats d'érable (Acer pseudoplatanus) et d'épicéa (Picea abies): leur influence sur le sol et la végétation du pâturage boisé jurassien. Master thesis, University of Neuchâtel, Neuchâtel, Switzerland
Dufour A, Gadallah Z, Wagner H, Guisan A, Buttler A (2006) Plant species richness and environmental heterogeneity in a mountain landscape : effects of variability and spatial configuration. Ecography 29:573–584
Edwards PJ, Hollis S (1982) The distribution of excreta on new forest grassland used by cattle, ponies and deer. J Appl Ecol 19:953–964
Etienne M (1996) Western European silvopastoral systems. INRA, Paris
Feeny P (1976) Plant apparancy and chemical defense. Recent Adv Phytoch 10:1–40
Gallandat JD, Gillet F, Havlicek E, Perrenoud A (1995) Patubois: typologie et systémique phyto-écologiques des pâturages boisés du Jura suisse. Laboratoire d'écologie végétale of the University of Neuchâtel, Neuchâtel, Switzerland
Gander A, Rockmann A, Strehler C, Güsewell S (2003) Habitat use by Scottish Highland cattle in a lakeshore wetland. Bull Geobot Inst ETH 69:3–13
Gigon A, Leutert AG (1996) The Dynamic keyhole key model of coexistence to explain diversity of plants in limestone and other grasslands. J Veg Sci 7:29–40
Gillet F (in press) Modelling vegetation dynamics in heterogeneous pasture-woodland landscapes. Ecol Model.
Gillet F, Gallandat JD (1996a) Integrated synusial phytosociology: some notes on new, multiscalar approach to vegetation analysis. J Veg Sci 7:13–18
Gillet F, Gallandat JD (1996b) Wooded pastures of the Jura mountains. In: Etienne M (ed) Western European silvopastoral systems. INRA, Paris
Gillet F, Murisier B, Buttler A, Gallandat J, Gobat J (1999) Influence of tree cover on the diversity of herbaceous communities in subalpine wooded pastures. Appl Veg Sci 2:47–54
Gillet F, Besson O, Gobat JM (2002) PATUMOD: a compartment model of vegetation dynamics in wooded pastures. Ecol Model 147:267–290
Gmür P, Wettstein J-B (1986) L'aménagement des pâturages communaux dans les Franches-Montagnes (Canton du Jura). Revue suisse d'Agriculture 18:87–92
Gmür P, Thomet P, Wettstein J-B (1989) Etablissement d'un plan de gestion d'un pâturage du Jura vaudois: planification de la cohabitation d'espaces naturels et de surfaces productives. Technicum agricole suisse, Zollikofen, Switzerland
Gobat JM, Duckert O, Gallandat JD (1989) Quelques relations microtopographie-sols-végétation dans les pelouses pseudo alpine du Jura suisse: exemples d'un système naturel et d'un systéme anthropisé. Bulletin de la société neuchâteloise des sciences naturelles 112:5–17
Gordon IJ (2003) Browsing and grazing ruminants: are they different beasts? Forest Ecol Manag 181:13–21
Grime JP (2001) Plant strategies, vegetation processes, and ecosystem properties. Wiley, Chichester, UK
Havlicek E, Gobat J-M, Gillet F (1998) Reflections on relationships between vegetation and soil: three examples on allochtonous material in the Jura Mountains. Ecologie 4:535–546
Hester AJ, Baillie GJ (1998) Spatial and temporal patterns of heather use by sheep and red deer within natural heather/grass mosaics. J Appl Ecol 35:772–784
Hester AJ, Millard P, Baillie GJ, Wendler R (2004) How does timing of browsing affect above-and below-ground growth of Betula pendula, Pinus sylvestris and Sorbus aucuparia? Oikos 105:536–550
Jewell PL (2002) Impact of cattle grazing upon the vegetation of an Alpine pasture. PhD thesis. Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Zürich, Switzerland Jewell PL, Güsewell S, Berry NR, Käuferle D, Kreuzer M, Edwards PJ (2005) Vegetation patterns maintained by cattle grazing on a degraded mountain pasture. Bot Helv 115:109ä124
Karl MG, Doescher PS (1993) Regulating competition on conifer plantations with prescribed cattle grazing. Forest Sci 39:405–418
Kohler F (2004) Influence of grazing, dunging and trampling on short-term dynamics of grasslands in mountain wooded pastures. PhD thesis. University of Neuchâtel, Neuchâtel, Switzerland
Kohler F, Gillet F, Progin MA, Gobat J-M, Buttler A (2004a) Seasonal dynamics of plant species at fine scale in wooded pastures. Community Ecol 5:7–17
Kohler F, Gillet F, Gobat JM, Buttler A (2004b) Seasonal vegetation changes in mountain pastures due to simulated effects of cattle grazing. J Veg Sci 15:143–150
Kohler F, Hamelin J, Gillet F, Gobat JM, Buttler A (2005) Soil microbial community changes in wooded mountain pastures due to simulated effects of cattle grazing. Plant Soil 278:327–340
Kohler F, Gillet F, Reust S, Wagner HH, Gadallah F, Gobat JM, Buttler A (2006a) Spatial and seasonal patterns of cattle habitat use in a mountain wooded pasture. Landscape Ecol 21:281–295
Kohler F, Gillet F, Gobat JM, Buttler A (2006b) Effect of cattle activities on gap colonisation in mountain pastures. Folia Geobot 41:289–304
MacDiarmid BN, Watkin BR (1972) The cattle dung patch: 2. Effect of a dung patch on the chemical status of the soil, and ammonia nitrogen losses from the patch. 3. Distribution and rate of decay of dung patches and their influence on grazing behaviour. J Brit Grassland Soc 27:43–54
Mattison EHA, Norris K (2005) Bridging the gaps between agricultural policy, land-use and biodiversity. Trends Ecol Evol 20:610–616
Mayer AC, Stöckli V, Huovinen C, Konold W, Estermann BL, Kreuzer M (2003) Herbage selection by cattle on subalpine wood pastures. Forest Ecol Manag 181:39–50
Mayer AC, Stöckli V, Konold W, Kreuzer M (2005) Influence of cattle stocking rate on browsing of Norway spruce in subalpine wood pastures. Agroforest Syst 66:143–149
McGechan MB, Topp CFE (2004) Modelling environmental impacts of deposition of excreted nitrogen by grazing dairy cows. Agr Ecosyst Environ 103:149–164
Meiners SJ, Handel SN (2000) Additive and nonadditive effects of herbivory and competition on tree seedling mortality, growth and allocation. Am J Bot 87:1821–1826
Meisser M (1993) Fertilisation et utilisation des pâturages boisés de l'arc jurassien. Master thesis, ETH Zürich, Switzerland
Miéville-Ott V, Barbezat V (2005) Perception du pâturage boisé: résultats d'un sondage effectuéau Communal de la Sagne NE. Schweiz Z Forstwes 156(1):1–12
Milchunas DG, Noy-Meir I (2002) Grazing refuges, external avoidance of herbivory and plant diversity. Oikos 99:113–130
Nilsson U, Gemmel P, Johansson U, Karlsson M, Welander T (2002) Natural regeneration of Norway spruce, Scots pine and Birch under Norway spruce shelterwoods of varying densities on a mesic-dry site in southern Sweden. Forest Ecol Manag 161:133–145
O'Neill RV, DeAngelis DL, Waide JB, Allen THF (1986) A hierarchical concept of ecosystems. Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ
Olff H, Ritchie ME (1998) Effects of herbivores on grassland plant diversity. Trends Ecol Evol 13:261–265
Olff H, Vera FWM, Bokdam J, Bakker ES, Gleichman JM, de Maeyer K, Smit R (1999) Shifting mosaics in grazed woodlands driven by the alternation of plant facilitation and competition. Plant Biol 1:127–137
Pagès JP, Pache G, Joud D, Magnan N, Michalet R (2003) Direct and indirect effects of shade on four forest tree seedlings in the French Alps. Ecology 84:2741–2750
Perrenoud A, Känzig-Schoch U, Schneider O, Wettstein J-B (2003) Exploitation durable des pâturages boisés. Un exemple appliqué de Jura suisse. Haupt, Bern, Switzerland
Peterson PR, Gerrish JR (1996) Grazing systems and spatial distribution of nutrients in pastures: Livestock management considerations. In: Joost RE, Roberts CA (eds.) Nutrient cycling in forage systems. Potash and Phosphate Institute and the Foundation for Agronomy Research, Manhattan, NY
Putman RJ, Pratt RM, Ekins JR, Edwards PJ (1987) Food and feeding-behavior of cattle and ponies in the New Forest, Hampshire. J Appl Ecol 24:369–380
Renaud PC, Verheyden-Tixier H, Dumont B (2003) Damage to saplings by red deer (Cervuselaphus): effect of foliage height and structure. Forest Ecol Manag 181:31–37
Rice RW, MacNeil MD, Koong LJ (1983) Simulation of herbage/animal interface of grazing land. In: Lauenroth WK, Skogerboe GV Flug M (eds.) Analysis of ecological systems: state-of-the-art in ecological modelling. Developments in Ecological Modeling 5. Elsevier, Amsterdam
Rigueiro A (1985) La utilización del ganado en el monte arbolado gallego: un paso hacia el uso integral del monte. In: Estudios sobre la prevención y efectos ecológicos de los incendios forestales. Ministerio de Agricultura pesca y alimentación, Madrid
Roath LR, Krueger WC (1982) Cattle grazing and behavior on a forested range. J Range Manage 35:332–338
Rook AJ, Dumont B, Isselstein J, Ososro K, WallisDeVries MF, Parente G, Mills J (2004) Matching type of livestock to desired biodiversity outcomes in pastures - a review. Biol Conserv 119:137–150
Roovers P, Verheyen K, Hermy M, Gulink H (2004) Experimental trampling and vegetation recovery in some forest and heathland communities. Appl Veg Sci 7:111–118
Senft RL, Coug our MB, Bailey DW, Rittenhouse LR, Sala OE, Swift DM (1987) Large herbivore foraging and ecological hierarchies. Bioscience 37:789–797
Silva-Pando FJ, González-Hernández MP, Rigueiro-Rodríguez A (1998) Grazing livestock in pinewood and eucalyptus forests: multiple use in northwest Spain. Agroforest Forum 9(1):36–43
Silva-Pando FJ, Rozados-Lorenzo MJ, González-Hernández MP (2002) Objetivo, diseño y apli-cación de experiencias en sistemas agroforestales atlánticos. Cuad Soc Esp Cien For 14: 109–114
Smit C (2005) Facilitation of tree regeneration in wood pastures. PhD thesis University of Fribourg, Fribourg, Switzerland
Smit C, Béguin D, Buttler A, Müller-Schärer H (2005) Safe sites for tree regeneration: a case of associational resistance? J Veg Sci 16:209–214
Smit C, Den Ouden J, Müller-Schärer H (2006) Unpalatable plants facilitate tree sapling survival in wooded pastures. J Appl Ecol 43:305–312
Tate KW, Atwill ER, McDouglas NK, George MR (2003) Spatial and temporal patterns of cattle faeces deposition on rangeland. J Range Manage 56:432–438
Vandenberghe C, Freléchoux F, Gadallah F, Buttler A (2006a) Competitive effects of herbaceous vegetation on tree seedling emergence, growth and survival: does gap size matter? J Veg Sci 17:481–488
Vandenberghe C, Freléchoux F, Moravie MA, Gadallah F, Buttler A (2006b) Short-term effects of cattle browsing on tree sapling growth in mountain wooded pastures. Plant Ecol 188:253–264
Vittoz P (1998) Flore et végétation du Parc jurassien vaudois: typologie, écologie et dynamique des milieux. PhD thesis, University of Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland
White SL, Sheffield RE, Washburn SP, King LD, Green JT (2001) Spatial and time distribution of dairy cattle excreta in an intensive pasture system. J Environ Qual 30:2180–2187
Wu J, David JL (2002) A spatially explicit hierarchical approach to modelling complex ecological systems: theory and applications. Ecol Model 153:7–26
Zamora R, Gómez JM, Hodar JA, Castro J, Garcia D (2001) Effect of browsing by ungulates on sapling growth of Scots pine in a Mediterranean environment: consequences for forest regeneration. Forest Ecol Manag 144:33–42
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Corresponding author
Editor information
Editors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 2009 Springer Science + Business Media B.V
About this chapter
Cite this chapter
Buttler, A., Kohler, F., Gillet, F. (2009). The Swiss Mountain Wooded Pastures: Patterns and Processes. In: Rigueiro-Rodróguez, A., McAdam, J., Mosquera-Losada, M.R. (eds) Agroforestry in Europe. Advances in Agroforestry, vol 6. Springer, Dordrecht. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4020-8272-6_19
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4020-8272-6_19
Publisher Name: Springer, Dordrecht
Print ISBN: 978-1-4020-8271-9
Online ISBN: 978-1-4020-8272-6
eBook Packages: Biomedical and Life SciencesBiomedical and Life Sciences (R0)