Volume 182, 1 January 2014, Pages 123–130
Biodiversity of Palaearctic grasslands: processes, patterns and conservation
- a Centre for the Humanities, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Országház u. 30., 1014 Budapest, Hungary
- b Centre for Ecology, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Alkotmány u. 2-4., 2063 Vácrátót, Hungary
- Received 9 January 2013, Revised 21 August 2013, Accepted 23 August 2013, Available online 20 September 2013
Highlights
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- Csángós have a fine-tuned traditional management of species-rich hay meadows.
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- Twelve practices are used to maintain meadow and pasture quality.
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- Conscious management of regeneration (e.g. mowing-date-rotation of meadow tracts).
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- Management of traditional farmlands should build on such ecological knowledge.
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- Subsidy systems should support traditional farming in semi-natural landscapes.
Abstract
Abandonment
or change of traditional (pre-modern) management systems threaten
semi-natural grasslands worldwide. Understanding existing traditional
grassland management could greatly help to improve our ability to
preserve biodiversity in traditionally managed farmlands. We studied the
management of species-rich man-made grasslands (ca. 32–52 vascular
plant species on 16 m2) and the related traditional
ecological knowledge in Gyimes (Romania), where more than 40,000
hectares of meadows and pastures are still managed traditionally.
Methods of ecological anthropology e.g. participatory field work,
semi-structured interviews (33 interviewees), and free listings were
used. Csángós (people living in these valleys of the Carpathians)
distinguish hay meadows based on manuring: nearby and distant hay
meadows. Pastures are classified into pastures near settlements,
mountain pastures, and pastures for sheep. Traditional management of
meadows includes mowing, cleaning, mowing-date rotation of tracts,
amelioration with hayseed and Onobrychis viciifolia seeds,
manuring, manual thinning of unwanted plants, suppression of mosses, and
small-scale drainage. We argue that the mowing-date rotation system
found in Gyimes is a unique land-use practice that could greatly enhance
biodiversity together with hayseed scattering. Treatment of pastures is
more simple: sectional cleaning of shrubs/trees, and burning and
corralling against Nardus. The goal of Csángós is not to
protect biodiversity, but to keep their grasslands in good condition for
a long run, and thus ascertain the availability of hay in the needed
quantity and quality. We argue that subsidy systems should encourage the
maintenance of this and similar systems, support the still existing
local traditional communities and also in protected areas management
systems should build on the experiences of these small-scale traditional
farmers.
Keywords
- Conservation management;
- Hay meadow;
- Ecosystem service;
- Natura 2000;
- Small-scale farming;
- Traditional ecological knowledge
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