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Slow development of woodland vegetation and bird communities during 33 years of passive rewilding in open farmland

Passive rewilding is a potential tool for expanding woodland cover and restoring biodiversity by abandoning land management and allowing natural vegetation succession to occur. Land can be abandoned to passive rewilding deliberately or due to socio-economic change. Despite abandonment being a major...

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Autores principales: Broughton, Richard K., Bullock, James M., George, Charles, Gerard, France, Maziarz, Marta, Payne, Wesley E., Scholefield, Paul A., Wade, Daniel, Pywell, Richard F.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9651571/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36367885
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0277545
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author Broughton, Richard K.
Bullock, James M.
George, Charles
Gerard, France
Maziarz, Marta
Payne, Wesley E.
Scholefield, Paul A.
Wade, Daniel
Pywell, Richard F.
author_facet Broughton, Richard K.
Bullock, James M.
George, Charles
Gerard, France
Maziarz, Marta
Payne, Wesley E.
Scholefield, Paul A.
Wade, Daniel
Pywell, Richard F.
author_sort Broughton, Richard K.
collection PubMed
description Passive rewilding is a potential tool for expanding woodland cover and restoring biodiversity by abandoning land management and allowing natural vegetation succession to occur. Land can be abandoned to passive rewilding deliberately or due to socio-economic change. Despite abandonment being a major driver of land use change, few have studied the long-term outcomes for vegetation and biodiversity in Western Europe. Studies are also biased towards sites that are close to seed sources and favourable to woodland colonisation. In this case-study, we reconstruct a time series of passive rewilding over 33 years on 25 ha of former farmland that had been subject to soil tipping, far from woodland seed sources. Natural colonisation by shrubs and trees was surveyed at three points during the time series, using field mapping and lidar. Breeding birds were surveyed at three time points, and compared with surveys from nearby farmland. Results showed that natural colonisation of woody vegetation was slow, with open grassland dominating the old fields for two decades, and small wetlands developing spontaneously. After 33 years, thorny shrub thickets covered 53% of the site and former hedgerows became subsumed or degraded, but trees remained scarce. However, the resulting habitat mosaic of shrubland, grassland and wetland supported a locally distinctive bird community. Farmland bird species declined as passive rewilding progressed, but this was countered by relatively more wetland birds and an increase in woodland birds, particularly songbirds, compared to nearby farmland. Alongside biodiversity benefits, shrubland establishment by passive rewilding could potentially provide ecosystem services via abundant blossom resources for pollinators, and recreation and berry-gathering opportunities for people. Although closed-canopy woodland remained a distant prospect even after 33 years, the habitat mosaic arising from passive rewilding could be considered a valuable outcome, which could contribute to nature recovery and provision of ecosystem services.
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spelling pubmed-96515712022-11-15 Slow development of woodland vegetation and bird communities during 33 years of passive rewilding in open farmland Broughton, Richard K. Bullock, James M. George, Charles Gerard, France Maziarz, Marta Payne, Wesley E. Scholefield, Paul A. Wade, Daniel Pywell, Richard F. PLoS One Research Article Passive rewilding is a potential tool for expanding woodland cover and restoring biodiversity by abandoning land management and allowing natural vegetation succession to occur. Land can be abandoned to passive rewilding deliberately or due to socio-economic change. Despite abandonment being a major driver of land use change, few have studied the long-term outcomes for vegetation and biodiversity in Western Europe. Studies are also biased towards sites that are close to seed sources and favourable to woodland colonisation. In this case-study, we reconstruct a time series of passive rewilding over 33 years on 25 ha of former farmland that had been subject to soil tipping, far from woodland seed sources. Natural colonisation by shrubs and trees was surveyed at three points during the time series, using field mapping and lidar. Breeding birds were surveyed at three time points, and compared with surveys from nearby farmland. Results showed that natural colonisation of woody vegetation was slow, with open grassland dominating the old fields for two decades, and small wetlands developing spontaneously. After 33 years, thorny shrub thickets covered 53% of the site and former hedgerows became subsumed or degraded, but trees remained scarce. However, the resulting habitat mosaic of shrubland, grassland and wetland supported a locally distinctive bird community. Farmland bird species declined as passive rewilding progressed, but this was countered by relatively more wetland birds and an increase in woodland birds, particularly songbirds, compared to nearby farmland. Alongside biodiversity benefits, shrubland establishment by passive rewilding could potentially provide ecosystem services via abundant blossom resources for pollinators, and recreation and berry-gathering opportunities for people. Although closed-canopy woodland remained a distant prospect even after 33 years, the habitat mosaic arising from passive rewilding could be considered a valuable outcome, which could contribute to nature recovery and provision of ecosystem services. Public Library of Science 2022-11-11 /pmc/articles/PMC9651571/ /pubmed/36367885 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0277545 Text en © 2022 Broughton et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Broughton, Richard K.
Bullock, James M.
George, Charles
Gerard, France
Maziarz, Marta
Payne, Wesley E.
Scholefield, Paul A.
Wade, Daniel
Pywell, Richard F.
Slow development of woodland vegetation and bird communities during 33 years of passive rewilding in open farmland
title Slow development of woodland vegetation and bird communities during 33 years of passive rewilding in open farmland
title_full Slow development of woodland vegetation and bird communities during 33 years of passive rewilding in open farmland
title_fullStr Slow development of woodland vegetation and bird communities during 33 years of passive rewilding in open farmland
title_full_unstemmed Slow development of woodland vegetation and bird communities during 33 years of passive rewilding in open farmland
title_short Slow development of woodland vegetation and bird communities during 33 years of passive rewilding in open farmland
title_sort slow development of woodland vegetation and bird communities during 33 years of passive rewilding in open farmland
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9651571/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36367885
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0277545
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