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  5. Can a mesotrophic grassland community be restored on a post-industrial sandy site with compost made from waste materials?

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Article
English
2010

Can a mesotrophic grassland community be restored on a post-industrial sandy site with compost made from waste materials?

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0 Files

English
2010
Biological Conservation
Vol 144 (1)
DOI: 10.1016/j.biocon.2010.10.004

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Davey L Jones
Davey L Jones

Bangor University

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Susan Tandy
Hilary Wallace
Davey L Jones
+3 more

Abstract

Restoration of sites degraded by industry to species-rich semi-natural vegetation communities is difficult; it usually involves the addition of soil ameliorants but excessive fertility may favour dominance by competitive species. In a field-experiment we tested the establishment of a biodiverse mesotrophic grassland community using different compost types (comprising of mixtures of waste materials), application rates and seeding (with species in the target community). Compost addition to the alkaline sandy substrate increased soil organic matter, nutrient content and water holding capacity (WHC), whilst decreasing pH. Over the first two growing seasons compost addition, (especially at a higher rate) increased total vegetation cover (from <20% to a maximum of 67%), although the cover of the target community remained below 20%. Seeding with target species greatly increased their establishment on compost-treated plots, demonstrating its value for restoration of mesotrophic grassland communities in such sites lacking a local seed source. Five soil properties accounted for 46% of the variation in target species density: negative correlations with soil pH and %N, and positive correlations with electrical conductivity (EC), %C, and WHC. For this mesotrophic grassland community, high EC and WHC and low pH were most important for forb species and high %C for grasses. Overall, %C was the soil property that best explained variation in the early restoration success of different compost types and application rates; pH and EC were also correlated with the rate of vegetation establishment and available-P was linked to plant community composition. While a longer time period is needed to judge the sustainability of the outcome, this demonstrates the potential to refine compost properties for restoration of biodiversity.

How to cite this publication

Susan Tandy, Hilary Wallace, Davey L Jones, M.A. Nason, Julie C. Williamson, John R. Healey (2010). Can a mesotrophic grassland community be restored on a post-industrial sandy site with compost made from waste materials?. Biological Conservation, 144(1), pp. 500-510, DOI: 10.1016/j.biocon.2010.10.004.

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Publication Details

Type

Article

Year

2010

Authors

6

Datasets

0

Total Files

0

Language

English

Journal

Biological Conservation

DOI

10.1016/j.biocon.2010.10.004

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