Conservation of Diversity in Times of Climatic Change
Conservation of Diversity in Times of Climatic Change
Conservation of Diversity in Times of Climatic Change
PS Number __________________
APPLICATION TO PROGRAMME : BRITE-EURAM III
[For Commission use only]
Contract for:
Shared-cost EU project
Project
Co-ordinator: Gh Kassel, FB 6, ASL
Hubert B. Beckmann, M.sc.agr.
Contractors:
(full names of the organisations) (country code)
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Document Revision Date: January d, yyyy
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Table of Contents
1 CONFIDENTIAL SUMMARY OF A SIGNATED WPRNR.21ST )ENTURY........................3
1.1 SOCIAL NEEDS.................................................................................................................... 3
1.2 COMMUNITY ADDED VALUE....................................................................................... ..............3
1.3 SPECIFIC PROGRAM............................................................................... ..............................4
1.4 T ECHNICAL AND SCIENTIFIC OBJECTIVES AS WELL AS INNOVATIVE ASPECTS............................ ...........4
1.5 SCIENTIFIC AND T ECHNICAL WORKPLAN ......................................................... .........................4
1.6 PARTNERSHIPS.................................................................................................. .................5
1.7 STRUCTURE OF THE PROJECT MANAGEMENT......................................................... ......................6
1.8 DEVELOPMENT PERSPECTIVES......................................................................................... ........6
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Thus TRUNPA is enhancing the implementation of the NATURE 2000 program. It works adapted
overlapping regulations while the regional rangeland conditions differ a lot. TRUNPA includes
several, culturally and technologically differing countries, which are forming an ecological transect.
TRUNPA also studies the administrative condition of a adapted comprehensive implementation of
our project aim as well as of NATURA 2000 by a binding agricultural policy.
implementing of regulations respectively their control. Moreover there will be tested the influence
of certain livestock species on migration as well as the covariance of methodological applications
in up-takes, and in order of shortening the lead-time and minimizing the costs.
TRUNPA work is planned in three development parts:
The first one takes time during the period of plants flowering. Its mission is the field work taking
botanical and environmental samples of Protected Areas and Green Corridors. The second scans
the plant migration, and in a third cycle being fixed during the rest of year results will be analyzed,
interpreted, written down and applied.
Principal project outputs will be:
Pan-European reintroduction of transhumance consolidates the plant species migration, and
therefore the species conservation. A modified profession of the eco-herdsman contributes in
society’s ecological formation taking into account the environmental claims of climatic change.
Developed methodologies and its applicability are evaluating the transhumant rangeland use
and its contribution to plant conservation in the Protected Areas as well as to plant migration in
the Green Corridors.
A GIS controlled monitoring facilities the administrating of Protected Areas.
Outputs of the different national project groups will be:
Identification of indicator species discovering the plant migration and the succession of the
plant communities respectively to the environmental changes.
Composition of an adapted grazing herd guarantying the preservation of plant diversity.
Analysis of the possible substitution of domestic grazing animals.
On the way to these outputs, the following major milestones are targeted:
Installation and utilization of closed forums in the Internet. The planed groups will be: Steering
committee, the practical group of herders, countrymen and politicians, the geo-botanical group,
the group of plant migration, the statistic-elaboration group, and a national group of each
participating country.
Web-pages of popular scientific content are connecting the project to the public and the
popular knowledge.
A methodology to evaluate the plant migration is installed.
The duties of the field study are complemented.
Soil and plant samples are chemically analyzed.
An advanced course of “Multivariate Analysis of Ecological Data” at the University of South
Bohemia, Cezke Budejovice, Czech Republic is visited.
Yearly research-reports are written.
Internet meetings are arranged. Twice a year meeting with project-evaluating contents are
realized.
Public Relation Work is getting answered.
Writing of a final report of research project (each country group)
1.6 Partnerships
Several European partners are guaranteeing the success of this project. An external assistant takes
account for backing up pt. 1 of the Scientific Objectives. Each of further points is conducted by the
concerning institute of a different national group.
The partnerships have to be separated in two levels:
an internal national level forwarding the investigation in Protected Areas and Green Corridors;
an external international applying different adapted methods to succeed the agreed results
supporting the maintenance of conservation in Protected Areas.
It is strived for including universities and institutions of the following Countries in the project group:
Germany the German national group takes account of Scientific Objective pt. 3
Department of Architecture, Urbanism and Landscaping, FB 06, Kassel University, chairman
Prof. Dr. Gert Rosenthal
Department of Bioinformatics, Hohenheim University, Stuttgart, chairman Prof. Dr. Hans-
Peter Piepho
Spain the Spanish national group takes account of Scientific Objective pt. 4
Instituto de Sociología y Estudios Campesinos, Córdoba University, chairman Prof. Dr. Eduardo
Sevilla Guzmán
Escuela de Pastores, Consorcio para el Desarrollo Rural del Oriente de
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conservation of habitats in particular areas and their biodiversity, and to avoid their deterioration.
Corridors are essential for the migration, dispersal and genetic exchange of wild species and
networking the several European regions.
[11] Van Soest-PJ. 1982. Nutritional Ecology of the Ruminant. Durham and Downey, Portland, Oregon, US.
[12] Rowan-RC, White-LD, Conner-JR. 1994. Understanding cause/effect relationships in stocking rate
change over time. J.rang.manag. 47 (5), 349-54.
[13] McCall-TC, Brown-RD, Bender-LC. 1997. Comparison of techniques for determining the nutritional
carrying capacity for white-tailed deer. J.rang.manag. 50 (1), 33-38.
[14] Tainton-NM, Morris-CD, Hardy-MB. 1996. Complexity and Stability in Grazing Systems. 275-300. in:
Hodgons-J, Illius-AW. CAB International. UK.
[15] Nolte-KR, Gabor-TM, Hehman-MW, Asleson-MA, Fulbright-TE, Rutledge-JC. 1994. Long-term effects of
brush management on vegetation diversity in ephemeral drainages. J.rang.manag. 47 (6), 457-59.
[16] Waddington-J, MacCartney-DH, Lefkovitc-LP. 1999. Effects of management on species dynamics of
Canadian aspen parkland pastures. J.rang.manag. 52 (1), 60-67.
[17] Armstrong-RH, Grant-SH, Hodgson-J. 1987. Grazing choices and hill management. Occasional
Symposium, British Grassland Society 21, 175-78
[18] FAO. 1991. Guidelines: land evaluation for extensive grazing. Roma.
[19] Milton-SJ, Dean-WRJ, Ellis-RP. 1998. Rangeland health assessment : a practical guide for ranchers in
arid Karoo shrublands. J. Arid Environ. 39 (2), 253-65.
[20] Gibson-RS, Bosch-OJH. 1996. Indicator species for the interpretation of vegetation condition in the St.
Bathans area, Central Otago, New Zealand. N. Zeal. J. Eco. 20, 2.1: 163 – 172.
[21] Jongman-RJH, ter Braak-CJF, van Tongeren-OFR. 1995. Data analysis end landscape ecology.
Cambrigde, UK.
[22] Hubert B. Beckmann. 2001. Evaluación de los pastos oromediterráneos de Sierra Nevada en relación a
su aprovechamiento por la ganadería local (ovino trashumante y bovino estante). Consejería de
Agrilcultura y Pesca, Junta de Andalucía. Sevilla.
CITED LITERATURE:
[21] Ellenberg-H. 1984. Entwicklung ohne Rückschläge. Schriftenreihe GTZ Nr. 156, Eschborn. 13-24.
[22] t’Mannetje-L, Haydock-KP. 1963. The dry-weight-rank method for botanical analysis of pastures. J. Brit.
Grassl. Soc. 18: 268 – 75.
[24] ter Braak-CJF. 1996. Unimodal models to relate species to environment. Wageningen, Netherlands.
[25] Ende-CN. 1993. Repeated-measures analysis: growth and other time-dependent measures. in: Design
and analysis of ecological experiments. 113-37. Chapman & Hall. New York.
[26] Ter Braak-CJF, Wiertz-J. 1994. On the statistical analysis of vegetation change: a wetland affected by
water extraction and soil acidification. J.veg.scien. 5: 361-72.
[27] Vacek-S, Bastl-M, Lepš-J. 1999. Vegetation changes in the forest of the Krkonoše Mts. over a period of
air pollution stress (1980-1995). Plant Ecol. 143, 1-11.
[28] Lepš-J, Michálek-J, Kulíšek-P, Uhlík-P. 1995. Use of paired plots and multivariate analysis for the
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line corridor
landscape corridor
source: http://www2.alterra.wur.nl
Pasture livestock supports different types of corridors: grazing on rangelands including several
ecosystems realizes plant migration through landscape corridors, in the meantime a transhumant
movement forms stepping stone corridors or line corridors according to realized grazing activity.
For grazing animals there has to be differentiated between three species function types of corridor:.
There is presented the previous research related to the rangeland use in Biosphere Reserve Sierra
Nevada:
It has been evaluated the goat husbandry in altitudes between 1.300 m and 2.150 m above sea
level Grazing was shown to be adapted in the study region as well in terms of sustainable carrying
capacity as in nutritional offer for grazing animals. This result was consolidated by proving an
abundant forage reserve, by examining existing forage composition, and by an extend analyzing of
nutritional values of sampled forage species [29].
There also has been compared the diet of sheep and of rock goat in the alpine levels, at a height of
more than 2.000 m above sea level, at the southern side of Sierra Nevada. It was analysed
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animals’ excrements, relating it to the forage supply of vegetation. It was shown that sheep
pastured grass- (41,6 %) as well as herb- (32,2 %) and shrub-vegetation (26,1 %). Rock goats
consume predominantly grass- (57,7 %) and shrub-vegetation (34,8 %), in which the species
Junperus nana and Junperus sabina make up an important part (20,5%) [30]. It was also proved,
that the composition of sheep’s diet was significantly influenced as well by forage over as by the
protein content of forage species [31].
It was informed about the bio-climatic environment of Sierra Nevada’s rangelands, and about both
traditional and present transhumant movements of current livestock. He verified a continuing
process of change in grazing herds replacing step by step traditional ewes and goats by labour-
extensive cattle husbandry [32].
In the rural areas of Granada, where Sierra Nevada belongs to, this is caused by immense social-
cultural changes in the last four decades, and due to his fact by a significant diminishing of
herdsman [33].
Two own previous investigations have been realised:
It was to notice, that sheep and goat husbandry farming systems in the southern part of the Sierra
Nevada, the so called Alpujarra, already are of a traditional form. Thus there have been suggested
different forms of an economically sustainable development adjusting to the different initial
positions [34].
Rangelands of High Sierra Nevada (2.250 to 3.000 m above sea level) have been proved not to be
overgrazed. The estimated forage quality did satisfy sheep’s energy requirements, meanwhile
cattle suffered a lack. Therefore it was observed that they did elude to adjacent rangelands [35].
CITED LITERATURE:
[29] Fernández García-P. 1995. Aprovechamiento silvopastoral de un agrosistema mediterráneo de montaña
en el Sureste ibérico: evaluación del potencial forrajero y la capacidad sustentadora. Facultad de
Ciencias, Universidad de Granada.
[30] Martínez -T. 1988. Comparación de los hábitos alimentarios de la cabra montés y de la oveja en la zona
alpina de Sierra Nevada. Archivos de zootecnica, 37: 39 – 53.
[31] Martínez Martínez-T. 1995. Estrategia alimentaria de la oveja en una zona de alta montaña. in: Actos de
la XXXV Reunión Científica de la Sociedad Española para el Estudio de los Pastos (S.E.E.P.), Centro de
Investigación y Tecnología Agrarias. Universidad de La Laguna, Tenerife. 113-117.
[32] Rubio de Lucas-JL, Albert Gamboa-MJ, Muñoz Municio-MC, José Gómez-SS. 1995. Cuadernos de la
trashumancia. - No 9. Sierra Nevada. ICONA, Madrid.)
[33] Carrascosa Salas. 1992. Las Alpujarras. Tomo 2. Monográfica Tierras del Sur. Univ. Granada. Spain.
[34] Beckmann-H. 1998. Animal husbandry in the mediterranean region of Spain. Faunus, 4: 5.
[35] Beckmann- H. 1999. Transhumanz als angepasste Nutzung einer Mediterranen Gebirgsweide.
Witzenhausen, University Gh Kassel, Germany.
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