Rigid nature by fixation in landscape ecological processes

A. Barendregt, H. Siepel

Research output: Contribution to conferenceAbstractOther research output

Abstract

Nature conservation in Europe may suffer from a drawback as a result of its fine legislation and regulation of nature parts in the landscape, in between all other functions. As a consequence of land use surrounding the last bits and pieces of nature, these appear to become rather rigid. When a goal is set as for instance ‘heathland’, this piece of land has to be managed as a heathland, despite succession due to ongoing weathering of minerals, leaching of these to deeper layers and consequently poorer vegetation quality for herbivores, resulting in their decline. We investigated this dilemma by having interviews with policy makers and nature managers from different areas, combined with a literature review on the qualities during time and the ecological processes involved. Finally, we formulate some suggestions to mitigate the foreseen effects and the call to open up the landscape physically in a wider perspective. This fixation of processes is quite general: it occurs in reed lands (where reed is gradually poisoning its own substrate), in coastal and inland sand dunes (succession of vegetation and building up of a soil profile), along rivers (due to its fixed channel), in fens (due to its fixed water table) and even on the longer run in forests. As a consequence, species that need dynamic landscape processes disappear from the nature areas that we preserve with great care. We need low frequent dynamics to counter these landscape processes, however, nowadays habitats are locked up in their nature reserves by having managers to maintain and report on the precise proportion of each habitat and the population sizes of the selected species. Nature conservation has to be replaced by nature management, given the space to anticipate and rejuvenate.
Original languageEnglish
Pages64
Number of pages1
Publication statusPublished - 27 May 2015
EventLandscape and Landscape Ecology - 17th international symposium - Nitra, Slovakia
Duration: 27 May 201530 May 2015

Conference

ConferenceLandscape and Landscape Ecology - 17th international symposium
Country/TerritorySlovakia
CityNitra
Period27/05/1530/05/15

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