4.3 Article

Using plant diversity to reduce vulnerability and increase drought resilience of permanent and sown productive grasslands

Journal

FOURRAGES
Volume -, Issue 253, Pages 61-74

Publisher

ASSOC FRANCAISE PRODUCTION FOURRAGERE
DOI: 10.1111/gfs.12578

Keywords

drought stress severity; resistance; survival; insurance effect; ecosystem functioning; complementarity

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Climate change leads to increased variability of droughts and extreme events in Europe's semi-natural and sown productive grasslands, posing challenges to their sustainability. Plant strategies for drought resistance depend on stress intensity, with trade-offs between maintaining leaf growth and survival under severe drought. The diverse genetic pool of forage grasses presents a potential for adapting to future droughts, and plant species diversity can stabilize forage production by including drought-resistant species and enhancing ecosystem functioning. This emphasizes the importance of valuing both intra- and inter-specific plant diversity to reduce vulnerability and increase resilience of productive grasslands.
Climate change associated with a greater variability of inter- and intra-annual droughts and the occurrence of extreme events act in combination to challenge semi-natural and sown productive grasslands in Europe. Successful plant strategies under drought strongly depend on stress intensity. Drought resistance to maintain leaf growth under moderate stress presents trade-offs with drought survival after growth cessation under life-threatening drought. Substantial intra-specific variability exists in key forage grasses originating from the Mediterranean to the cooltemperate climates and represents a great potential for adaptation of future ecotypes and cultivars to a larger range of drought intensities. Plant species diversity offers an opportunity to stabilize forage production in two ways. First, growth reduction under stress is significantly smaller for diverse compared to simple plant communities because the former offers the opportunity to include drought-resistant (or droughtsurviving) species. Second, positive interactions among species increase ecosystem functioning of more diverse plant communities under moderate drought, allowing them to compensate for drought-induced yield reductions. Currently, available cultivars of perennial forage species adapted to dry climate are still rare and only a few forage species are used in productive systems. Thus, both intra- and inter-specific plant diversity should be better valued to reduce vulnerability and increase resilience of productive grasslands.

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