4.6 Article

Traditional Free-Ranging Livestock Farming as a Management Strategy for Biological and Cultural Landscape Diversity: A Case from the Southern Apennines

Journal

LAND
Volume 10, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/land10090957

Keywords

transhumance; traditional pastoralism; free-ranging livestock; rural abandonment; land use change; Southern Apennines; Monti Picentini Park

Funding

  1. Ministry for Education, University, and Research of Italy, as part of the National Operational Programme on Research and Innovation [CUP E62G17000000006]

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Mediterranean mountain landscapes are experiencing widespread abandonment, leading to the loss of traditional land use practices and impacting biodiversity. Traditional livestock grazing can be a valuable tool for maintaining high biological and cultural diversity, but stronger cooperation and attention to local needs are necessary.
Mediterranean mountain landscapes are undergoing a widespread phenomenon of abandonment. This brings, as a consequence, the loss of traditional land use practices, such as transhumant pastoralism, as well as shrub and wood encroachment, with repercussions on the biodiversity associated with semi-open, human-managed landscapes. In this study, we focus on a mountain pasture from the Southern Apennines (Italy), where free-ranging transhumant grazing is still carried out, to quantify the effects of grazing presence and exclusion on arthropod diversity, and to qualitatively characterize the plant communities of grazed and ungrazed areas. Using field sampling, remote sensing, and semi-structured interviews, we assessed the validity of traditional cattle farming as a landscape management tool. Indeed, high diversity grasslands excluded from grazing were characterized by significantly less even and more dominated arthropod communities, as well as fewer plant species and families. Moreover, in areas that have been consistently grazed over the years, we found no forest encroachment from 1955 to 2019. However, rural communities are experiencing difficulties in keeping local traditions alive, even with current agri-environmental schemes. Thus, traditional livestock grazing can be a valuable management tool to maintain high biological and cultural diversity, even if stronger cooperation and attention to local needs is necessary.

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