A Pilot Project to Limit the Human Impacts on the Fragile Antarctic Biota: Mitigation of a Runway through Vegetation Transplantation

Autor: Francesco Malfasi, Stefano Ponti, Nicoletta Cannone
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2021
Předmět:
0106 biological sciences
010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences
Geography
Planning and Development

TJ807-830
Scientific experiment
Management
Monitoring
Policy and Law

TD194-195
biological conservation
010603 evolutionary biology
01 natural sciences
Renewable energy sources
Boulder clay
medicine
GE1-350
Ecosystem
vegetation transplantation
0105 earth and related environmental sciences
flora and vegetation
runway airstrip
mitigation of anthropogenic impacts
Environmental effects of industries and plants
Renewable Energy
Sustainability and the Environment

business.industry
Environmental resource management
Biota
Priority areas
Environmental sciences
Transplantation
management decisions
Environmental science
Runway
medicine.symptom
business
Vegetation (pathology)
Biological conservation
Flora and vegetation
Management decisions
Mitigation of anthropogenic impacts
Runway airstrip
Vegetation transplantation
Zdroj: Sustainability
Volume 13
Issue 2
Sustainability, Vol 13, Iss 811, p 811 (2021)
ISSN: 2071-1050
DOI: 10.3390/su13020811
Popis: Background: Antarctica is among the world&rsquo
s last great wildernesses, but the anthropogenic activities and associated infrastructures threaten its fragile biota. We quantify the impact of the construction of a 2200 m long gravel runway airstrip for airfreight operations of the Italian research station on vegetation ecosystems at Boulder Clay (continental Antarctica). We propose a pilot project to mitigate this impact through the transplantation of vegetation from the runway to safe sites. Methods: A vegetation field survey was performed through phytosociological relevé
s and vegetation mapping and data were analyzed through multivariate analysis. Results: We quantify the destructive impact of the runway construction on the flora and vegetation of Boulder Clay. Based on vegetation characteristics, 28 priority areas were transplanted from the runway to safe sites, with 89% of survival. Conclusions: To our knowledge, this is the first time that vegetation transplantation was performed in Antarctica to mitigate the consequences of human actions, as formerly it was used only for scientific experiments. This pilot project provides a tool to support management decisions, involving the quantitative evaluation of the infrastructure impacts and showing the suitability of practical mitigation actions. This pilot project proposes a practical tool exportable to all Antarctica and beyond and suggests to link the permissions&rsquo
release for the new infrastructures in Antarctica to the realization of specific conservation and mitigation actions.
Databáze: OpenAIRE