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Dive into the research topics where Benjamin Komac is active.

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Featured researches published by Benjamin Komac.


Plant Ecology | 2007

Gypsophile vegetation patterns under a range of soil properties induced by topographical position

Yolanda Pueyo; Concepción L. Alados; Melchor Maestro; Benjamin Komac

Iberian gypsophile plant communities are considered a priority for conservation by the European Community because of their highly specialized flora in gypsum outcrops in arid and semiarid regions. Despite the ecological importance of these ecosystems, the edaphic factors that constrain plant communities on gypsiferous soils remain unclear. It has been proposed that both the chemical and physical restrictive conditions of gypsum soils determine gypsophily in plants. Here we hypothesize that the rigors of the gypsum soil environment depends on topography, decreasing from flat areas on hilltops to south-oriented slopes and finally to slopes oriented to the north. We also hypothesized that the relaxation of the rigors of the gypsum soil environment with topography affects both to individual plant and community characteristics of gypsophile vegetation: we expect a reduction of gypsophyte abundance, an increase of diversity and the amelioration of facilitative interactions of plant species. We analysed the physical and chemical properties of gypsum soils that have been proposed that determine the rigors of the gypsum soil environment (i.e.: unbalanced ion concentrations and superficial soil crust). The predicted rigor gradient along topographical locations was confirmed and was mainly caused by superficial soil crust. The decreasing rigor gradient was accompanied by a fall in the abundance of gypsophytes. However, when gypsophytes were considered separately, several patterns were observed, indicating distinct tolerance to relaxation of rigor of the gypsum soil conditions and different competition abilities between gypsophytes. Plant species were more clumped, and gypsophile communities presented higher diversity, evenness and richness values where rigor of gypsum soil conditions were maximum (flat hilltop positions). Relaxation of rigor (north-oriented slopes) was characterized by loss of facilitative interaction between species and the dominance of the gypsovag Rosmarinus officinalis L., although richness was still very high, which can be attributed to the coexistence of gypsophytes and gypsovags. We conclude that the rigor of gypsum soil environment gradient with topography is mainly determined by superficial soil crust, and it is a crucial determinant of gypsophile plant communities.


Journal of Environmental Management | 2013

Modeling shrub encroachment in subalpine grasslands under different environmental and management scenarios

Benjamin Komac; Sonia Kéfi; Paloma Nuche; J. Escós; Concepción L. Alados

Woody plants are spreading in many alpine and subalpine ecosystems and are expected to continue increasing in response to land abandonment and global warming. This encroachment threatens species diversity, and considerable efforts have been deployed to control it. In this study, we combined a lattice model and field data to investigate the efficiency of different management strategies in controlling shrub encroachment in alpine grasslands. The model parameter values were estimated in the field based on the thorny shrub Echinospartum horridum (erizón) which is currently encroaching in central Spanish Pyrenees. Our study shows that encroachment could accelerate if climate warming continues. Different management scenarios consisting of a gradient of livestock pressures, fire events and mechanical removal were simulated to identify scenarios able to control the expansion of shrubs into grasslands. Our study shows that grazing alone cannot stop encroachment. Rather, a combination of grazing and shrub removal (either by fire or mechanical removal) is needed, and our model can help estimate the frequency and intensities of the shrub removal. This model can be used to investigate the consequences of different management scenarios and environmental variability which could be of practical value in the preservation of alpine grasslands.


Ecological Applications | 2008

DIFFERENCES IN GYPSUM PLANT COMMUNITIES ASSOCIATED WITH HABITAT FRAGMENTATION AND LIVESTOCK GRAZING

Yolanda Pueyo; Concepción L. Alados; Benjamin Komac; Max Rietkerk

The negative consequences of habitat fragmentation for plant communities have been documented in many regions of the world. In some fragmented habitats, livestock grazing has been proposed to be a dispersal mechanism reducing isolation between fragments. In others, grazing acts together with fragmentation in a way that increases habitat degradation. Iberian gypsum plant communities have been grazed and fragmented by agricultural practices for centuries. Although their conservation is considered a priority by the European Community, the effects of fragmentation on gypsum plant communities and the possible role of livestock grazing remain unknown. In addition, a substantial proportion of plant species growing in gypsum environments are gypsum specialists. They could be particularly affected by fragmentation, as was found for other habitat specialists (i.e., serpentine and calcareous specialists). In this study (1) we investigated the effect of fragmentation and grazing on gypsum plant community composition (species and life-forms), and (2) we tested to see if gypsum specialists were differently affected by fragmentation and grazing than habitat generalists. A vegetation survey was conducted in the largest gypsum outcrop of Europe (Middle Ebro Valley, northeast Spain). Fragmented and continuous sites in grazed and ungrazed areas were compared. Measurements related to species and composition of life-forms were contrasted first for the whole gypsum plant community and then specifically for the gypsum specialists. In the whole community, our results showed lower plant species diversity in fragmented sites, mainly due to the larger dominance of species more tolerant to fragmented habitat conditions. With livestock grazing, the plant species richness and the similarity in plant species composition between remnants was larger, suggesting that animals were acting as dispersal agents between fragments. As expected, gypsum specialists were less abundant in fragmented areas, and grazing led to the disappearance of the rare gypsum specialist Campanula fastigiata. According to our results, conservation strategies for gypsum plant communities in human-dominated landscapes should consider that fragmentation and grazing modify plant community composition affecting gypsum specialists in particular.


Plant Ecology | 2011

Spatial patterns of species distributions in grazed subalpine grasslands

Benjamin Komac; Concepción L. Alados; C. G. Bueno; D. Gómez

Spatial patterns of species diversity have important influences on the functioning of ecosystems, and the effect of livestock grazing on spatial heterogeneity can differ depending on the scale of the analysis. This study examined the effects of grazing on the spatial patterns of species distributions and whether the effects of grazing on the spatial distributions of a species vary with the scale of the analysis. Data were collected at three locations in the subalpine grasslands of Ordesa-Monte Perdido National Park and Aísa Valley, Central Pyrenees, Spain, which differed in mean stocking rates. Aspect explained about one-third of the environmental variation in species distributions. In flat areas, spatial variation in species composition varied with grazing intensity at two scales. At a coarse scale (among vegetation patches), grazing promoted patchiness, and among-transect variation in species diversity and grazing intensity were positively correlated. At a fine scale (within vegetation patches), the disruption of the self-organizing processes of the species spatial distributions resulted in a reduction in the long-range spatial autocorrelations of some of the characteristic species and in the homogenization of species spatial distributions. The presence of encroaching Echinospartum horridum had a significant influence on the effect of grazing on south-facing grassland slopes.


Ecological Complexity | 2009

Do vegetation patch spatial patterns disrupt the spatial organization of plant species

Concepción L. Alados; Teresa Navarro; Benjamin Komac; Virginia Pascual; Francisco José Sáez Martínez; Baltasar Cabezudo; Yolanda Pueyo


Biological Journal of The Linnean Society | 2010

Dispersal abilities and spatial patterns in fragmented landscapes

Concepción L. Alados; Teresa Navarro; Benjamin Komac; Virginia Pascual; Max Rietkerk


Ecological Indicators | 2014

Developmental instability as an index of adaptation to drought stress in a Mediterranean oak

Paloma Nuche; Benjamin Komac; Jesús Julio Camarero; Concepción L. Alados


Archive | 2008

Valoración ecológica y productiva de los pastos supraforestales en el Parque Nacional de Ordesa y Monte Perdido

Ricardo García-González; Concepción L. Alados; C. Guillermo Bueno; Federico Fillat; Maite Gartzia; Daniel Gómez García; Benjamin Komac; A. Marinas; Nicolás Saint-Jean


Rangeland Ecology & Management | 2009

Modeling Bare Ground With Classification Trees in Northern Spain

Keith T. Weber; Concepción L. Alados; C. Guillermo Bueno; Bhushan Gokhale; Benjamin Komac; Yolanda Pueyo


Applied Vegetation Science | 2018

Assessment of prescribed fire and cutting as means of controlling the invasion of sub-alpine grasslands by Echinospartum horridum

Paloma Nuche; Benjamin Komac; Maite Gartzia; Jesús Villellas; Ramón Reiné; Concepción L. Alados

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Concepción L. Alados

Spanish National Research Council

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Yolanda Pueyo

Spanish National Research Council

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Maite Gartzia

Spanish National Research Council

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Paloma Nuche

Spanish National Research Council

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Daniel Gómez García

Spanish National Research Council

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Federico Fillat

Spanish National Research Council

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J. Escós

University of Zaragoza

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Jesús Julio Camarero

Spanish National Research Council

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Ricardo García-González

Spanish National Research Council

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