Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Francesc Montané is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Francesc Montané.


Plant and Soil | 2010

Aboveground litter quality changes may drive soil organic carbon increase after shrub encroachment into mountain grasslands

Francesc Montané; Joan Romanyà; Pere Rovira; Pere Casals

Shrub encroachment into grasslands is ubiquitous but its impact on soil organic C (SOC) remains unclear. In previous work we had observed that shrub encroachment into mesic mountain grasslands increased SOC content. Here we sought the mechanisms of this increase. To this end, we assessed aboveground and belowground production for a conifer shrub (Juniperus communis L), a legume shrub (Cytisus balansae ssp. europaeus (G. López & Jarvis) Muñoz Garmendia) and grass (Festuca eskia Ramond ex DC), together with decomposition rates for both aboveground litter and roots. Belowground C net inputs do not clearly explain SOC increase: grass root production was higher than that of either shrub and the decomposition rate of grass roots was the lowest. Aboveground C net inputs were only slightly greater in shrubs than in grass, but the decomposition rate of litter of both shrubs was much lower than that of grass. The decomposition of conifer litter was N-limited, whereas that of legume shrub litter was P-limited. Thus we conclude that the SOC increases after shrub encroachment into mesic grasslands probably as a result of higher recalcitrance of shrub aboveground litter relative to grass litter.


Annals of Forest Science | 2009

Spatial patterns of shrub cover after different fire disturbances in the Pyrenees.

Francesc Montané; Pere Casals; Marc Taull; Bernard Lambert; Mark R. T. Dale

Abstract• Woody encroachment into grasslands is a worldwide phenomenon. In the Pyrenees, fire has been used as a management tool to transform part of the encroached land to grassland.• This study aims to compare the spatial patterns of shrub cover 4 y after 4 different fire disturbances (prescribed burning, repeated prescribed burning, wildfire in 20 year-old shrubs and wildfire in 5 year-old shrubs); and also to compare shrub cover after different fire disturbances, accounting for spatial autocorrelation. The study focuses on the shrub Cytisus balansae. Two-dimensional transects (20 × 0.5 m) were established to monitor shrub cover for 4 y after each disturbance type. Autoregressive models and Markov models were used with a Monte Carlo procedure to account for the presence of spatial autocorrelation.• Shrub cover was greater after prescribed burning than after repeated prescribed burning, and it increased with shrub age before disturbance. Differences in spatial patterns were detected in shrub patch size, with repeated prescribed fires and wildfires reducing shrub patch size by half in comparison with prescribed burning.• From the management point of view, the effects of repeated prescribed burning were similar to those of a wildfire on reducing shrub cover and shrub patch size.Résumé• Les empiètements boisés sur les prairies sont un phénomène mondial. Dans les Pyrénées, le feu a été utilisé comme un outil de gestion pour transformer une partie des empiètements boisés en prairies.• Cette étude vise à comparer les caractéristiques spatiales des couverts de buissons 4 ans après 4 différentes perturbations (feu prescrit, feu prescrit répété, feu spontané dans des buissons âgés de 20 ans et feu spontané dans buissons âgés de 5 ans), et aussi de comparer la couverture des buissons après les différents perturbations occasionnées par les incendies, prenant en compte l’autocorrélation spatiale. L’étude se concentre sur les buissons de Cytisus balansae. Deux transects dimensionnels (20 × 0,5 m) ont été mis en place pour suivre la couverture des buissons 4 ans après chaque type de perturbation. Des modèles autorégressifs et des modèles de Markov ont été utilisés avec une procédure de Monte Carlo pour tenir compte de la présence d’une autocorrélation spatiale.• Le couvert des buissons est plus important après le feu prescrit qu’après le feu prescrit répété et il augmente avec l’âge des buissons avant la perturbation. Les différences dans les modèles spatiaux ont été détectées dans la taille des bouquets de buissons, avec les feux prescrits répétés et les feux spontanés réduisant la taille des bouquets de buissons de moitié en comparaison avec le brûlage prescrit.• Du point de vue de la gestion, les effets des feux prescrits répétés ont été similaires à ceux des feux spontanés sur la réduction de la couverture des buissons et de la taille des bouquets de buissons.


PLOS ONE | 2011

How Spatial Heterogeneity of Cover Affects Patterns of Shrub Encroachment into Mesic Grasslands

Francesc Montané; Pere Casals; Mark R. T. Dale

We used a multi-method approach to analyze the spatial patterns of shrubs and cover types (plant species, litter or bare soil) in grassland-shrubland ecotones. This approach allows us to assess how fine-scale spatial heterogeneity of cover types affects the patterns of Cytisus balansae shrub encroachment into mesic mountain grasslands (Catalan Pyrenees, Spain). Spatial patterns and the spatial associations between juvenile shrubs and different cover types were assessed in mesic grasslands dominated by species with different palatabilities (palatable grass Festuca nigrescens and unpalatable grass Festuca eskia). A new index, called RISES (“Relative Index of Shrub Encroachment Susceptibility”), was proposed to calculate the chances of shrub encroachment into a given grassland, combining the magnitude of the spatial associations and the surface area for each cover type. Overall, juveniles showed positive associations with palatable F. nigrescens and negative associations with unpalatable F. eskia, although these associations shifted with shrub development stage. In F. eskia grasslands, bare soil showed a low scale of pattern and positive associations with juveniles. Although the highest RISES values were found in F. nigrescens plots, the number of juvenile Cytisus was similar in both types of grasslands. However, F. nigrescens grasslands showed the greatest number of juveniles in early development stage (i.e. height<10 cm) whereas F. eskia grasslands showed the greatest number of juveniles in late development stages (i.e. height>30 cm). We concluded that in F. eskia grasslands, where establishment may be constrained by the dominant cover type, the low scale of pattern on bare soil may result in higher chances of shrub establishment and survival. In contrast, although grasslands dominated by the palatable F. nigrescens may be more susceptible to shrub establishment; current grazing rates may reduce juvenile survival.


Plant Ecology & Diversity | 2016

Canopy cover and understory composition determine abundance of Vaccinium myrtillus L., a key plant for capercaillie (Tetrao urogallus), in subalpine forests in the Pyrenees

Francesc Montané; David Guixé; Jordi Camprodon

Background: The dwarf shrub Vaccinium myrtillus – with high cover, height, and fruit production – benefits capercaillie (Tetrao urogallus). Aims: Our aim was to quantify landscape (e.g. elevation, geographic location, and precipitation), site (e.g. overstorey cover and stoniness) and very fine scale factors (e.g. spatial associations in the understorey) that affect cover, height, and fruit production of V. myrtillus in subalpine forests in thePyrenees, with understorey usually dominated by Rhododendron ferrugineum. Methods: We sampled 155 plots (0.5 m × 5 m) in six sites. For each plot, in the understorey layer, we assessed species cover, height for R. ferrugineum and V. myrtillus, number of total fruits in V. myrtillus, and spatial associations among V. myrtillus and the remaining cover types. Results: Overstorey cover negatively influenced V. myrtillus cover, its height, and particularly, the number of fruits, which was also negatively influenced by R. ferrugineum cover. Associations between R. ferrugineum and V. myrtillus were site dependent, while V. myrtillus showed mostly positive associations with grasses and mosses. Conclusions: Reducing overstorey and R. ferrugineum cover has the strongest positive effect on increasing V. myrtillus fruit production, but with additional positive effects on V. myrtillus cover and height. Increases in grass and moss coverage could favour V. myrtillus.


Archive | 2017

Are Soil Carbon Stocks in Mountain Grasslands Compromised by Land-Use Changes?

Jordi Garcia-Pausas; Joan Romanyà; Francesc Montané; Ana I. Rios; Marc Taull; Pere Rovira; Pere Casals

Mountain grasslands are generally rich in soil organic C, but the typical high spatial variability of mountain environments, together with the different management systems, makes their soil C content particularly variable. Socio-economic changes of the past decades have caused a progressive abandonment of the traditional use for grazing of some areas, while grazing pressure at easily accessible grasslands have increased. Here, we analyse the effect of these land-use changes on the factors regulating the soil C accumulation and stocks. Overgrazing generally leads to a reduction above- and below-ground litter inputs and a decrease in soil C stocks, affecting some soil physicochemical and biological properties. Additionally, the labile C inputs coming from animal faeces may accelerate the mineralisation of organic matter. Grazing abandonment causes a reduction of aboveground productivity, but the lack of consumption causes a short-term accumulation of organic matter. Its effect on belowground biomass and productivity is less clear. At longer term, grazing abandonment causes a change in the plant community composition, having the shrub encroachment the strongest effect on C storage. The low biochemical quality of shrub litter delays its decomposition and allows higher organic matter accumulation in the topsoil. But the effect of shrub proliferation at the deeper soil is less clear. The low root turnover of shrubs compared to grasses may reduce the C inputs to the soil. But, at the same time, the reduction of the root exudates may also reduce the microbial activity and the organic matter mineralisation.


Global Biogeochemical Cycles | 2007

Shrub encroachment into mesic mountain grasslands in the Iberian peninsula: Effects of plant quality and temperature on soil C and N stocks

Francesc Montané; Pere Rovira; Pere Casals


Geoscientific Model Development | 2017

Evaluating the effect of alternative carbon allocation schemes in a land surface model (CLM4.5) on carbon fluxes, pools, and turnover in temperate forests

Francesc Montané; Andrew Fox; Avelino F. Arellano; Natasha MacBean; M. Ross Alexander; Alex Dye; Daniel A. Bishop; Valerie Trouet; Flurin Babst; Amy E. Hessl; Neil Pederson; Peter D. Blanken; Gil Bohrer; Christopher M. Gough; Marcy E. Litvak; Kimberly A. Novick; Richard P. Phillips; Jeffrey D. Wood; David J. P. Moore


Plant Ecology | 2010

Spatial patterns of shrub encroachment in neighbouring grassland communities in the Pyrenees: floristic composition heterogeneity drives shrub proliferation rates

Francesc Montané; Pere Casals; Marc Taull; Bernard Lambert; Mark R. T. Dale


Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment | 2010

Root decomposition in grazed and abandoned dry Mediterranean dehesa and mesic mountain grasslands estimated by standard labelled roots.

Pere Casals; Jordi Garcia-Pausas; Francesc Montané; Joan Romanyà; Pere Rovira


Global Biogeochemical Cycles | 2007

Shrub encroachment into mesic mountain grasslands in the Iberian peninsula: Effects of plant quality and temperature on soil C and N stocks: SHRUB ENCROACHMENT INTO MESIC GRASSLANDS

Francesc Montané; Pere Rovira; Pere Casals

Collaboration


Dive into the Francesc Montané's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Pere Casals

University of Barcelona

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Pere Rovira

University of Barcelona

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Mark R. T. Dale

University of Northern British Columbia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Alex Dye

West Virginia University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Amy E. Hessl

West Virginia University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Christopher M. Gough

Virginia Commonwealth University

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge