Roberta Berretti
University of Turin
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Featured researches published by Roberta Berretti.
Annals of Forest Science | 2009
Renzo Motta; Paola Nola; Roberta Berretti
Abstract• The alluvial forests of the Ticino valley have been greatly reduced in size and are now represented by only a small number of fragmented remnants. To study the natural development of the black locust, an invasive species, on relatively undisturbed lowland forests, two permanent plots were established in 2005 in the “Siro Negri” Forest Reserve.• The black locust became established almost exclusively between 1940 and 1960. The observed dynamic of the black locust in the Reserve was very similar to what has been observed in its native North American range: following the initial colonization, the black locust firmly established itself in the dominant and intermediate layers but did not regenerate. In addition to the absence of a significant younger population, the decline of the black locust is evident in an elevated mortality rate and higher proportion of black locust biomass in the total coarse woody debris (CWD)• Our results support the hypothesis that the best strategy to control the spread of black locust is to avoid disturbances that favour black locust colonization, and to wait for natural suppression of the species by other trees. Due to the lack of past reference conditions and the future uncertainties, ongoing monitoring will be needed to fully understand the dynamics of forest ecosystem change in the Reserve.Résumé• Les forêts alluviales de la vallée du Tessin ont été fortement réduites en taille et ne sont maintenant représentées que par un petit nombre de vestiges fragmentaires. Pour étudier le développement naturel du robinier, une espèce envahissante, dans des forêts de plaine relativement intactes, deux placettes permanentes ont été établies en 2005 dans la Réserve Forestière « Siro Negri ».• Le robinier s’est établi presque exclusivement entre 1940 et 1960. La dynamique d’installation observée de Robinia pseudoacacia L. dans la réserve est très similaire à ce qui a été observé dans son habitat naturel en Amérique du Nord : après la première colonisation, le robinier s’est fermement établi dans les strates dominantes et intermédiaires, mais il ne s’est pas régénéré. En plus de l’absence d’une population plus jeune, l’évidence du déclin du robinier est révélée par une élévation du taux de mortalité et une plus grande proportion de la biomasse du robinier dans le total des débris ligneux grossiers (CWD).• Nos résultats appuient l’hypothèse que la meilleure stratégie pour contrôler la propagation du robinier est d’éviter les perturbations qui favorisent sa propagation, et d’attendre la suppression physique de l’espèce par d’autres arbres. En raison de l’absence de références sur les conditions passées, et les incertitudes futures, la surveillance continue sera nécessaire pour comprendre la dynamique de l’écosystème forestier dans la réserve.
Annals of Forest Science | 2010
Renzo Motta; Roberta Berretti; Daniele Castagneri; Emanuele Lingua; Paola Nola; Giorgio Vacchiano
Abstract• We studied structural characteristics, amount and quality of coarse woody debris (CWD), intensity of competition and mortality in two subalpine Norway spruce stands withdrawn from regular management. The stands, that we measured twice (in 1993 and 2005), have similar age and structure, but a different time has elapsed since the last silvicultural treatments (respectively 22 and about 55 y).• The main purposes were to analyze the current stage of development as compared to the old-growth one and to highlight the legacies of past management.• Although relatively old, the first plot (Valbona 1) was at the end of the pole stage. CWD was low in volume and was mainly of man-made origin (stumps). A recent thinning from below has reduced density-dependent competition and delayed the development of old-growth characteristics. The second plot (Valbona 2a) was at the beginning of the transition stage, with density-dependent and allogenic mortality both active at the same time. CWD volume was higher in plot Valbona 2a than in Valbona 1, but neither was comparable yet to the reference old-growth sites from Central Europe, both in quantity and in quality (e.g., decay rate continuity).• The effects of the past management were: (1) reducing the quality and quantity of the CWD, (2) alleviating competition, (3) increasing resistance to minor disturbances and, as a consequence, (4) delaying the development processes.• In mature or overmature subalpine Norway spruce stands withdrawn from regular management many decades are necessary to develop old-growth characteristics and a longer period of time is necessary to reach a true old-growth stage.
Plant Biosystems | 2015
Renzo Motta; Matteo Garbarino; Roberta Berretti; I. Bjelanovic; E. Borgogno Mondino; Milic Curovic; Srđan Keren; Fabio Meloni; A. Nosenzo
The structure and the spatio-temporal dynamics of the mixed beech–silver fir–Norway spruce old-growth forest of Biogradska Gora (Montenegro) have been analysed at different spatial scales: at the landscape scale, using a high-resolution SPOT5 satellite image and at the stand level with an intensive field survey. This remote-sensing approach has been used to obtain a land cover map in order to define the main vegetation types and to detect the large canopy gaps (>150 m2). The structural characteristics have been delineated in a 50-ha study area in which a regular 120-m grid was superimposed over a 1:10,000 raster map and 30 sampling points have been obtained. The forest is characterized by a high volume of living trees (1029.6 m3 ha− 1) and coarse woody debris (420.4 m3 ha− 1) and by small-scale disturbances (individual trees to small groups) with a low incidence of intermediate disturbances (18 forest canopy gaps>150 m2 over 1230 ha). The two approaches have proved useful to delineate the spatio-temporal dynamics. The Biogradska Gora forest dynamics are dominated by very small-scale processes, which are partially autogenic and partially caused by allogenic factors. The influence of large-scale or intermediate disturbances has shown to be negligible.
Mountain Research and Development | 2016
Giorgio Vacchiano; Roberta Berretti; Enrico Borgogno Mondino; Fabio Meloni; Renzo Motta
Forests provide direct protection to human settlements from hydrogeomorphic hazards. This paper proposes a method for assessing the effect of natural disturbances on the functionality of direct protection forests (DPFs) in order to prioritize management interventions. We georeferenced disturbance data for wildfires, wind and snow damage, avalanches, and insects and overlaid them to a region-wide DPF map. Within each disturbance polygon, we used a Landsat-5 TM image to identify DPFs with insufficient vegetation cover, by using a maximum likelihood classifier of 6 spectral bands plus 5 vegetation indices. For each disturbance agent, we fitted a generalized linear model of the probability of finding a forested pixel, as a function of topography, time since disturbance, distance from disturbance edge, summer precipitation, and drought in the disturbance year. DPFs covered almost half of total forest area in the study region. Disturbance by insects occurred in more than one sixth of all forests. Avalanche and wildfire occurred each in about one tenth of total forest area, and wind and snow disturbance in only 1%. In the last 50 years, disturbances had a recurrence rate of 3% every 10 years. Almost one sixth of DPFs are currently lacking sufficient forest cover. Wildfires resulted in the highest rate of nonforested pixels (42% of all DPFs), followed by avalanches (21%). Forest recovery was explained by time elapsed, distance from edge (for conifers), and aspect. Summer precipitation and drought had a mixed influence. Our approach to assessing the effect of disturbances on the functionality of DPFs is reproducible in all mountain regions using institutional or open-access geographic data and provides a tool to prioritize DPF management by indicating where restoration of protection is most urgent.
Plant Biosystems | 2015
Giorgio Vacchiano; Michele Lonati; Roberta Berretti; Renzo Motta
In dry, inner-alpine valleys, regeneration of Scots pine after large, high-severity fires is limited by seed dispersal distance. When dispersal limitations are relaxed (small fires), colonization dynamics of Scots pine remain unclear. Our aims were (1) to assess the regeneration niche of Scots pine seedlings following small fires in a dry, inner-alpine valley and (2) to measure the influence of competition, drought, fertility, and soil pH on pine colonization. We sampled pine seedlings in six high-severity fires (1962–2006), where distance from the unburned edge was < 60 m. We modeled seedling density as a function of topography and soil cover by means of generalized linear models. Ellenberg indicator values (EIVs) for light, moisture, soil pH, and fertility were computed from vegetation sampling at each plot, and used as additional predictors of seedling density. Pine colonization was initially slow due to drought, and peaked 16 years after fire. The inclusion of EIV provided +31% of explained deviance in models of seedling density. Herb cover and soil moisture were the most important predictors. Scots pine regenerates successfully following small, high-severity fires, albeit slowly due to unfavorable water balance. Hence, restoration by artificial regeneration may not be necessary when seed dispersal is not limiting.
Forest Ecology and Management | 2006
Renzo Motta; Roberta Berretti; Emanuele Lingua; Pietro Piussi
Canadian Journal of Forest Research | 2011
Renzo Motta; Roberta Berretti; Daniele Castagneri; Matteo Garbarino; Emanuele Lingua; Fabio Meloni
European Journal of Forest Research | 2015
Renzo Motta; Matteo Garbarino; Roberta Berretti; Fabio Meloni; Antonio Nosenzo; Giorgio Vacchiano
Alpine Botany | 2013
Michele Lonati; Giorgio Vacchiano; Roberta Berretti; Renzo Motta
Ecology | 2017
Davide Ascoli; Janet Maringer; Andrew Hacket-Pain; Marco Conedera; Igor Drobyshev; Renzo Motta; Mara Cirolli; Władysław Kantorowicz; Christian Zang; Silvio Schueler; Luc Croisé; Pietro Piussi; Roberta Berretti; Ciprian Palaghianu; Marjana Westergren; Jonathan G.A. Lageard; Anton Burkart; Regula Gehrig Bichsel; Peter A. Thomas; Burkhard Beudert; Rolf Övergaard; Giorgio Vacchiano