For the past six years, researchers at the Universitat Politènica de
València (Polytechnic Univeristy of Valencia, UPV) have been studying
the performance of twelve Aleppo pine varieties native to different
regions of Spain in reforestation campaigns across three national forest
areas. Different varieties or genotypes have different levels of
resistance to cold and drought, which influence how well they perform in
a given geographical region, and researchers wanted to find out which
varieties worked best and where.
To do so, the different national
varieties or genotypes were used to repopulate forest areas in La Hunde,
Valencia (as the control region), in the drier Granja d'Escarp, Lleida,
to the north and further inland in Tramacastiel, Teruel, where the
climate is much cooler.
"The varieties from Inland Levante and La
Mancha performed the best overall, while those from further south seem
to be perfect for reforestation efforts in regions already affected by
climate change," observes Antonio del Campo, researcher at the UPV's
Institute of Water and Environmental Engineering (IIAMA).
Broadly
speaking, varieties from central Spain work well in Valencia, on the
east coat, while those from Valencia perform well up in Lleida.
Fellow
researcher from the University's Institute for Plant Molecular and
Cellular Biology (IBMCP), José Miguel Mulet, tells us: "What works now
in the dry environments in the south-east will become, and indeed
already is, ideal for the central Aleppo pine habitat area (central to
eastern Spain). We are seeing a progressive colonisation from south to
north."
In a context of climate change, it is perhaps not
surprising that 'outsider' varieties perform better in a given region
than local varieties, but this idea needs to be incorporated into
national reforestation policy in order for efforts to be successful on
the long-term.
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