Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumComprehensive Plant Inventories From 1884 To 1931 Were Nearly Tossed; Now Provide Priceless Window On Habitats Over Time
For two years, a team of Swiss researchers crossed the country by train, car and foot, carrying with them a red frame measuring 30 by 30 centimetres. At 277 sites they placed the frame in the grass and counted all of the plant species within it. The scientists were retracing a path set more than 100 years earlier, when two botanists had done the same thing in exactly the same meadows, long before such plant inventories became common.
By revisiting these places, the researchers hoped to open a window on the grassland that existed before the agrarian revolution that took place from the 1950s to the 80s, when farming was transformed by the mass adoption of fertiliser and agricultural machinery. The loss of biodiversity since then was massive, says Prof Jürgen Dengler, a biologist at the Zurich University of Applied Sciences (ZHAW) and the leader of the project. Their research, published in Global Change Biology, found that across Switzerland, the average number of plant species on agricultural grassland has fallen by 26% over the last century.
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The plant inventories from 1884 to 1931 were discovered in preparation for renovations at Agroscope, Switzerlands agricultural research institute, and were almost thrown away. Fortunately, a colleague there realised that they do not belong in the wastepaper basket, but that this is a treasure for research, says Dengler. The handwritten lists had been put together by two Swiss botanists, Friedrich Stebler and Carl Schröter, who were investigating the productivity of different meadow types. Surprisingly, almost all of the old meadows they sampled in the 19th and early 20th centuries are still meadows today. Only about 20 plots were excluded because they have since been developed, or are now regenerated forests or a lake.
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Since the early 2000s, Swiss meadows have seen a slight increase in plant diversity. These recent developments did not come out of nowhere, says Dengler. They are the result of major agricultural interventions. Farmers are rewarded for mowing late, extensive rather than intensive grazing, and the presence of target species. This leads to lower yields but is compensated by generous subsidies. And there is some reassurance about natures resilience, as an additional part of the research project shows: when they could not find the old species in their 30 by 30cm plots, the scientists increased their search radius by 500 metres. There they rediscovered all of the old species, often in areas that were either protected or used for biodiversity promotion an indication that political measures to preserve nature are working.
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https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2025/oct/09/switzerland-botany-biodiversity-grassland-agriculture-alpine-meadows-study-aoe

cachukis
(3,465 posts)WestMichRad
(2,700 posts)Thanks for posting this!
Michigan is fortunate to have extensive botanical data dating back to the First Survey, which was roughly about 1836. In addition to the first accurate land survey back then, surveyors did assessments of the plant species. The University of Michigans herbarium has an informative website (michiganflora.net ) that includes historic information when the species was first found in the state (to the county level, actually) and other cool stuff like detailed photos and a botanical key to help with identification. One of my favorite websites!