Concurrent and legacy effects of sheep trampling on soil organic carbon stocks in a typical steppe, China

被引:1
|
作者
Li, Lan [1 ]
He, Xiong Zhao [2 ]
Zhang, Jing [1 ]
Bryant, Racheal [3 ]
Hu, An [1 ]
Hou, Fujiang [1 ]
机构
[1] Lanzhou Univ, State Key Lab Herbage Improvement & Grassland Agro, Key Lab Grassland Livestock Ind Innovat, Minist Agr & Rural Affairs,Engn Technol Res Ctr Ec, Lanzhou 730020, Peoples R China
[2] Massey Univ, Sch Agr & Environm, Palmerston North, New Zealand
[3] Lincoln Univ, Fac Agr & Life Sci, Christchurch, New Zealand
关键词
Grazing; Grassland adaptive management; Herbivore-plant-soil interactions; Non-trophic interactions; Soil organic carbon stocks; Trampling intensity; NITROGEN MINERALIZATION; PLANT; SEQUESTRATION; DEFOLIATION; COMPACTION; PRODUCTIVITY; COMMUNITIES; DIVERSITY; RESPONSES; LINKAGES;
D O I
10.1016/j.jenvman.2024.122121
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Grazing plays a key role in ecosystem biogeochemistry, particularly soil carbon (C) pools. The non-trophic interactions between herbivores and soil processes through herbivore trampling have recently attracted extensive attention. However, their concurrent and legacy effects on the ecosystem properties and processes are still not clear, due to their effects being hard to separate via field experiments. In this study, we conducted a 2-year simulated-sheep-trampling experiment with four trampling intensity treatments (i.e., T0, T40, T80, and T120 for 0, 40, 80, and 120 hoofprints m(-2), respectively) in a typical steppe to explore the concurrent and legacy effects of trampling on grassland ecosystem properties and processing. In 2017 (trampling treatment year), we found that trampling decreased aboveground biomass (AGB) of plant community and community-weighted mean shoot C concentration (CWM C), soil available nitrogen (N) and available phosphorus (P), but did not affect plant species diversity and belowground biomass (BGB). We show that compared with T0, trampling increased soil bulk density (BD) at T80, and decreased soil organic carbon (SOC) stocks. After the cessation of trampling for two years (i.e., in 2019), previous trampling increased plant diversity and BGB, reaching the highest values at T80, but decreased soil available N and available P. Compared with T0, previous trampling significantly increased soil BD at T120, while significantly decreased CWM C at T80 and T120, and reduced SOC stocks at T80. Compared with 2017, the trampling negative legacy effects amplified at T80 but weakened at T40 and T120. We also show that trampling-induced decreases in soil available N, AGB of Fabaceae and CWM C were the main predictors of decreasing SOC stocks in 2017, while previous trampling-induced legacy effects on soil available P, AGB of Poaceae and CWM C contributed to the variations of SOC stocks in 2019. Taken together, short-term trampling with low intensity could maintain most plant functions, while previous trampling with low intensity was beneficial to most plant and soil functions. The results of this study show that T40 caused by sheep managed at a stocking rate of 2.7 sheep ha(-1) is most suitable for grassland adaptive management in the typical steppe. The ecosystem functions can be maintained under a high stocking rate through the process of providing enough time to rebuild sufficient vegetation cover and restore soil through measures such as regional rotational grazing and seasonal grazing.
引用
收藏
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Mechanisms driving spatial and temporal changes in soil organic carbon stocks in saline soils in a typical county of the western Songnen Plain, northeast China
    Liang, Bing
    Wei, Jianbing
    Zhao, Haiqin
    Wu, Shangyu
    Hou, Yongxia
    Zhang, Susu
    Bini, Claudio
    SOIL RESEARCH, 2024, 62 (01)
  • [42] Soil Organic Carbon Stocks of Citrus Orchards in Yongchun County, Fujian Province, China
    WANG Yixiang
    WENG Boqi
    TIAN Na
    ZHONG Zhenmei
    WANG Mingkuang
    Pedosphere, 2017, (05) : 985 - 990
  • [43] Impacts of urbanization on soil organic carbon stocks in the northeast coastal agricultural areas of China
    Wang, Shuai
    Adhikari, Kabindra
    Zhuang, Qianlai
    Gu, Hanlong
    Jin, Xinxin
    SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT, 2020, 721
  • [44] Temporal and Spatial Changes of Soil Organic Carbon Stocks in the Forest Area of Northeastern China
    Wang, Shuai
    Zhuang, Qianlai
    Yang, Zijiao
    Yu, Na
    Jin, Xinxin
    FORESTS, 2019, 10 (11):
  • [45] Land-cover effects on soil organic carbon stocks in a European city
    Edmondson, Jill L.
    Davies, Zoe G.
    McCormack, Sarah A.
    Gaston, Kevin J.
    Leake, Jonathan R.
    SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT, 2014, 472 : 444 - 453
  • [46] Disturbance and management effects on forest soil organic carbon stocks in the Pacific Northwest
    Nave, Lucas E.
    DeLyser, Kendall
    Domke, Grant M.
    Holub, Scott M.
    Janowiak, Maria K.
    Kittler, Brian
    Ontl, Todd A.
    Sprague, Eric
    Sucre, Eric B.
    Walters, Brian F.
    Swanston, Christopher W.
    ECOLOGICAL APPLICATIONS, 2022, 32 (06)
  • [47] Simulation of Salinity Effects on Past, Present, and Future Soil Organic Carbon Stocks
    Setia, Raj
    Smith, Pete
    Marschner, Petra
    Gottschalk, Pia
    Baldock, Jeff
    Verma, Vipan
    Setia, Deepika
    Smith, Jo
    ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY, 2012, 46 (03) : 1624 - 1631
  • [48] Black Carbon Contribution to Organic Carbon Stocks in Urban Soil
    Edmondson, Jill L.
    Stott, Iain
    Potter, Jonathan
    Lopez-Capel, Elisa
    Manning, David A. C.
    Gaston, Kevin J.
    Leake, Jonathan R.
    ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY, 2015, 49 (14) : 8339 - 8346
  • [49] Effects of land use changes on soil organic carbon, nitrogen and their losses in a typical watershed of the Loess Plateau, China
    Zhu, Guangyu
    Shangguan, Zhouping
    Hu, Xinzhi
    Deng, Lei
    ECOLOGICAL INDICATORS, 2021, 133
  • [50] Soil labile organic carbon fractions and soil organic carbon stocks as affected by long-term organic and mineral fertilization regimes in the North China Plain
    Li, Juan
    Wen, Yanchen
    Li, Xuhua
    Li, Yanting
    Yang, Xiangdong
    Lin, Zhian
    Song, Zhenzhen
    Cooper, Julia Mary
    Zhao, Bingqiang
    SOIL & TILLAGE RESEARCH, 2018, 175 : 281 - 290