Long term prevention of disturbance induces the collapse of a dominant species without altering ecosystem function
Yu, Qiang ; Wu, Honghui ; Wang, Zhengwen ; Flynn, Dan F. B. ; Yang, Hao ; Lu, Fumei ; Smith, Melinda ; Han, Xingguo
刊名SCIENTIFIC REPORTS ; Yu, Qiang,Wu, Honghui,Wang, Zhengwen,et al. Long term prevention of disturbance induces the collapse of a dominant species without altering ecosystem function[J]. SCIENTIFIC REPORTS,2015,5(1):1.
2015-09-21
英文摘要Limitation of disturbances, such as grazing and fire, is a key tool for nature reserve management and ecological restoration. While the role of these disturbances in shaping ecosystem structure and functioning has been intensively studied, less is known about the consequences of long-term prevention of grazing and fire. Based on a 31-year study, we show that relative biomass of the dominant grass, Leymus chinensis, of grasslands in northern China declined dramatically, but only after 21 years of exclusion of fire and grazing. However, aboveground net primary productivity (ANPP) did not decline accordingly due to compensatory responses of several subdominant grass species. The decline in dominance of L. chinensis was not related to gradually changing climate during the same period, whereas experimentally imposed litter removal (simulating fire), mowing (simulating grazing), fire and moderate grazing enhanced dominance of L. chinensis significantly. Thus, our findings show that disturbances can be critical to maintain the dominance of key grass species in semiarid grassland, but that the collapse of a dominant species does not necessarily result in significant change in ANPP if there are species in the community capable of compensating for loss of a dominant.; Limitation of disturbances, such as grazing and fire, is a key tool for nature reserve management and ecological restoration. While the role of these disturbances in shaping ecosystem structure and functioning has been intensively studied, less is known about the consequences of long-term prevention of grazing and fire. Based on a 31-year study, we show that relative biomass of the dominant grass, Leymus chinensis, of grasslands in northern China declined dramatically, but only after 21 years of exclusion of fire and grazing. However, aboveground net primary productivity (ANPP) did not decline accordingly due to compensatory responses of several subdominant grass species. The decline in dominance of L. chinensis was not related to gradually changing climate during the same period, whereas experimentally imposed litter removal (simulating fire), mowing (simulating grazing), fire and moderate grazing enhanced dominance of L. chinensis significantly. Thus, our findings show that disturbances can be critical to maintain the dominance of key grass species in semiarid grassland, but that the collapse of a dominant species does not necessarily result in significant change in ANPP if there are species in the community capable of compensating for loss of a dominant.
内容类型期刊论文
源URL[http://ir.nwipb.ac.cn/handle/363003/5506]  
专题西北高原生物研究所_中国科学院西北高原生物研究所
推荐引用方式
GB/T 7714
Yu, Qiang,Wu, Honghui,Wang, Zhengwen,et al. Long term prevention of disturbance induces the collapse of a dominant species without altering ecosystem function[J]. SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, Yu, Qiang,Wu, Honghui,Wang, Zhengwen,et al. Long term prevention of disturbance induces the collapse of a dominant species without altering ecosystem function[J]. SCIENTIFIC REPORTS,2015,5(1):1.,2015.
APA Yu, Qiang.,Wu, Honghui.,Wang, Zhengwen.,Flynn, Dan F. B..,Yang, Hao.,...&Han, Xingguo.(2015).Long term prevention of disturbance induces the collapse of a dominant species without altering ecosystem function.SCIENTIFIC REPORTS.
MLA Yu, Qiang,et al."Long term prevention of disturbance induces the collapse of a dominant species without altering ecosystem function".SCIENTIFIC REPORTS (2015).
个性服务
查看访问统计
相关权益政策
暂无数据
收藏/分享
所有评论 (0)
暂无评论
 

除非特别说明,本系统中所有内容都受版权保护,并保留所有权利。


©版权所有 ©2017 CSpace - Powered by CSpace