In recent years, herbaceous species such as Deyeuxia angustifolia (Kom.) Y. L. Chang has invaded alpine tundra regions of the western slope of the Changbai Mountains. Because atmospheric nitrogen deposition is predi...In recent years, herbaceous species such as Deyeuxia angustifolia (Kom.) Y. L. Chang has invaded alpine tundra regions of the western slope of the Changbai Mountains. Because atmospheric nitrogen deposition is predicted to increase under a warming climate and D. angustifolia is sensitive to nitrogen addition, field experiments were conducted from 2010 to 2013 to determine the effect of increased nitrogen deposition on the mechanisms of D. angustifolia invasion. The goal of this study is to evaluate the impact of increased nitrogen deposition on the changes in alpine tundra vegetation (consisting mostly of Rhododendron chrysanthum Pall. and Vaccinium uliginosum Linn.). The results showed that: 1) simulated nitrogen deposition affected overall characteristics and structure of R. chrysanthum and E uliginosum communities and had a positive impact on the growth of tundra vegetation invaded by 1). angustifolia; 2) R. chrysanthum was more resistant to invasion by D. angustifolia than V.. uliginosum; 3) simulated nitrogen deposition could improve the growth and enhance the competitiveness of D. angustifolia, which was gradually replacing R. chrysanthum and V. uliginosum and might become the dominant species in the system in future, transforming alpine tundra into alpine meadow in the Chanebai Mountains.展开更多
Aims Woody plants are widely distributed in various grassland types along the altitudinal/climatic gradients in Xinjiang,China.Considering previously reported change in carbon(C)storage following woody plant encroachm...Aims Woody plants are widely distributed in various grassland types along the altitudinal/climatic gradients in Xinjiang,China.Considering previously reported change in carbon(C)storage following woody plant encroachment in grasslands and the mediating effect of climate on this change,we predicted that a positive effect of woody plants on plant C storage in semiarid grasslands may revert to a negative effect in arid grasslands.We first investigated the spatial variation of aboveground C(AGC)and belowground C(BGC)storage among grassland types and then tested our prediction.Methods We measured the living AGC storage,litter C(LC)and BGC storage of plants in two physiognomic types,wooded grasslands(aboveground biomass of woody plants at least 50%)and pure grasslands without woody plants in six grassland types representing a gradient form semiarid to arid conditions across Xinjiang.Important Findings Living AGC,LC,BGC and total plant C storage increased from desert to mountain meadows.These increases could also be explained by increasing mean annual precipitation(MAP)or decreasing mean annual temperature(MAT),suggesting that grassland types indeed represented an aridity gradient.Woody plants had an effect on the plant C storage both in size and in distribution relative to pure grasslands.The direction and strength of the effect of woody plants varied with grassland types due to the mediating effect of the climate,with wetter conditions promoting a positive effect of woody plants.Woody plants increased vegetation-level AGC through their high AGC relative to herbaceous plants.However,more negative effects of woody plants on herbaceous plants with increasing aridity led to a weaker increase in the living AGC in arid desert,steppe desert and desert steppe than in the less arid other grassland types.Under greater aridity(lower MAP and higher MAT),woody plants allocated less biomass to roots and had lower BGC and had a more negative impact on herbaceous plant production,thereby reducing vegetation-level BGC in the desert,steppe desert and desert steppe.In sum,this resulted in a negative effect of woody plants on total plant C storage in the most arid grasslands in Xinjiang.As a consequence,we predict that woody plant encroachment may decrease rather than increase C storage in grasslands under future drier conditions.展开更多
基金Special Fund of National Seismological Bureau,China(No.201208005)National Natural Science Foundation of China(No.41171072,41101523)
文摘In recent years, herbaceous species such as Deyeuxia angustifolia (Kom.) Y. L. Chang has invaded alpine tundra regions of the western slope of the Changbai Mountains. Because atmospheric nitrogen deposition is predicted to increase under a warming climate and D. angustifolia is sensitive to nitrogen addition, field experiments were conducted from 2010 to 2013 to determine the effect of increased nitrogen deposition on the mechanisms of D. angustifolia invasion. The goal of this study is to evaluate the impact of increased nitrogen deposition on the changes in alpine tundra vegetation (consisting mostly of Rhododendron chrysanthum Pall. and Vaccinium uliginosum Linn.). The results showed that: 1) simulated nitrogen deposition affected overall characteristics and structure of R. chrysanthum and E uliginosum communities and had a positive impact on the growth of tundra vegetation invaded by 1). angustifolia; 2) R. chrysanthum was more resistant to invasion by D. angustifolia than V.. uliginosum; 3) simulated nitrogen deposition could improve the growth and enhance the competitiveness of D. angustifolia, which was gradually replacing R. chrysanthum and V. uliginosum and might become the dominant species in the system in future, transforming alpine tundra into alpine meadow in the Chanebai Mountains.
基金supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China(U1603235,31500450)the strategic priority research program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences(XDA05050405)Bernhard Schmid was supported by the University of Zürich Research Priority Program on Global Change and Biodiversity(URPP GCB).
文摘Aims Woody plants are widely distributed in various grassland types along the altitudinal/climatic gradients in Xinjiang,China.Considering previously reported change in carbon(C)storage following woody plant encroachment in grasslands and the mediating effect of climate on this change,we predicted that a positive effect of woody plants on plant C storage in semiarid grasslands may revert to a negative effect in arid grasslands.We first investigated the spatial variation of aboveground C(AGC)and belowground C(BGC)storage among grassland types and then tested our prediction.Methods We measured the living AGC storage,litter C(LC)and BGC storage of plants in two physiognomic types,wooded grasslands(aboveground biomass of woody plants at least 50%)and pure grasslands without woody plants in six grassland types representing a gradient form semiarid to arid conditions across Xinjiang.Important Findings Living AGC,LC,BGC and total plant C storage increased from desert to mountain meadows.These increases could also be explained by increasing mean annual precipitation(MAP)or decreasing mean annual temperature(MAT),suggesting that grassland types indeed represented an aridity gradient.Woody plants had an effect on the plant C storage both in size and in distribution relative to pure grasslands.The direction and strength of the effect of woody plants varied with grassland types due to the mediating effect of the climate,with wetter conditions promoting a positive effect of woody plants.Woody plants increased vegetation-level AGC through their high AGC relative to herbaceous plants.However,more negative effects of woody plants on herbaceous plants with increasing aridity led to a weaker increase in the living AGC in arid desert,steppe desert and desert steppe than in the less arid other grassland types.Under greater aridity(lower MAP and higher MAT),woody plants allocated less biomass to roots and had lower BGC and had a more negative impact on herbaceous plant production,thereby reducing vegetation-level BGC in the desert,steppe desert and desert steppe.In sum,this resulted in a negative effect of woody plants on total plant C storage in the most arid grasslands in Xinjiang.As a consequence,we predict that woody plant encroachment may decrease rather than increase C storage in grasslands under future drier conditions.