种内竞争
食草动物
自行车
湿地
氮气循环
生态学
生物
碳循环
北极的
碳纤维
植物
氮气
农学
生态系统
化学
地理
林业
复合数
复合材料
有机化学
材料科学
作者
Emily A. Chavez,Jaron Adkins,Bonnie G. Waring,Karen H. Beard,Ryan T. Choi,Lindsay Miller,Taylor Saunders,Trisha B. Atwood
标识
DOI:10.1111/1365-2745.70028
摘要
Abstract High latitude wetlands are ecologically important ecosystems due to their large carbon (C) storage capacity and because they serve as breeding and nesting habitat for large populations of migratory birds. Goose herbivory in wetland meadows affects leaf chemical and morphological traits and also influences soil properties by increasing soil temperature and depositing faeces. Grazing‐induced changes to above‐ground traits and soil properties impact C cycling, but the influence of grazing on root‐mediated C and nitrogen (N) cycling has not been explored. We investigated how goose herbivory in a low‐Arctic coastal wetland in western Alaska affected root morphological, physiological and chemical traits of a dominant graminoid by assessing plant traits in ungrazed versus heavily grazed sedge meadows. We also performed a 11‐week lab‐based root incubation experiment to determine how grazing affects CO 2 ‐C efflux, the size and decay rate of the fast‐cycling C pool (i.e. C with a mean residence time of days to weeks, determined via CO 2 ‐C efflux), and patterns of N mineralization during root decomposition. Goose grazing altered root chemical traits by increasing root N by 7%, cellulose by 12%, and ash content by 17%, indicating that grazing shifted root chemical traits towards a resource‐acquisition strategy. Grazing did not alter root biomass, morphology or bulk C exudation. In our root incubation, soils that included the roots of grazed plants tended to exhibit greater CO 2 ‐C efflux than those containing ungrazed plant roots due to a larger fast‐cycling C pool. Additionally, grazing‐induced increases in soil temperature led to greater CO 2 ‐C efflux due to a faster decay rate of the fast‐cycling C pool. Finally, compared with ungrazed roots, we found that the decomposition of grazed roots resulted in more N being transferred to root necromass from the surrounding soil, suggesting that microbial communities decomposing grazed roots immobilized N. Synthesis . Overall, our results indicate that goose grazing increased C‐cycling rates by influencing soil environmental conditions and by altering the ecological strategy of grazed plants. In contrast, grazing decreased net N mineralization by promoting N immobilization. These results suggest that changing patterns and abundances of herbivores can have substantial effects on elemental cycles.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI