4.7 Article

Ungulates alter plant cover without consistent effect on soil ecosystem functioning

Journal

AGRICULTURE ECOSYSTEMS & ENVIRONMENT
Volume 326, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.agee.2021.107796

Keywords

Soil heterogeneity; Ecosystem services; Microbial activity; Grazing exclusion; Ungulate overabundance

Funding

  1. Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad, Gobierno de Espana [CGL2015-70449-R]
  2. project Estudi d'investigacio en sols per determinar la seva resiliencia front al canvi climatic - Fundacion la CAIXA through the Institut Balear de la Natura
  3. FUEIB
  4. Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad (MINECO, Spain) [CGL2015-70449-R/BES-2016]
  5. Spanish Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad (MINECO) through a Ramon y Cajal agreement [RYC-2016-21120]
  6. Balearic University

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Shifts in animal husbandry and landscape use have significantly affected ungulate grazing effects on ecosystem functioning. However, studies on plant and soil communities yield varied and context-dependent results.
Shifts in animal husbandry and landscape use have significantly changed ungulate grazing effects on ecosystem functioning. These changes are now the subject of extensive research with respect to plant and soil communities, but the results of these studies are highly varied and context dependent. The objective of this study is to address contextual variation by holding all sampling methods and analytical approaches constant and analyse the effect of the feral goat (Capra hircus) population of Mallorca Island, Spain, on soil physical, chemical and biological characteristics across five controlled sites. Specifically, vegetation cover and soil properties in fenced plots excluded from ungulates were compared with adjacent grazed plots in five independent mountain areas of Mallorca. Soil microbial activity measured as Community-Level Physiological Profiles (CLPP) using EcoPlate (TM) increased when ungulates were excluded. However, all other physical and chemical measures of the soils did not vary significantly when we considered ungulate exclusion across all plots, and this may be caused by a soil community that is simply robust to the effects of the herbivores. Or, it may be due to the high heterogeneity that was detected among pair plots comparisons within each of the five sites. Indeed, we find more variability within a site than among our independent sites leading us to hypothesize that grazing does influence biogeochemical cycles, but it does it by increasing variability of the system in general. Our well-controlled multilevel meta analysis confirms the notion that ungulate effects are highly context dependent, and soil heterogeneity makes resolving clear patterns very challenging. Apparently, context persistently drives the soil response more than the grazing itself, and this is seen even at very small scales.

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