4.5 Article

Effects of disturbances on aboveground biomass of alpine meadow in the Yellow River Source Zone, Western China

Journal

ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
Volume 12, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.8640

Keywords

AGB change; alpine meadow; disturbance intensity; Qinghai-Tibet Plateau; sole and joint impacts

Funding

  1. Project of the Science and Technology Department of Qinghai Province [2020-ZJ-904]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31872999]
  3. Discipline Innovation and Introducing Talents Program of Higher Education Institutions [D18013]
  4. Chinese Academy of Sciences and Qinghai Provincial People's Government [LHZX-2020--08]

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This field experiment investigates the impacts of grazing-simulated mowing and pika population on aboveground biomass in the Yellow River Source Zone. The results show that severe mowing has a stronger effect on aboveground biomass loss compared to severe pika disturbance, and the joint effects of both disturbances have the most significant impacts on aboveground biomass loss. However, pika disturbance has little effect on aboveground biomass change in moderate and non-mowed plots.
A field experiment quantifies the impacts of two external disturbances (mowing-simulated grazing and number of pika) on aboveground biomass (AGB) in the Yellow River Source Zone from 2018 to 2020. AGB was estimated from drone images for 27 plots subject to three levels of each disturbance (none, moderate, and severe). The three mowing severities bear a close relationship with AGB and its annual change. The effects of pika disturbance on AGB change were overwhelmed by the significantly different AGB at different mowing severities (-.471 r < -.368), but can still be identified by inspecting each mowing intensity (-.884 r < -.626). The impact of severe mowing on AGB loss was more profound than that of severe pika disturbance in heavily disturbed plots, and the joint effects of both severe disturbances had the most impacts on AGB loss. However, pika disturbance made little difference to AGB change in the moderate and non-mowed plots. Mowing intensity weakens the relationship between pika population and AGB change, but pika disturbance hardly affects the relationship between mowing severity and AGB change. The effects of both disturbances on AGB were further complexified by the change in monthly mean temperature. Results indicate that reducing mowing intensity is more effective than controlling pika population in efforts to achieve sustainable grazing of heavily disturbed grassland.

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