4.7 Article

Shrub encroachment increases soil carbon and nitrogen stocks in alpine grassland ecosystems of the central Tibetan Plateau

Journal

GEODERMA
Volume 433, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.geoderma.2023.116468

Keywords

Alpine grasslands; Shrub encroachment; Soil carbon and nitrogen stocks; Soil microbial carbon; Soil microbial nitrogen

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Shrub encroachment can significantly affect the ecosystem structure and functioning of alpine grasslands. The study investigated the soil organic carbon stocks (SOCS) and soil nitrogen stocks (STNS) of encroached and non-encroached plots in alpine meadow and alpine steppe ecosystems on the central Tibetan Plateau. The results showed that shrub encroachment increased herbaceous plant richness, diversity, aboveground biomass, belowground plant biomass, SOCS and STNS in both ecosystems, with alpine steppe showing the highest carbon and nitrogen gains.
Shrub encroachment can significantly affect the ecosystem structure and functioning of alpine grasslands. However, little is known about how this phenomenon alters soil organic carbon stocks (SOCS) and soil nitrogen stocks (STNS) in different alpine grassland ecosystems within the same region. Here we addressed this research gap by investigating the SOCS and STNS of encroached and non-encroached plots in alpine meadow and alpine steppe ecosystems on the central Tibetan Plateau. We found that, in both ecosystems, shrub encroachment significantly increased herbaceous plant richness, diversity, and aboveground biomass, but more notably in alpine meadow. Conversely, shrub encroachment increased belowground plant biomass in alpine steppe but had the opposite effect in alpine meadow, where belowground biomass was four times lower at encroached than at non-encroached plots. Importantly, encroaching shrubs resulted in significantly higher SOCS and STNS in both ecosystems, with alpine steppe showing the greatest carbon and nitrogen gains. The shrub encroached plots had 34.24 % and 97.25 % higher carbon stocks and 70.87 % and 67.34 % higher nitrogen stocks than non-encroached plots at the alpine meadow and alpine steppe, respectively. Increases in carbon and nitrogen stocks occurred mostly at the 10-30 cm soil layer and were highly correlated with shrub-induced changes in the herbaceous community composition. Overall, our results indicated that (1) shrub encroachment promoted carbon and ni-trogen accumulation in the soils of both alpine meadow and alpine steppe and (2) the degree of accumulation and the mechanisms behind these changes varied between the two alpine grasslands. Our findings advance the general understanding of the soil carbon and nitrogen dynamics in shrub-encroached alpine grasslands and highlight the importance of investigating how this phenomenon affects different ecosystems within the same region.

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