4.7 Article

Nitrogen availability constrains grassland plant diversity in response to grazing

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 896, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.165273

Keywords

Grassland plant diversity; Experimental grazing; Soil nitrogen change; Grazing intensity; Background nitrogen deposition

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By synthesizing data from 306 grazing experiments, it was found that grassland plant diversity is controlled by soil nitrogen content. The impact of grazing on plant diversity is influenced by changes in soil nitrogen. In regions with low nitrogen deposition, additional management strategies are required to maintain grassland biodiversity by improving soil fertility.
Grassland plant diversity has been observed with divergent responses in grazing experiments around the world. However, the dominant role of nitrogen (N) availability in controlling this global variation has not been well explored, impeding our capacity to formulate effective strategies for preserving grassland plant diversity. Here, we synthesized data from 306 grazing experiments that measured plant diversity and soil N content across global grasslands. Overall, grazing reduced plant diversity by 7.63%, with substantial variations observed across the dataset. Our study revealed that these contrasting effects were best explained by soil N change. Plant diversity under enhanced soil N showed a strong increase in response to grazing. We found that lower grazing intensity and higher background N deposition could collectively enhance soil N, thereby promoting diversity. These results suggest that while avoiding high grazing intensity is crucial in maintaining biodiversity of grazed grasslands, it alone is not sufficient. In regions with lower N deposition (< 500 mg N m-2 yr-1), additional management strategies that target improving soil fertility are needed. Our analysis propounds that local environmental conditions should be incorporated into decision-making of grassland biodiversity conservation, or ignoring this may lead to counterproductive impacts.

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