4.4 Article

Universal rule and regional variation of vegetation height assembly of typical grasslands in China

Journal

JOURNAL OF PLANT ECOLOGY
Volume 16, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/jpe/rtac048

Keywords

grassland; vegetation height; community structure; environmental change; transect

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Measuring plant heights one by one is important for exploring the height structure of grassland plant communities. Our study analyzed the height structure and aggregation of grassland vegetation in three plateaus. We found that the mean height increased significantly from Tibetan Plateau, Mongolian Plateau to Loess Plateau, and the aggregation of grassland vegetation showed different distribution patterns in different regions. The study also highlighted the influence of environmental factors on vegetation height and aggregation.
Measuring plant heights one by one is an important way to explore the height structure of grassland plant communities, and can be used to analyze the universal rules and regional variations of vegetation growth under environmental change. We chose grasslands in three plateaus, namely Tibetan Plateau (TP), Mongolian Plateau (MP) and Loess Plateau (LP), and set up three grassland transects along the precipitation gradients from meadow, steppe to desert. The mean height of grassland vegetation was 30.38 +/- 22.44 cm, and the mean height from TP, MP to LP increased significantly. The aggregation of grassland vegetation exhibited a positive skew distribution (0.91, 3.60), and the community aggregation from TP, MP to LP tended to a normal distribution (0, 3). However, for TP, there was an exponential distribution in community aggregation of meadows, and a uniform distribution in that of desert. The explanatory effect of climate and soil nutrients on the variation of mean height in each region was more than 70%, while the explanatory effect on the community aggregation was the highest at TP, only 29%. From TP, MP to LP, response intensity of mean height to environmental changes increased significantly, and the influence of temperature and precipitation gradually increased, the influence of radiation, wind speed, and nutrients gradually weakened, and the synergy among environmental factors strengthened. Our study shows that normal distribution is a universal rule of grassland height construction, and that the synergy of environmental factors varies from region to region.

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