4.8 Article

Functional substitutability of native herbivores by livestock for soil carbon stock is mediated by microbial decomposers

期刊

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
卷 29, 期 8, 页码 2141-2155

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/gcb.16600

关键词

carbon hoofprint; carbon use efficiency; ecosystem disservice; grassland; microbiome rewilding; restoration; soil microbial enzymes; tetracycline

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Grazing by large mammalian herbivores impacts climate by influencing the carbon pool in grazing ecosystems. As native herbivores are being replaced by livestock, it is important to examine whether livestock can fulfill the same functional roles. Livestock and native herbivores differ in their effects on vegetation composition and soil carbon, with livestock leading to lower microbial carbon use efficiency and reduced soil carbon stocks. The presence of veterinary antibiotics used on livestock is also found to have an impact on soil microbial communities and soil carbon. Conservation of native herbivores and alternative livestock management are crucial for soil carbon stewardship and natural climate solutions.
Grazing by large mammalian herbivores impacts climate as it can favor the size and stability of a large carbon (C) pool in the soils of grazing ecosystems. As native herbivores in the world's grasslands, steppes, and savannas are progressively being displaced by livestock, it is important to ask whether livestock can emulate the functional roles of their native counterparts. While livestock and native herbivores can have remarkable similarity in their traits, they can differ greatly in their impacts on vegetation composition which can affect soil-C. It is uncertain how these similarities and differences impact soil-C via their influence on microbial decomposers. We test competing alternative hypotheses with a replicated, long-term, landscape-level, grazing-exclusion experiment to ask whether livestock in the Trans-Himalayan ecosystem of northern India can match decadal-scale (2005-2016) soil-C stocks under native herbivores. We evaluate multiple lines of evidence from 17 variables that influence soil-C (quantity and quality of C-input from plants, microbial biomass and metabolism, microbial community composition, eDNA, veterinary antibiotics in soil), and assess their inter-relationships. Livestock and native herbivores differed in their effects on several soil microbial processes. Microbial carbon use efficiency (CUE) was 19% lower in soils under livestock. Compared to native herbivores, areas used by livestock contained 1.5 kg C m(-2) less soil-C. Structural equation models showed that alongside the effects arising from plants, livestock alter soil microbial communities which is detrimental for CUE, and ultimately also for soil-C. Supporting evidence pointed toward a link between veterinary antibiotics used on livestock, microbial communities, and soil-C. Overcoming the challenges of sequestering antibiotics to minimize their potential impacts on climate, alongside microbial rewilding under livestock, may reconcile the conflicting demands from food-security and ecosystem services. Conservation of native herbivores and alternative management of livestock is crucial for soil-C stewardship to envision and achieve natural climate solutions.

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