4.5 Article

Responses of grassland productivity to mowing intensity and precipitation variability in a temperate steppe

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OECOLOGIA
卷 201, 期 1, 页码 259-268

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SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00442-022-05305-6

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Mowing; Precipitation; Graminoids; Forbs; Legacies

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Mowing for hay is a significant land use in grasslands, and it is greatly affected by precipitation variability. The natural variation in precipitation can impact plant responses to changes in mowing intensity. Decreasing mowing intensity can increase plant productivity and forage yield in the whole community, but it may have negative effects on other plant species.
Mowing for hay is an important land use in grasslands that is affected by precipitation variability, due to the water-limited nature of these ecosystems. Past land use and precipitation conditions can have legacy effects on ecosystem functions, potentially altering responses to both mowing and precipitation. Nonetheless, it is still unclear how natural variation in precipitation will affect plant responses to changes in mowing intensity. We conducted a seven-year field experiment with three mowing intensity treatments compared to the traditional mowing intensity (5 cm stubble height) as a control: increased mowing (2 cm stubble), decreased mowing (8 cm stubble) and ceased mowing. Decreased mowing increased both plant aboveground net primary productivity [ANPP] and forage yield across the whole community, driven by increases in graminoids, mainly owing to the positive response of plants to precipitation. Both mowing disturbance and precipitation variability had legacy effects on plant ANPP; however, these responses differed among the whole community, graminoid, and forb levels. Current-year community-wide ANPP [ANPP(n)] was positively associated with current-year precipitation [PPTn] in all mowing treatments, driven by positive precipitation responses of the dominant graminoids. For forbs, however, ANPP(n) was negatively associated with prior-year growing season precipitation [PPTn-1] across mowing treatments, potentially due to lagged competition with the dominant graminoids. Our results suggest that the response of the dominant graminoids is the primary factor determining the response of ANPP to mowing and precipitation variability in these grassland ecosystems, and highlight that decreasing mowing intensity may maximize both herder's income and grassland sustainability.

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