4.3 Article

The role of plant-soil feedbacks and land-use legacies in restoration of a temperate steppe in northern China

期刊

ECOLOGICAL RESEARCH
卷 25, 期 6, 页码 1101-1111

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1007/s11284-010-0735-x

关键词

Abiotic and biotic soil properties; Biogeochemistry; Land-use history; Natural experiment approach; Old-field; Secondary succession; Soil chemistry

类别

资金

  1. State Key Basic Research Development Program of China [2007CB106801]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [30830026, 30821062]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Plant-soil feedbacks affect plant performance and plant community dynamics; however, little is known about their role in ecological restoration. Here, we studied plant-soil feedbacks in restoration of steppe vegetation after agricultural disturbance in northern China. First, we analyzed abiotic and biotic soil properties under mono-dominant plant patches in an old-field restoration site and in a 'target' steppe site. Second, we tested plant-soil feedbacks by growing plant species from these two sites on soils from con- and heterospecific origin. Soil properties generally did not differ between the old-field site and steppe site, but there were significant differences among mono-dominant plant patches within the sites. While soil species origin (i.e., the plant species beneath which the soil was collected) affected biomass of individual plant species in the feedback experiment, species-level plant-soil feedbacks were 'neutral'. Soil site origin (old-field, steppe) significantly affected biomass of old-field and steppe species. For example, old-field species had higher biomass in old-field soils than in steppe soils, indicating a positive land-use legacy. However, soil site origin effects depended on the plant species beneath which the soils were collected. The predictive value of abiotic and biotic soil properties in explaining plant biomass differed between and within groups of old-field and steppe species. We conclude that the occurrence of positive land-use legacies for old-field species may retard successional replacement of old-field species by steppe species. However, high levels of idiosyncrasy in responses of old-field and steppe plant species to con- and heterospecific soils indicate interspecific variation in the extent to which soil legacies and plant-soil feedbacks control successional species replacements in Chinese steppe ecosystems.

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