Community and Conservation Ecology, University of Groningen, PO Box 11103, 9700 CC Groningen, The Netherlands.
Oecologia. 2013 May;172(1):231-43. doi: 10.1007/s00442-012-2484-8. Epub 2012 Dec 28.
Studies addressing the role of large herbivores on nitrogen cycling in grasslands have suggested that the direction of effects depends on soil fertility. Via selection for high quality plant species and input of dung and urine, large herbivores have been shown to speed up nitrogen cycling in fertile grassland soils while slowing down nitrogen cycling in unfertile soils. However, recent studies show that large herbivores can reduce nitrogen mineralization in some temperate fertile soils, but not in others. To explain this, we hypothesize that large herbivores can reduce nitrogen mineralization in loamy or clay soils through soil compaction, but not in sandy soils. Especially under wet conditions, strong compaction in clay soils can lead to periods of soil anoxia, which reduces decomposition of soil organic matter and, hence, N mineralization. In this study, we use a long-term (37-year) field experiment on a salt marsh to investigate the hypothesis that the effect of large herbivores on nitrogen mineralization depends on soil texture. Our results confirm that the presence of large herbivores decreased nitrogen mineralization rate in a clay soil, but not in a sandy soil. By comparing a hand-mown treatment with a herbivore-grazed treatment, we show that these differences can be attributed to herbivore-induced changes in soil physical properties rather than to above-ground biomass removal. On clay soil, we find that large herbivores increase the soil water-filled porosity, induce more negative soil redox potentials, reduce soil macrofauna abundance, and reduce decomposition activity. On sandy soil, we observe no changes in these variables in response to grazing. We conclude that effects of large herbivores on nitrogen mineralization cannot be understood without taking soil texture, soil moisture, and feedbacks through soil macrofauna into account.
研究表明,大型食草动物在草原氮循环中的作用取决于土壤肥力。通过选择高质量的植物物种和投入粪便和尿液,大型食草动物被证明可以加速肥沃草原土壤中的氮循环,而减缓贫瘠土壤中的氮循环。然而,最近的研究表明,大型食草动物可以减少一些温带肥沃土壤中的氮矿化,但不能减少其他土壤中的氮矿化。为了解释这一点,我们假设大型食草动物可以通过土壤压实来减少壤土或粘土地壤中的氮矿化,但不能减少沙土地壤中的氮矿化。特别是在潮湿条件下,粘土地壤的强烈压实会导致土壤缺氧期,从而减少土壤有机质的分解,从而减少氮矿化。在这项研究中,我们使用盐沼的一项长期(37 年)野外实验来研究大型食草动物对氮矿化的影响是否取决于土壤质地的假设。我们的结果证实,大型食草动物的存在降低了粘土地壤中的氮矿化速率,但不能降低沙土地壤中的氮矿化速率。通过比较手割处理和食草动物放牧处理,我们表明这些差异可以归因于食草动物引起的土壤物理性质变化,而不是地上生物量的去除。在粘土地壤上,我们发现大型食草动物增加了土壤水充满孔隙度,诱导了更负的土壤氧化还原电位,减少了土壤大型动物的丰度,并降低了分解活性。在沙土地壤上,我们观察到放牧对这些变量没有影响。我们得出结论,如果不考虑土壤质地、土壤水分和通过土壤大型动物的反馈,就无法理解大型食草动物对氮矿化的影响。