Department of Land, Air, and Water Resources, University of California, Biogeochemistry and Nutrient Cycling Laboratory, One Shields Avenue, Davis, California 95616-8627, USA.
Ecol Appl. 2013 Sep;23(6):1345-56. doi: 10.1890/12-1957.1.
Opencast mining causes severe impacts on natural environments, often resulting in permanent damage to soils and vegetation. In the present study we use a 14-year restoration chronosequence to investigate how resource input and spontaneous plant colonization promote the revegetation and reconstruction of mined soils in central Brazil. Using a multi-proxy approach, combining vegetation surveys with the analysis of plant and soil isotopic abundances (delta13C and delta15N) and chemical and physical fractionation of organic matter in soil profiles, we show that: (1) after several decades without vegetation cover, the input of nutrient-rich biosolids into exposed regoliths prompted the establishment of a diverse plant community (> 30 species); (2) the synergistic effect of resource input and plant colonization yielded unprecedented increases in soil carbon, accumulating as chemically stable compounds in occluded physical fractions and reaching much higher levels than observed in undisturbed ecosystems; and (3) invasive grasses progressively excluded native species, limiting nutrient availability, but contributing more than 65% of the total accumulated soil organic carbon. These results show that soil-plant feedbacks regulate the amount of available resources, determining successional trajectories and alternative stable equilibria in degraded areas undergoing restoration. External inputs promote plant colonization, soil formation, and carbon sequestration, at the cost of excluding native species. The introduction of native woody species would suppress invasive grasses and increase nutrient availability, bringing the system closer to its original state. However, it is difficult to predict whether soil carbon levels could be maintained without the exotic grass cover. We discuss theoretical and practical implications of these findings, describing how the combination of resource manipulation and management of invasive species could be used to optimize restoration strategies, counteracting soil degradation while maintaining species diversity.
露天开采对自然环境造成严重影响,经常导致土壤和植被的永久性破坏。本研究利用 14 年的恢复时间序列,调查资源投入和自然植物定居如何促进巴西中部矿区土壤的植被恢复和重建。我们采用多指标方法,将植被调查与植物和土壤稳定同位素丰度(δ13C 和 δ15N)分析以及土壤剖面有机质的化学和物理分馏相结合,结果表明:(1)在没有植被覆盖几十年后,富营养生物污泥输入到暴露的风化壳中,促进了多样化的植物群落(>30 种)的建立;(2)资源投入和植物定居的协同作用导致土壤碳的空前增加,以化学稳定的化合物形式积累在被截留的物理部分中,达到比未受干扰的生态系统高得多的水平;(3)入侵性草类逐渐排斥本地物种,限制了养分的可用性,但它们贡献了超过 65%的总累积土壤有机碳。这些结果表明,土壤-植物反馈调节了可用资源的数量,决定了退化地区恢复过程中的演替轨迹和替代稳定平衡。外部投入促进了植物定居、土壤形成和碳固存,但以排斥本地物种为代价。引入本地木本物种将抑制入侵性草类并增加养分可用性,使系统更接近原始状态。然而,很难预测在没有外来草类覆盖的情况下,土壤碳水平是否能够维持。我们讨论了这些发现的理论和实际意义,描述了如何通过资源管理和入侵物种管理相结合来优化恢复策略,在维持物种多样性的同时,防止土壤退化。