Risch Anita C, Schotz Martin, Vandegehuchte Martijn L, Van Der Putten Wim H, Duyts Henk, Raschein Ursina, Gwiazdowicz Dariusz J, Busse Matt D, Page-dumroese Deborah S, Zimmermann Stephan
Ecology. 2015 Dec;96(12):3312-22. doi: 10.1890/15-0300.1.
Aboveground herbivores have strong effects on grassland nitrogen (N) cycling. They can accelerate or slow down soil net N mineralization depending on ecosystem productivity and grazing intensity. Yet, most studies only consider either ungulates or invertebrate herbivores, but not the combined effect of several functionally different vertebrate and invertebrate herbivore species or guilds. We assessed how a diverse herbivore community affects net N mineralization in subalpine grasslands. By using size-selective fences, we progressively excluded large, medium, and small mammals, as well as invertebrates from two vegetation types, and assessed how the exclosure types (ET) affected net N mineralization. The two vegetation types differed in long-term management (centuries), forage quality, and grazing history and intensity. To gain a more mechanistic understanding of how herbivores affect net N mineralization, we linked mineralization to soil abiotic (temperature; moisture; NO3-, NH4+, and total inorganic N concentrations/pools; C, N, P concentrations; pH; bulk density), soil biotic (microbial biomass; abundance of collembolans, mites, and nematodes) and plant (shoot and root biomass; consumption; plant C, N, and fiber content; plant N pool) properties. Net N mineralization differed between ET, but not between vegetation types. Thus, short-term changes in herbivore community composition and, therefore, in grazing intensity had a stronger effect on net N mineralization than long-term management and grazing history. We found highest N mineralization values when only invertebrates were present, suggesting that mammals had a negative effect on net N mineralization. Of the variables included in our analyses, only mite abundance and aboveground plant biomass explained variation in net N mineralization among ET. Abundances of both mites and leaf-sucking invertebrates were positively correlated with aboveground plant biomass, and biomass increased with progressive exclusion. The negative impact of mammals on net N mineralization may be related partially to (1) differences in the amount of plant material (litter) returned to the belowground subsystem, which induced a positive bottom-up effect on mite abundance, and (2) alterations in the amount and/or distribution of dung, urine, and food waste. Thus, our results clearly show that short-term alterations of the aboveground herbivore community can strongly impact nutrient cycling within ecosystems independent of long-term management and grazing history.
地上食草动物对草地氮(N)循环有强烈影响。它们可以根据生态系统生产力和放牧强度加速或减缓土壤净氮矿化。然而,大多数研究只考虑有蹄类动物或无脊椎动物食草动物,而没有考虑几种功能不同的脊椎动物和无脊椎动物食草动物物种或类群的综合影响。我们评估了多样化的食草动物群落如何影响亚高山草地的净氮矿化。通过使用尺寸选择性围栏,我们逐步排除了两种植被类型中的大型、中型和小型哺乳动物以及无脊椎动物,并评估了围栏类型(ET)如何影响净氮矿化。这两种植被类型在长期管理(几个世纪)、饲料质量以及放牧历史和强度方面存在差异。为了更深入地了解食草动物如何影响净氮矿化,我们将矿化与土壤非生物因素(温度、湿度、NO3-、NH4+和总无机氮浓度/库、C、N、P浓度、pH、容重)、土壤生物因素(微生物生物量、弹尾虫、螨虫和线虫的丰度)以及植物因素(地上和地下生物量、消耗量、植物C、N和纤维含量、植物N库)特性联系起来。净氮矿化在围栏类型之间存在差异,但在植被类型之间没有差异。因此,食草动物群落组成的短期变化以及由此导致的放牧强度变化对净氮矿化的影响比长期管理和放牧历史更强。我们发现仅有无脊椎动物时氮矿化值最高,这表明哺乳动物对净氮矿化有负面影响。在我们分析中包含的变量中,只有螨虫丰度和地上植物生物量解释了不同围栏类型间净氮矿化的变化。螨虫和吸叶无脊椎动物的丰度均与地上植物生物量呈正相关,且生物量随着逐步排除而增加。哺乳动物对净氮矿化的负面影响可能部分与以下因素有关:(1)返回地下子系统的植物物质(凋落物)数量不同所引发的对螨虫丰度的正向自下而上效应,以及(2)粪便、尿液和食物残渣数量和/或分布的改变。因此,我们的结果清楚地表明,地上食草动物群落的短期变化能够强烈影响生态系统内的养分循环,而与长期管理和放牧历史无关。