Berry Ryan S, Kulmatiski Andrew
Department of Wildland Resources and the Ecology Center, Utah State University, Logan, UT, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2017 Apr 7;12(4):e0175402. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0175402. eCollection 2017.
As the atmosphere warms, precipitation events are becoming less frequent but more intense. A three-year experiment in Kruger National Park, South Africa, found that fewer, more intense precipitation events encouraged woody plant encroachment. To test whether or not these treatment responses persisted over time, here, we report results from all five years of that experiment. Grass growth, woody plant growth, total fine root number and area and hydrologic tracer uptake by grasses and woody plants were measured in six treated plots (8 m by 8 m) and six control plots. Treatment effects on soil moisture were measured continuously in one treated and one control plot. During the fourth year, increased precipitation intensity treatments continued to decrease water flux in surface soils (0-10 cm), increase water flux in deeper soils (20+ cm), decrease grass growth and increase woody plant growth. Greater root numbers at 20-40 cm and greater woody plant uptake of a hydrological tracer from 45-60 cm suggested that woody plants increased growth by increasing root number and activity (but not root area) in deeper soils. During the fifth year, natural precipitation events were large and intense so treatments had little effect on precipitation intensity or plant available water. Consistent with this effective treatment removal, there was no difference in grass or woody growth rates between control and treated plots, although woody plant biomass remained higher in treated than control plots due to treatment effects in the previous four years. Across the five years of this experiment, we found that 1) small increases in precipitation intensity can result in large increases in deep (20-130 cm) soil water availability, 2) plant growth responses to precipitation intensity are rapid and disappear quickly, and 3) because woody plants accumulate biomass, occasional increases in precipitation intensity can result in long-term increases in woody plant biomass (i.e., shrub encroachment). While results are likely to be site-specific, they provide experimental evidence of large ecohydrological responses to small changes in precipitation intensity.
随着大气变暖,降水事件变得频率更低但强度更大。在南非克鲁格国家公园进行的一项为期三年的实验发现,降水事件次数减少但强度增大促使木本植物入侵。为了测试这些处理反应是否随时间持续存在,在此我们报告该实验全部五年的结果。在六个处理地块(8米×8米)和六个对照地块中测量了草生长、木本植物生长、细根总数和面积以及草和木本植物对水文示踪剂的吸收。在一个处理地块和一个对照地块中连续测量处理对土壤湿度的影响。在第四年,降水强度增加的处理继续减少表层土壤(0 - 10厘米)的水流,增加深层土壤(20厘米及以上)的水流,减少草生长并增加木本植物生长。20 - 40厘米处更多的根数量以及45 - 60厘米处木本植物对水文示踪剂的更大吸收表明,木本植物通过增加深层土壤中的根数量和活性(而非根面积)来增加生长。在第五年,自然降水事件量大且强度高,因此处理对降水强度或植物可用水几乎没有影响。与这种有效的处理消除一致,对照地块和处理地块之间的草或木本生长速率没有差异,尽管由于前四年的处理影响,处理地块中的木本植物生物量仍高于对照地块。在该实验的五年中,我们发现:1)降水强度的小幅增加可导致深层(20 - 130厘米)土壤水分可用性大幅增加;2)植物对降水强度的生长反应迅速且很快消失;3)由于木本植物积累生物量,降水强度的偶尔增加可导致木本植物生物量长期增加(即灌木入侵)。虽然结果可能具有地点特异性,但它们提供了对降水强度小变化的大型生态水文响应的实验证据。