School of Environment and Institute of Grassland Science, and Key Laboratory of Vegetation Ecology and Key Laboratory for Wetland Ecology and Vegetation Restoration, Northeast Normal University, Changchun, Jilin, 130024, China.
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research, University of Colorado at Boulder, Boulder, Colorado, 80309, USA.
Ecol Appl. 2018 Jan;28(1):201-211. doi: 10.1002/eap.1640. Epub 2017 Dec 13.
Large herbivores have pronounced effects on nutrient cycling in grasslands. These organisms are known to alter the quality and quantity of plant production as well as the amounts and quality of plant litter and animal wastes. The generalization that the relative quality of detritus inputs is enhanced by herbivores is well known, but how this process is affected by diet selection processing and feces production of different large herbivores remains largely unstudied. Here, we measured how these differences for cattle and sheep on a dry grassland might influence nitrogen (N) mineralization from feces. We found that cattle of larger body size tended to select the low quality grass Stipa grandis as their major food source. In contrast, the subdominant grass Leymus chinensis, with relatively high N content, was a majority in the diet of smaller sheep, when palatable forbs were insufficient in the field. This diverse diet quality resulted in a C:N ratio of cattle feces that was higher than that of sheep feces. Relatively higher labile C availability in the cattle feces, namely relatively higher cellulose/hemicellulose contents, promoted microbial growth and in turn accelerated cattle feces decomposition. A surprise finding was that the feces from cattle mineralized about twice as much N as feces from sheep, despite the latter having slightly higher N content. From a grassland productivity perspective, increasing the proportion of large body-sized species in grazing herbivore assemblages perhaps is beneficial to forage productivity and nutrient recycling by the rapid degradation of feces.
大型食草动物对草原养分循环有显著影响。这些生物被认为可以改变植物的产量和质量,以及植物凋落物和动物粪便的数量和质量。众所周知,食草动物会提高碎屑输入的相对质量,但不同大型食草动物的饮食选择处理和粪便产生如何影响这个过程,仍在很大程度上未被研究。在这里,我们测量了干旱草原上的牛和羊之间的这些差异如何影响粪便中的氮(N)矿化。我们发现,体型较大的牛往往选择低质量的草大针茅作为主要食物来源。相比之下,当野外适口的草本植物不足时,相对含氮量较高的次优势草赖草则成为体型较小的绵羊的主要食物来源。这种多样化的饮食质量导致牛粪便的 C:N 比高于绵羊粪便。牛粪便中相对较高的可利用易分解 C,即相对较高的纤维素/半纤维素含量,促进了微生物的生长,从而加速了牛粪便的分解。一个令人惊讶的发现是,尽管绵羊粪便的 N 含量略高,但牛粪便的矿化 N 量却是绵羊粪便的两倍左右。从草原生产力的角度来看,增加放牧食草动物组合中大型物种的比例,可能有利于通过快速降解粪便来提高饲料生产力和养分循环。