Barnett Kirk L, Johnson Scott N, Power Sally A
Hawkesbury Institute for the Environment, Western Sydney University, Locked Bag 1797, Penrith, NSW, 2751, Australia.
Oecologia. 2018 Nov;188(3):777-789. doi: 10.1007/s00442-018-4244-x. Epub 2018 Aug 12.
Predicted increases in extreme weather are likely to alter the interactions between organisms within ecosystems. Whilst many studies have investigated the impacts of climate change on aboveground plant-insect interactions, those belowground remain relatively unexplored. Root herbivores can be the dominant taxa in grasslands, potentially altering plant community dynamics. To better predict the impact of climate change on grasslands, we subjected four Australian pasture grasses (Cynodon dactylon, Paspalum dilatatum, Microlaena stipoides and Lolium perenne) to contrasting rainfall regimes [a press drought (i.e. sustained, moderate water stress), a pulse drought (water stress followed by periodic, infrequent deluge event) and a well-watered control], with and without root herbivores; a manual root cutting treatment was also included for comparison. Plant growth, rooting strategy, phenology and biochemistry were measured to evaluate above and belowground treatment responses. Watering treatments had a larger effect on plant productivity than root damage treatments: press drought and pulse drought treatments reduced biomass by 58% and 47%, respectively. Root herbivore damage effects were species dependent and were not always equivalent to root cutting. The combination of pulse drought and root herbivory resulted in increased root:shoot ratios for both P. dilatatum and L. perenne, as well as decreased biomass and delayed flowering time for P. dilatatum. Plant biomass responses to root damage were greatest under well-watered conditions; however, root damage also delayed or prevented investment in reproduction in at least one species. Our findings highlight the important role of soil-dwelling invertebrates for forecasting growth responses of grassland communities to future rainfall regime changes.
预计极端天气的增加可能会改变生态系统中生物之间的相互作用。虽然许多研究调查了气候变化对地上植物与昆虫相互作用的影响,但地下的相互作用仍相对未被探索。食根动物可能是草原上的主要类群,有可能改变植物群落动态。为了更好地预测气候变化对草原的影响,我们将四种澳大利亚牧场草(狗牙根、宽叶雀稗、细叶米草和多年生黑麦草)置于不同的降雨模式下[持续干旱(即持续的中度水分胁迫)、脉冲干旱(水分胁迫后间歇性、不频繁的洪水事件)和充分浇水的对照],有或没有食根动物;还包括手动剪根处理以作比较。测量了植物生长、生根策略、物候和生物化学,以评估地上和地下处理的反应。浇水处理对植物生产力的影响大于根系损伤处理:持续干旱和脉冲干旱处理分别使生物量减少了58%和47%。食根动物的损伤影响因物种而异,并不总是等同于剪根。脉冲干旱和食根动物的组合导致宽叶雀稗和多年生黑麦草的根冠比增加,以及宽叶雀稗的生物量减少和开花时间延迟。植物生物量对根系损伤的反应在充分浇水条件下最大;然而,根系损伤也至少在一个物种中延迟或阻止了对繁殖的投入。我们的研究结果突出了土壤无脊椎动物在预测草原群落对未来降雨模式变化的生长反应方面的重要作用。