Jin Xiaoying, Jin Huijun, Wu Xiaodong, Luo Dongliang, Yu Sheng, Li Xiaoying, He Ruixia, Wang Qingfeng, Knops Johannes M H
Northeast-China Observatory and Research-Station of Permafrost Geo-Environment-Ministry of Education, Institute of Cold-Regions Science and Engineering, School of Civil Engineering, Northeast Forestry University, Harbin 150040, China.
State Key Laboratory of Frozen Soils Engineering, Northwest Institute of Eco-Environment and Resources, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Lanzhou 730000, China.
Plants (Basel). 2020 Oct 28;9(11):1453. doi: 10.3390/plants9111453.
Degradation of permafrost with a thin overlying active layer can greatly affect vegetation via changes in the soil water and nutrient regimes within the active layer, while little is known about the presence or absence of such effects in areas with a deep active layer. Here, we selected the northeastern Qinghai-Tibet Plateau as the study area. We examined the vegetation communities and biomass along an active layer thickness (ALT) gradient from 0.6 to 3.5 m. Our results showed that plant cover, below-ground biomass, species richness, and relative sedge cover declined with the deepening active layer, while the evenness, and relative forb cover showed a contrary trend. The vegetation indices and the dissimilarity of vegetation composition exhibited significant changes when the ALT was greater than 2.0 m. The vegetation indices (plant cover, below-ground biomass, evenness index, relative forb cover and relative sedge cover) were closely associated with soil water content, soil pH, texture and nutrient content. Soil water content played a key role in the ALT-vegetation relationship, especially at depths of 30-40 cm. Our results suggest that when the ALT is greater than 2.0 m, the presence of underlying permafrost still benefits vegetation growth via maintaining adequate soil water contents at 30-40 cm depth. Furthermore, the degradation of permafrost may lead to declines of vegetation cover and below-ground biomass with a shift in vegetation species.
覆盖着薄表层活跃层的多年冻土退化会通过活跃层内土壤水分和养分状况的变化对植被产生重大影响,而对于具有深厚活跃层的地区是否存在此类影响却知之甚少。在此,我们选择青藏高原东北部作为研究区域。我们沿着0.6至3.5米的活跃层厚度(ALT)梯度研究了植被群落和生物量。我们的结果表明,随着活跃层加深,植被覆盖度、地下生物量、物种丰富度和莎草相对覆盖度下降,而均匀度和杂类草相对覆盖度则呈相反趋势。当ALT大于2.0米时,植被指数和植被组成的差异呈现出显著变化。植被指数(植被覆盖度、地下生物量、均匀度指数、杂类草相对覆盖度和莎草相对覆盖度)与土壤含水量、土壤pH值、质地和养分含量密切相关。土壤含水量在ALT与植被的关系中起关键作用,尤其是在30 - 40厘米深度处。我们的结果表明,当ALT大于2.0米时,下层多年冻土的存在仍通过在30 - 40厘米深度维持充足的土壤含水量而有利于植被生长。此外,多年冻土的退化可能导致植被覆盖度和地下生物量下降以及植被物种的转变。