Plants and Ecosystems (PLECO), Department of Biology, University of Antwerp, B-2610 Wilrijk, Belgium.
Flanders Research Institute for Agricultural, Food and Fisheries Research (ILVO), Burg. Van Gansberghelaan 109, B-9820 Merelbeke, Belgium.
Sci Total Environ. 2024 Mar 25;918:170623. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2024.170623. Epub 2024 Feb 4.
Agricultural practices enhancing soil organic carbon (SOC) show potential to buffer negative effects of climate change on forage grass performance. We tested this by subjecting five forage grass varieties differing in fodder quality and drought/flooding resistance to increased persistence in summer precipitation regimes (PR) across sandy and sandy-loam soils from either permanent (high SOC) or temporary grasslands (low SOC) in adjacent parcels. Over the course of two consecutive summers, monoculture mesocosms were subjected to rainy/dry weather alternation either every 3 days or every 30 days, whilst keeping total precipitation equal. Increased PR persistence induced species-specific drought damage and productivity declines. Soils from permanent grasslands with elevated SOC buffered plant quality, but buffering effects of SOC on drought damage, nutrient availability and yield differed between texture classes. In the more persistent PR, Festuca arundinacea FERMINA was the most productive species but had the lowest quality under both ample water supply and mild soil drought, whilst under the most intense soil droughts, Festulolium FESTILO maintained the highest yields. The hybrid Lolium × boucheanum kunth MELCOMBI had intermediate productivity and both Lolium perenne varieties showed the lowest yields under soil drought, but the highest forage quality (especially the tetraploid variety MELFORCE). Performance varied with plant maturity stage and across seasons/years and was driven by altered water and nutrient availability and related nitrogen nutrition among species during drought and upon rewetting. Moreover, whilst permanent grassland soils showed the most consistent positive effects on plant performance, their available water capacity also declined under increased PR persistence. We conclude that permanent grassland soils with historically elevated SOC likely buffer negative effects of increasing summer weather persistence on forage grass performance, but may also be more sensitive to degradation under climate change.
农业实践可以增加土壤有机碳(SOC),从而有可能缓解气候变化对饲草性能的负面影响。我们通过在永久性草地(SOC 较高)或相邻地块的临时草地(SOC 较低)中,用五种饲草品种在沙质和沙壤土上进行夏季降水制度(PR)持续时间增加的实验来验证这一点。在两个连续的夏季,在每个 3 天或 30 天的干湿交替天气下,对单种培养的中培养箱进行处理,同时保持总降水量相等。PR 持续时间的增加导致了特定物种的干旱损伤和生产力下降。具有较高 SOC 的永久性草地土壤缓冲了植物的质量,但 SOC 对干旱损伤、养分供应和产量的缓冲作用在质地类型之间存在差异。在更持久的 PR 中,FESTUCA ARUNDINACEA FERMINA 是生产力最高的物种,但在充足的水分供应和轻度土壤干旱下质量最低,而在最强烈的土壤干旱下,Festulolium FESTILO 保持了最高的产量。杂种 Lolium×boucheanum kunth MELCOMBI 具有中等生产力,在土壤干旱下,两种 Lolium perenne 品种的产量最低,但饲料质量最高(特别是四倍体品种 MELFORCE)。性能随植物成熟阶段和季节/年份的变化而变化,是由物种在干旱和复湿期间改变的水分和养分供应以及相关氮营养引起的。此外,尽管永久性草地土壤对植物性能表现出最一致的积极影响,但在 PR 持续时间增加的情况下,其可用水分容量也有所下降。我们的结论是,具有历史上较高 SOC 的永久性草地土壤可能会缓冲夏季天气持续时间增加对饲草性能的负面影响,但在气候变化下也可能更容易退化。