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Different responses of leaf and root economics spectrum to grazing time at the community level in desert steppe, China

The plant economic spectrum can explain the trade-off strategies of vascular plants between resource acquisition and storage. Grazing can alter the plant functional characteristics of grassland ecosystems, resulting in a shift in plant resource acquisition strategies. Taking fenced grassland as a co...

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Published in:The Science of the total environment 2024-01, Vol.909, p.168547-168547, Article 168547
Main Authors: Zhou, Yao, Ma, Hongbin, Lu, Qi, Ma, Jingli, Shen, Yan, Wang, Guohui
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:The plant economic spectrum can explain the trade-off strategies of vascular plants between resource acquisition and storage. Grazing can alter the plant functional characteristics of grassland ecosystems, resulting in a shift in plant resource acquisition strategies. Taking fenced grassland as a control, in this study we quantified six leaf traits and four root traits of 14 plant species (those that comprised >85 % of the species community abundance) of different grazing time grasslands in desert grasslands in Ningxia. We examined how grazing time shapes the functional structure of plant communities and the resource acquisition strategy. The results revealed an inverse pattern of the fast-slow economic spectrum of leaf and root traits; that is, as grazing time increased, the leaf traits shifted from an acquisitive type to a conservative type of resource acquisition strategy. In contrast, the root traits showed a shift from a conservative type to an acquisitive type of resource acquisition strategy. Grazing time leads to a whole plant economic spectrum, and plant functional traits may facilitate their response to environmental change, the study of which can hereby deepen our understanding of the plant economics spectrum. Our study provides new evidence that leaf and root resource acquisition and utilization are relatively independent under grazing pressure. [Display omitted] •Grazing time led to an inverse pattern of the leaf and root traits economic spectrum.•As the grazing time increases, plants tend to prioritize the growth of aboveground.•TP and AK are the main driving factors of plant traits under different grazing times.
ISSN:0048-9697
1879-1026
DOI:10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.168547