TY - JOUR
T1 - Effects of livestock grazing on the spatial heterogeneity of net soil nitrogen mineralization in three types of Mongolian grasslands
AU - Hirobe, Muneto
AU - Kondo, Junji
AU - Enkhbaatar, Altangerel
AU - Amartuvshin, Narantsetseg
AU - Fujita, Noboru
AU - Sakamoto, Keiji
AU - Yoshikawa, Ken
AU - Kielland, Knut
N1 - Funding Information:
Acknowledgments We would like to thank Dr. J. Tsogtbaatar for his support in Mongolia. We wish to thank Dr. T. Okayasu and Ms. J. Sergerenkhuu for their helpful comments, and Drs. K. Shima and M. Maeda for their help in laboratory analysis. We also thank Dr. T. Otoda and Mr. Y. Akaji for their advices in statistical analysis. Two anonymous reviewers improved this paper. This research was supported by the Research Institute for Humanity and Nature (Project No. D-04) and was partly supported by the Global Environmental Research Fund for Japan’s Ministry of the Environment “Desertification Control and Restoration of Ecosystem Services in Grassland Regions of North-East Asia” (Global Environment Research Fund, G-071). Financial support was also provided in part by the Yakumo Foundation for Environmental Science.
PY - 2013/8
Y1 - 2013/8
N2 - Purpose: Small-scale soil heterogeneity relates to productivity and biodiversity and is crucial to understand. Soil heterogeneity could be affected by vegetation structure, and large mammal grazers could modify it through herbivory and excretion. The objective is to clarify the effects of livestock grazing on the small-scale (∼3 m) soil heterogeneity in three types of Mongolian grasslands. Materials and methods: We sampled soils from inside (ungrazed) and outside (grazed) exclosures in three vegetation types: forest-steppe, shrub-steppe, and desert-steppe. We measured laboratory rates of soil net nitrogen (N) mineralization and net nitrification and geostatistically analyzed heterogeneity. Results and discussion: Average rates of net N mineralization and net nitrification were lower at shrub-steppe and desert-steppe and were decreased by grazing. Semivariograms showed vegetation-induced heterogeneity in ungrazed plots, except for net nitrification at forest-steppe. We found linear change with distance under dense and uniform vegetation at forest-steppe, 1.3 m patch under patchy vegetation at shrub-steppe, and linear change, but with much smaller semivariance, under sparse and poor vegetation at desert-steppe. At forest-steppe, grazing randomized the spatial patterns of net N mineralization and net nitrification. At shrub-steppe and desert-steppe, grazing greatly decreased the semivariances of net N mineralization and net nitrification as well as their averages, and the soil heterogeneity was virtually disappeared. Conclusions: Grazing in Mongolian grasslands homogenized the spatial patterns of net N mineralization and net nitrification, irrespective of their original spatial patterns determined by the differences in vegetation structure.
AB - Purpose: Small-scale soil heterogeneity relates to productivity and biodiversity and is crucial to understand. Soil heterogeneity could be affected by vegetation structure, and large mammal grazers could modify it through herbivory and excretion. The objective is to clarify the effects of livestock grazing on the small-scale (∼3 m) soil heterogeneity in three types of Mongolian grasslands. Materials and methods: We sampled soils from inside (ungrazed) and outside (grazed) exclosures in three vegetation types: forest-steppe, shrub-steppe, and desert-steppe. We measured laboratory rates of soil net nitrogen (N) mineralization and net nitrification and geostatistically analyzed heterogeneity. Results and discussion: Average rates of net N mineralization and net nitrification were lower at shrub-steppe and desert-steppe and were decreased by grazing. Semivariograms showed vegetation-induced heterogeneity in ungrazed plots, except for net nitrification at forest-steppe. We found linear change with distance under dense and uniform vegetation at forest-steppe, 1.3 m patch under patchy vegetation at shrub-steppe, and linear change, but with much smaller semivariance, under sparse and poor vegetation at desert-steppe. At forest-steppe, grazing randomized the spatial patterns of net N mineralization and net nitrification. At shrub-steppe and desert-steppe, grazing greatly decreased the semivariances of net N mineralization and net nitrification as well as their averages, and the soil heterogeneity was virtually disappeared. Conclusions: Grazing in Mongolian grasslands homogenized the spatial patterns of net N mineralization and net nitrification, irrespective of their original spatial patterns determined by the differences in vegetation structure.
KW - Livestock grazing
KW - Mongolian grasslands
KW - Semivariogram
KW - Soil heterogeneity
KW - Soil nitrogen mineralization
KW - Vegetation structure
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U2 - 10.1007/s11368-013-0702-6
DO - 10.1007/s11368-013-0702-6
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84880846088
SN - 1439-0108
VL - 13
SP - 1123
EP - 1132
JO - Journal of Soils and Sediments
JF - Journal of Soils and Sediments
IS - 7
ER -