Author:
Wu Ruixin,Chai Qi,Zhang Jianquan,Zhong Mengying,Liu Yuehua,Wei Xiaoting,Pan Duo,Shao Xinqing
Abstract
The relationships among environmental factors, rodent activity disturbance and plant-community diversity were studied across four sites in a prefecture of the ‘Three-River-Source’ region of the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau. It was found that burrow number and mound area had little impact on plant diversity indices, which were mainly affected by altitude, soil total P and pH. Altitude and mound area, especially mound area, can strongly affect the aboveground biomass and the vegetation cover of plants was mainly influenced by mound area. There was some evidence that moderate levels of disturbance by rodents could lead to the highest levels of plant diversity. These findings indicated that moderate levels of disturbance by rodents may be beneficial to grassland productivity and plant diversity. Understanding these impacts is vital for better rangeland management practices so that rodents should be controlled within a suitable range rather than being exterminated.
Subject
Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
28 articles.
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