Affiliation:
1. Department of Ecology, Evolution and Behavior University of Minnesota St Paul Minnesota USA
2. Swiss Federal Institute for Forest, Snow and Landscape Research, WSL Birmensdorf Switzerland
Abstract
Abstract
Global interest and investment in nature‐based solutions (NbS) are rapidly increasing because of the potential of this approach to concurrently counter biodiversity loss, provide cost‐effective measures for climate change adaptations, and maintain natural processes that underpin human health and wellbeing.
Recognition is growing that grasslands in many regions will protect carbon stores more effectively than forests in the warmer, drier, more fire‐prone conditions of the future while also serving as hotspots for biodiversity. Yet grasslands have received less attention for their NbS potential. Despite the wide‐ranging goals of this approach, many investments in nature‐based solutions also have focused narrowly on using plants to meet climate pledges, often without considering plant interactions with herbivores and the abiotic environment that jointly control ecosystem functioning and underpin the success of nature‐based solutions.
Here, we review the roles that large and small vertebrate and invertebrate herbivores play in the ability of the world's grasslands to provide nature‐based solutions, with a focus on wild herbivore impacts on biodiversity and carbon storage.
Synthesis. Planning for nature‐based solutions with a holistic, ecologically informed view that includes the role of herbivores and their interaction with plants and the environment will allow NbS investments to more likely achieve successful, sustainable outcomes.
Funder
National Science Foundation
Reference132 articles.
1. Critical review of the impacts of grazing intensity on soil organic carbon storage and other soil quality indicators in extensively managed grasslands;Abdalla M.;Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment,2018
2. Evolution and origin of the central grassland of North America: Climate, fire, and mammalian grazers;Anderson R.;The Journal of the Torrey Botanical Society,2006
3. Responses of belowground communities to large aboveground herbivores: Meta‐analysis reveals biome‐dependent patterns and critical research gaps;Andriuzzi W. S.;Global Change Biology,2017
4. Herbivores at the highest risk of extinction among mammals, birds, and reptiles;Atwood T. B.;Science Advances,2020
5. Grassland soil carbon sequestration: Current understanding, challenges, and solutions;Bai Y.;Science,2022