Different responses of plant N and P resorption to overgrazing in three dominant species in a typical steppe of Inner Mongolia, China

Author:

Wang Zhen1,Jimoh Saheed Olaide12,Li Xiliang1,Ji Baoming3,Struik Paul C.4,Sun Shixian1,Lei Ji1,Ding Yong1,Zhang Yong1

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Grassland Research, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Hohhot, Inner Mongolia, China

2. Sustainable Environment Food and Agriculture Initiative (SEFAAI), Lagos, Nigeria

3. College of Forestry, Beijing Forestry University, Beijing, China

4. Department of Plant Sciences, Wageningen University, Wageningen, Netherlands

Abstract

Nutrient resorption from senesced leaves is an important mechanism for nutrient conservation in plants. However, little is known about the effect of grazing on plant nutrient resorption from senesced leaves, especially in semiarid ecosystems. Here, we evaluated the effects of grazing on N and P resorption in the three most dominant grass species in a typical steppe in northern China. We identified the key pathways of grazing-induced effects on N and P resorption efficiency. Grazing increased N and P concentrations in the green leaves of Leymus chinensis and Stipa grandis but not in Cleistogenes squarossa. Both L. chinensis and S. grandis exhibited an increasing trend of leaf N resorption, whereas C. squarrosa recorded a decline in both leaf N and P resorption efficiency under grazing. Structural equation models showed that grazing is the primary driver of the changes in N resorption efficiency of the three dominant grass species. For L. chinensis, the P concentration in green and senesced leaves increased the P resorption efficiency, whereas the senesced leaf P concentration played an important role in the P resorption efficiency of C. squarrosa. Grazing directly drove the change in P resorption efficiency of S. grandis. Our results suggest that large variations in nutrient resorption patterns among plant species depend on leaf nutritional status and nutrient-use strategies under overgrazing, and indicate that overgrazing may have indirect effects on plant-mediated nutrient cycling via inducing shifts in the dominance of the three plant species.

Funder

The National Natural Science Foundation of China

The Major Project of National Natural Science Foundation of Inner Mongolia

Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region key research and development plan project

The National Natural Science Foundation of Inner Mongolia

The National Natural Science Foundation of China and USA

The Central Nonprofit Research Institutes Fundamental Research Funds

The Inner Mongolia Science and Technology Plan

Grass and Livestock Resource-Saving Production System and Sustainable Development Mode of Ecologically Vulnerable Areas

Publisher

PeerJ

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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