Data from: Litter accumulation alters the abiotic environment and drives community successional changes in two fenced grasslands in Inner Mongolia
Fencing is an effective and practical method for restoring degraded grasslands in northern China. However, little is known about the role of excess litter accumulation due to long-term fencing in regulating abiotic environment and driving changes in community structure and function. We conducted a t...
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Zusammenfassung: | Fencing is an effective and practical method for restoring degraded
grasslands in northern China. However, little is known about the role of
excess litter accumulation due to long-term fencing in regulating abiotic
environment and driving changes in community structure and function. We
conducted a three-year field experiment in two fenced grasslands in Inner
Mongolia, and monitored light quantity, soil temperature, and soil
moisture continuously, and determined community height, community
aboveground net primary productivity (ANPP), and the relative dominance of
different plant functional groups. Litter accumulation reduced light
quantity and soil temperature but increased soil moisture. The regulating
effects of litter accumulation on soil temperature and soil moisture
fluctuated temporally and gradually weakened over the growing season.
Litter accumulation also altered community vertical structure and function
by increasing community height and ANPP. The increase in soil moisture
increased the relative dominance of rhizome grasses but suppressed bunch
grasses, thereby shifting bunch grass grasslands to rhizome grass
grasslands. Our findings provide a potential mechanism for community
succession in the context of litter accumulation in fenced grasslands, and
indicate that the vegetation and ecosystem services of degraded grasslands
are improved after appropriate fencing. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.6r99k25 |