A single application of fertilizer can affect semi-natural grassland vegetation over half a century

Restoration of species-rich semi-natural grassland requires not only a seed source but also appropriate soil properties. In Europe, approximately 10 years are required for the properties of fertilized soils to reach suitable conditions and be considered successfully restored. However, restoration ma...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2022-11, Vol.17 (11), p.e0275808-e0275808
Hauptverfasser: Tsutsumi, Michio, Hiradate, Syuntaro, Yokogawa, Masashi, Yamakita, Eri, Inoue, Masahito, Takahashi, Yoshitaka
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container_title PloS one
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creator Tsutsumi, Michio
Hiradate, Syuntaro
Yokogawa, Masashi
Yamakita, Eri
Inoue, Masahito
Takahashi, Yoshitaka
description Restoration of species-rich semi-natural grassland requires not only a seed source but also appropriate soil properties. In Europe, approximately 10 years are required for the properties of fertilized soils to reach suitable conditions and be considered successfully restored. However, restoration may require additional time in Japan because heavier precipitation causes leaching of basic cations from soils, resulting in soil acidification; volcanic ejecta also forms active Al and Fe hydroxides with high phosphate sorption. Within this context, we aimed to answer the following questions: i) whether and how the impacts of fertilization remain in the soil properties after half a century in Japan; and ii) how fertilization affects the restoration of semi-natural grasslands in Japan. We investigated the vegetation and soil properties of a Zoysia japonica pasture improved half a century ago with a single application of fertilizer and an adjacent semi-natural grassland (native pasture) in Japan, and found the following: (1) the two pastures had similar dominance of Z. japonica, but differed in the species composition; (2) the improved pasture exhibited lower species richness than the native pasture; (3) soil nutrients, including N, P, K, Mg, and Ca, were higher in the improved pasture than in the native pasture; and (4) many chemical properties of the soils were associated with species composition; namely, the vegetation on nutrient-rich soil had more alien species and fewer native species. We conclude that a single dose of fertilization can affect soil properties in semi-natural grasslands over half a century in Japan, leading to species loss and changing the species composition. We suggest that fertilized soils under grazing in Japan may require more than half a century to restore the nutrients to suitable levels for the establishment of a species-diverse grassland.
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subjects Acidic soils
Acidification
Biology and Life Sciences
Cations
Chemical properties
Composition
Earth Sciences
Ecological research
Ecological restoration
Ecology and Environmental Sciences
Ejecta
Environmental aspects
Environmental restoration
Fertilization
Fertilizer application
Fertilizer applications
Fertilizers
Forecasts and trends
Grassland
Grassland ecology
Grasslands
Hydroxides
Indigenous species
Introduced species
Iron
Japan
Land use
Leaching
Nutrients
Pasture
Pastures
Physical Sciences
Poaceae
Precipitation
Restoration
Social aspects
Social Sciences
Soil
Soil acidification
Soil conditions
Soil fertility
Soil nutrients
Soil properties
Soils
Species composition
Species richness
Vegetation
Volcanic activity
Volcanic soils
title A single application of fertilizer can affect semi-natural grassland vegetation over half a century
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