Assessment of the Ecosystem Service Function of Sandy Lands at Different Times Following Aerial Seeding of an Endemic Species

Desertification is a global and pressing environmental problem in the course of environmental changes, and considerable efforts have been made to restore these degraded ecosystems. Aerial seeding has been widely used to accelerate ecological restoration around the world. However, few efforts have be...

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Veröffentlicht in:Sustainability 2018-03, Vol.10 (4), p.902
Hauptverfasser: Zhang, Lei, Hong, Guangyu, Li, Zhuofan, Gao, Xiaowei, Wu, Yongzhi, Wang, Xiaojiang, Wang, Pingping, Yang, Jie
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container_issue 4
container_start_page 902
container_title Sustainability
container_volume 10
creator Zhang, Lei
Hong, Guangyu
Li, Zhuofan
Gao, Xiaowei
Wu, Yongzhi
Wang, Xiaojiang
Wang, Pingping
Yang, Jie
description Desertification is a global and pressing environmental problem in the course of environmental changes, and considerable efforts have been made to restore these degraded ecosystems. Aerial seeding has been widely used to accelerate ecological restoration around the world. However, few efforts have been made to assess the ecosystem service function after aerial seeding has occurred. In this study, we analyzed variations in the ecosystem service function after varying periods of elapsed time after aerial seeding of Hedysarum laeve Maxim. (14a, 30a and 38a) in the Mu Us Sandy Land, China. We also assessed the carbon sequestration ability, biodiversity, soil properties, wind-break and sand-fixation ability on a typical windward slope. We found that the overall assessment value of ecosystem services had generally increased with the elapsed time after aerial seeding. Additionally, the assessment values increased as the slope position moved downwards. Moreover, we observed a gradual replacement of H. laeve by Artemisia ordosica Krasch and grass species with the increase in elapsed years after aerial seeding, indicating a positive succession towards locally native vegetation. Compared with the local natural vegetation, our results suggest that the practice of aerial seeding stimulated vegetation restoration without the need for follow-up field interventions, and the practice of aerial seeding might fit more ecosystems with similar vegetation degradation problems.
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Moreover, we observed a gradual replacement of H. laeve by Artemisia ordosica Krasch and grass species with the increase in elapsed years after aerial seeding, indicating a positive succession towards locally native vegetation. 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source MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute; EZB Electronic Journals Library
subjects Biodiversity
Desertification
Ecosystem assessment
Ecosystem services
Ecosystems
Endemic species
Environmental changes
Environmental degradation
Natural vegetation
Sandy soils
Seeding
Soil properties
Sustainability
Vegetation
Windbreaks
title Assessment of the Ecosystem Service Function of Sandy Lands at Different Times Following Aerial Seeding of an Endemic Species
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