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Nitrogen pools and cycles in Tibetan <Emphasis Type="Italic">Kobresia</Emphasis> pastures depending on grazing
Authors:  Per-Marten?Schleuss  Johanna?Pausch  Email author" target="_blank">Xingliang?XuEmail author  Yakov?Kuzyakov
Institution:1.Department of Agricultural Soil Science,University of Goettingen,G?ttingen,Germany;2.Department of Soil Ecology,BayCEER, University of Bayreuth,Bayreuth,Germany;3.Department of Agroecology,BayCEER, University of Bayreuth,Bayreuth,Germany;4.Key Laboratory of Ecosystem Network Observation and Modelling, Institute of Geographic Sciences and Natural Resources Research,CAS,Beijing,China;5.Department of Soil Science of Temperate Ecosystems,University of G?ttingen,G?ttingen,Germany;6.Institute of Environmental Sciences,Kazan Federal University,Kazan,Russia
Abstract:Kobresia grasslands on the Tibetan Plateau comprise the world’s largest pastoral alpine ecosystem. Overgrazing-driven degradation strongly proceeded on this vulnerable grassland, but the mechanisms behind are still unclear. Plants must balance the costs of releasing C to soil against the benefits of accelerated microbial nutrient mineralization, which increases their availability for root uptake. To achieve the effect of grazing on this C-N exchange mechanism, a 15NH4+ field labeling experiment was implemented at grazed and ungrazed sites, with additional treatments of clipping and shading to reduce belowground C input by manipulating photosynthesis. Grazing reduced gross N mineralization rates by 18.7%, similar to shading and clipping. This indicates that shoot removal by grazing decreased belowground C input, thereby suppressing microbial N mining and overall soil N availability. Nevertheless, NH4+ uptake rate by plants at the grazed site was 1.4 times higher than at the ungrazed site, because plants increased N acquisition to meet the high N demands of shoot regrowth (compensatory growth: grazed > ungrazed). To enable efficient N uptake and regrowth, Kobresia plants have developed specific traits (i.e., efficient above-belowground interactions). These traits reflect important mechanisms of resilience and ecosystem stability under long-term moderate grazing in an N-limited environment. However, excessive (over)grazing might imbalance such C-N exchange and amplify plant N limitation, hampering productivity and pasture recovery over the long term. In this context, a reduction in grazing pressure provides a sustainable way to maintain soil fertility, C sequestration, efficient nutrient recycling, and overall ecosystem stability.
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