Passar para o conteúdo principal

page search

Biblioteca Climate change and grazing interact to alter flowering patterns in the Mongolian steppe

Climate change and grazing interact to alter flowering patterns in the Mongolian steppe

Climate change and grazing interact to alter flowering patterns in the Mongolian steppe

Resource information

Date of publication
Dezembro 2014
Resource Language
ISBN / Resource ID
AGRIS:US201400085574
Pages
251-260

Socio-economic changes threaten nomadic pastoralism across the world, changing traditional grazing patterns. Such land-use changes will co-occur with climate change, and while both are potentially important determinants of future ecosystem functioning, interactions between them remain poorly understood. We investigated the effects of grazing by large herbivores and climate manipulation using open-top chambers (OTCs) on flower number and flowering species richness in mountain steppe of northern Mongolia. In this region, sedentary pastoralism is replacing nomadic pastoralism, and temperature is predicted to increase. Grazing and OTCs interacted to affect forb flowering richness, which was reduced following grazing removal, and reduced by OTCs in grazed plots only. This interaction was directly linked to the soil moisture and temperature environments created by the experimental treatments: most species flowered when both soil moisture and temperature levels were high (i.e. in grazed plots without OTCs), while fewer species flowered when either temperature, or moisture, or both, were low. Removal of grazing increased the average number of graminoid flowers produced at peak flowering in Year 1, but otherwise grazing removal and OTCs did not affect community-level flower composition. Of four abundant graminoid species examined individually, three showed increased flower number with grazing removal, while one showed the reverse. Four abundant forb species showed no significant response to either treatment. Our results highlight how climate change effects on mountain steppe could be contingent on land-use, and that studies designed to understand ecosystem response to climate change should incorporate co-occurring drivers of change, such as altered grazing regimes.

Share on RLBI navigator
NO

Authors and Publishers

Author(s), editor(s), contributor(s)

Spence, Laura A.
Liancourt, Pierre
Boldgiv, Bazartseren
Petraitis, Peter S.
Casper, Brenda B.

Publisher(s)
Data Provider
Geographical focus