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Dryad

Intraspecific trait variation and species turnover mediate grazing impacts on above- and below-ground functional trait composition of plant communities

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Sep 23, 2021 version files 71.50 KB

Abstract

  1. Although grazing has significant impacts on plant functional traits and community composition in grasslands, few studies have simultaneously explored how plant above- and below-ground traits and community functional composition respond to grazing.
  2. Using a grazing manipulation experiment with seven levels of grazing intensity (0, 1.5, 3.0, 4.5, 6.0, 7.5, and 9 sheep ha-1) in the Inner Mongolia grassland, we partitioned the roles of intraspecific trait variation (ITV) and species turnover underlying the grazing induced changes in above- and below-ground functional trait composition of plant communities.  Six aboveground traits (i.e. plant height, plant aboveground biomass, plant density, leaf area, specific leaf area (SLA) and leaf density) and three root traits (average root diameter, ARD; specific root length, SRL; and root tissue density, RTD) of the first-, second- and third-order roots (1st-, 2nd-, and 3rd-) were measured at the plant individual level. 
  3. At the community level, plant above-ground traits shifted towards grazing avoidance strategy (e.g. plant height and leaf area decreased), and below-ground traits shifted towards conservative strategy (i.e. 1st-SRL and 2nd-SRL decreased, 1st-RTD and 2nd-ARD increased) with increasing grazing intensity.  Functional tradeoffs were found between plant individual biomass and plant density, and between leaf area and leaf density under grazing.  However, community-weighted mean SRL (SRLCWM) and ARD (ARDCWM) of different root orders exhibited functional coordination under grazing pressure.  SLACWM and SRLCWM also showed synergistic responses to grazing.
  4.  The ITV plays a predominant for the changes in above- and below-ground functional trait composition at the community level.  However, changes in mean trait values among plant species with different resource use strategies were mainly triggered by species turnover.  For species with different resource use strategies, grazing exhibited a coordinated effects on ITV but an offset effect on species turnover.
  5. Synthesis. Our results demonstrate that both the above- and below-ground trait composition of plant communities shifted toward conservative strategy under long-term grazing.  This study highlights the effects of ITV and species turnover that govern the grazing-induced changes in functional trait composition of plant communities, and has important implications for grazing management in semiarid grasslands.