| Literature DB >> 29558936 |
Shiming Tang1, Yujuan Zhang2, Xiajie Zhai1, Andreas Wilkes3, Chengjie Wang4, Kun Wang5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The effects of grazing on soil methane (CH4) uptake in steppe ecosystems are important for understanding carbon sequestration and cycling because the role of grassland soil for CH4 uptake can have major impacts at the global level. Here, a meta-analysis of 27 individual studies was carried out to assess the response patterns of soil CH4 uptake to grazing in steppe ecosystems of China. The weighted log response ratio was used to assess the effect size.Entities:
Keywords: CH4 uptake; China; Grazing; Meta-analysis; Soil; Steppe
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29558936 PMCID: PMC5859401 DOI: 10.1186/s12898-018-0168-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Ecol ISSN: 1472-6785 Impact factor: 2.964
Fig. 1Weighted response ratio (RR ++) of CH4 uptake at different grazing intensities, in different steppe types, and grazing duration (years). Bars represent mean RR++ ± 95% confidence interval. The number of observations for each category used in the analysis is given in the figure. LG, MG, and HG are light grazing, moderate grazing, and heavy grazing, respectively
Effects of the independent variables on the response ratios, using between-group heterogeneity (Qb) of the CH4 flux response to grazing
| Types | Categories | Qb | p |
|---|---|---|---|
| Grazing intensity | Light, moderate, heavy | 15.43 | 0.002 |
| Climatic type | < 400 mm, ≥ 400 mm | 0.28 | 0.554 |
| Grazing duration | < 5, 5–10, ≥ 10 | 18.42 | 0.007 |
Fig. 2Effects of grazing on a soil bulk density (BD), b soil temperature (ST), c soil moisture (SM), d soil organic carbon (SOC) and e aboveground biomass (AGB), represented by weighted response ratio (RR ++) in different intensity. The dashed vertical lines were drawn at RR = 0. The bars represent 95% confidence interval. The number of observations for each category used in the analysis is given at each bar. LG, MG, and HG are light grazing, moderate grazing, and heavy grazing, respectively
Fig. 3Relationships of response ratios (RR) of soil CH4 uptake flux with RR of a soil temperature (ST) and b aboveground biomass (AGB)