| Literature DB >> 30134213 |
Georg Miehe1, Per-Marten Schleuss2, Elke Seeber3, Wolfgang Babel4, Tobias Biermann5, Martin Braendle6, Fahu Chen7, Heinz Coners8, Thomas Foken9, Tobias Gerken10, Hans-F Graf11, Georg Guggenberger12, Silke Hafner13, Maika Holzapfel14, Johannes Ingrisch15, Yakov Kuzyakov16, Zhongping Lai17, Lukas Lehnert1, Christoph Leuschner8, Xiaogang Li18, Jianquan Liu18, Shibin Liu13, Yaoming Ma19, Sabine Miehe1, Volker Mosbrugger20, Henry J Noltie21, Joachim Schmidt22, Sandra Spielvogel23, Sebastian Unteregelsbacher24, Yun Wang14, Sandra Willinghöfer8, Xingliang Xu25, Yongping Yang26, Shuren Zhang27, Lars Opgenoorth28, Karsten Wesche29.
Abstract
With 450,000 km2Kobresia (syn. Carex) pygmaea dominated pastures in the eastern Tibetan highlands are the world's largest pastoral alpine ecosystem forming a durable turf cover at 3000-6000 m a.s.l. Kobresia's resilience and competitiveness is based on dwarf habit, predominantly below-ground allocation of photo assimilates, mixture of seed production and clonal growth, and high genetic diversity. Kobresia growth is co-limited by livestock-mediated nutrient withdrawal and, in the drier parts of the plateau, low rainfall during the short and cold growing season. Overstocking has caused pasture degradation and soil deterioration over most parts of the Tibetan highlands and is the basis for this man-made ecosystem. Natural autocyclic processes of turf destruction and soil erosion are initiated through polygonal turf cover cracking, and accelerated by soil-dwelling endemic small mammals in the absence of predators. The major consequences of vegetation cover deterioration include the release of large amounts of C, earlier diurnal formation of clouds, and decreased surface temperatures. These effects decrease the recovery potential of Kobresia pastures and make them more vulnerable to anthropogenic pressure and climate change. Traditional migratory rangeland management was sustainable over millennia, and possibly still offers the best strategy to conserve and possibly increase C stocks in the Kobresia turf.Entities:
Keywords: Alpine meadow; Alpine plant ecology; Carbon cycle and sequestration; Carex parvula; Grazing ecology; Hydrological cycle; Nutrient cycles; Paleo-environment; Qinghai-Tibet Plateau; Rangeland management
Year: 2018 PMID: 30134213 DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2018.08.164
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Total Environ ISSN: 0048-9697 Impact factor: 7.963