| Literature DB >> 34956262 |
Lian-Lian Fan1,2,3, Okhonniyozov Mekrovar1,2,3, Yao-Ming Li1,2,3, Kai-Hui Li1,2,3, Xue-Xi Ma1,2, Jie-Fei Mao1,2,3.
Abstract
Grasslands provide key resource for the millions of people who are dependent on livestock in Tajikistan. Productivity and species richness (SR) are important characteristics of grassland ecosystems and are greatly affected by nutrient inputs. The effect that climate change might have on these characteristics remains unclear. Here, an in situ nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) fertilization experiment was conducted at four sites along with an elevational gradient (650, 1,100, 1,250, and 2,000 m) in western Tajikistan over 2 years (2018 and 2019) to examine the influences of nutrient availability and climate change on aboveground biomass (AGB) and SR; precipitation and temperature were also considered to analyze the responses. It demonstrated that enrichment with N, P, and their combinations significantly increased AGB along with an elevational gradient (p < 0.05). AGB increased as the concentrations of nutrients added increased. The maximum AGB, which was 2-fold higher compared with control, was observed when 90 kg N ha-1year-1 and 30 kg P ha-1year-1 were added. In addition, nitrogen addition alone stimulated greater AGB than P addition, although no significant difference was observed between these two treatments. Enrichment with N, P, and their combination had no significant effect on SR; however, SR significantly changed at different elevation. Elevation had direct effect on precipitation and temperature, which, in turn, resulted in variation in AGB and SR. Moreover, both nutrient and elevation had significant effect on AGB and SR, but there was no interaction effect of them. AGB and SR interacted with significant negative correlation. In the high-elevation area, plants grew better in the warmer year (2018); this indicates that grasslands in high mountain areas in Tajikistan might have higher productivity as the climate warms, which will positively affect the economic development of the country.Entities:
Keywords: Central Asia; above-ground biomass (AGB); climate change; meteorological factor; nutrient addition
Year: 2021 PMID: 34956262 PMCID: PMC8708349 DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2021.765077
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Plant Sci ISSN: 1664-462X Impact factor: 5.753
FIGURE 1Map of the study area and the experimental design. N0P0–the control; N3—addition of 30 kg N ha−1year−1, P3—addition of 30 kg P ha−1year−1, N3P3—addition of 30 kg N ha−1year−1 and 30 kg P ha−1year−1, N9P3—addition of 90 kg N ha−1year−1 and 30 kg P ha−1year−1. The fertilizer was added via a single application. The Shuttle Radar Topographic Mission (SRTM) 30 m digital elevation model (DEM) dataset was obtained from USGS (https://glovis.usgs.gov/).
FIGURE 2The average monthly temperature (A–G) and monthly precipitation (E–H) in the four experimental sites.
The location of the four experimental sites and the total precipitation and annual average temperature among the four sites.
| Site | Latitude | Longitude | Altitude (m) | TP (mm) | AAT (°C) | ||
| 2018 | 2019 | 2018 | 2019 | ||||
| Tabakchi | 37°51.55′°N | 68°57.56′°E | 650 | 172.60 | 344.50 | 17.28 | 17.60 |
| Blakhi | 38°14.05′°N | 69°17.02′°E | 1,100 | 426.30 | 456.70 | 17.51 | 17.51 |
| Luchob | 38°39.91′°N | 68°39.38′°E | 1,250 | 1,290.00 | 1,317.80 | 12.35 | 12.05 |
| Ziddi | 39°02.19′°N | 68°49.37′°E | 2,000 | 692.90 | 1,211.90 | 13.96 | 6.77 |
TP, total precipitation; AAT, annual average temperature.
FIGURE 3Changes in the above-ground biomass (A,B) and species richness (C,D) changing under different nutrient treatments at different elevations in 2018 (left) and 2019 (right). Within each panel, groups with the same capital letters above them are not significantly different at p < 0.05 (Duncan’s test). Within each group of five bars, bars sharing the different letters are significantly different from each other at p < 0.05. Letters are not presented when none of the five bars differs significantly from any of the others (Duncan’s test), ns means that differences are not significant. The data were showed as mean ± SE.
Summary of the linear mixed-effects models relating fixed factor (N, E) and random factor (Y) for the grassland above-ground biomass and species richness.
| Source | AGB | SR | ||
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| N | 14.971 | 0.000 | 0.2684 | 0.898 |
| E | 156.448 | 0.000 | 125.5307 | 0.000 |
| N × E | 1.281 | 0.237 | 1.071 | 0.389 |
N means different nutrient addition and E means different elevation, N × E means the interaction. ***Significant difference at p < 0.001 level.
FIGURE 4Structural equation model for the effect of environmental factors and nutrient inputs on the plant above-ground biomass. Red and black arrows indicate positive and negative relationships, respectively. Single-headed arrows represent causal relationships and two-headed arrows indicate correlation. Dotted arrows represent non-significant paths (p > 0.05). Values adjacent to arrows indicate standardized path coefficients. The proportion of variance explained (r2) appears alongside response variable in the model. Significance levels are denoted with **p < 0.01.
FIGURE 5Annual total precipitation and annual average temperature at different elevations (A), the average above-ground biomass (B), and species richness (C) in 2018 and 2019. Data of the control treatment were used (mean ± SE). Different capital letters indicate significant difference between years at the same elevation (p < 0.05), ns, no significant difference.