Effects of different fencing regimes on community structure of degraded desert grasslands on Mu Us desert, China

Grazing is one of the major anthropogenic driving factors influencing community structure and ecological function of grasslands. Fencing has been proved to be one of the main measures for rehabilitating degraded grasslands in northwestern China. However, data from combined empirical studies on the e...

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Published inEcology and evolution Vol. 9; no. 6; pp. 3367 - 3377
Main Authors Liu, Jiankang, Bian, Zhen, Zhang, Kebin, Ahmad, Bilal, Khan, Alamgir
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England John Wiley & Sons, Inc 01.03.2019
John Wiley and Sons Inc
Wiley
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Summary:Grazing is one of the major anthropogenic driving factors influencing community structure and ecological function of grasslands. Fencing has been proved to be one of the main measures for rehabilitating degraded grasslands in northwestern China. However, data from combined empirical studies on the effects of different management regimes in desert grasslands are lacking. So we selected long‐term fencing (fenced since 1991), mid‐term fencing and seasonal fencing (fenced since 2002), and adjacent free‐grazing grasslands to investigate vegetation and soil properties on southwest Mu Us desert. Our results showed that fencing increased plant cover, height, aboveground biomass (AGB) of different plant life‐form groups, Shannon–Wiener diversity index, Evenness index, Simpson index, total soil nitrogen, total soil phosphorus, and soil organic matter, but decreased plant density, species richness, Richness index, soil bulk density, water content, and pH. However, 22–24 years of long‐term complete fencing might cause redegradation of vegetation and soil nutrients, characterized by the reduction of some vegetation properties, biodiversity, total AGB, and some soil properties. Seasonal fencing with 11–13 year was more beneficial to vegetation restoration than that with completely fencing measures. Our study suggests that appropriate artificial disturbances, such as seasonal fencing (winter grazing and summer fencing), should be used after long‐term fencing in order to maintain grassland productivity and biodiversity. These findings will help to provide theoretical support for vegetation restoration and sustainable management in grassland under grazing prohibition at Mu Us desert. This study indicated that differences in management regimes induced different changes of community structure. Moderate time fencing had positive effect on plant community of degraded grazing grassland. However, long‐term completely fencing might cause redegradation of vegetation. Seasonal fencing is a practical artificial disturbance measures to restore degraded vegetation.
Bibliography:Funding information
This research was funded by the National Key Technology R&D Program of China (2016YFC0500908), the National Natural Science Foundation of China (31400619), and the National Forestry Administration Desertification Positioning Monitoring Project (660550).
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ISSN:2045-7758
2045-7758
DOI:10.1002/ece3.4958