Soil Aggregate Stability and Grassland Productivity Associations in a Northern Mixed-Grass Prairie.

Soil aggregate stability data are often predicted to be positively associated with measures of plant productivity, rangeland health, and ecosystem functioning. Here we revisit the hypothesis that soil aggregate stability is positively associated with plant productivity. We measured local (plot-to-pl...

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Main Authors: Kurt O Reinhart, Lance T Vermeire
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2016-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4965036?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-1c759a9d33e447ea86893f5424b015812020-11-24T20:50:01ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032016-01-01117e016026210.1371/journal.pone.0160262Soil Aggregate Stability and Grassland Productivity Associations in a Northern Mixed-Grass Prairie.Kurt O ReinhartLance T VermeireSoil aggregate stability data are often predicted to be positively associated with measures of plant productivity, rangeland health, and ecosystem functioning. Here we revisit the hypothesis that soil aggregate stability is positively associated with plant productivity. We measured local (plot-to-plot) variation in grassland community composition, plant (aboveground) biomass, root biomass, % water-stable soil aggregates, and topography. After accounting for spatial autocorrelation, we observed a negative association between % water-stable soil aggregates (0.25-1 and 1-2 mm size classes of macroaggregates) and dominant graminoid biomass, and negative associations between the % water-stable aggregates and the root biomass of a dominant sedge (Carex filifolia). However, variation in total root biomass (0-10 or 0-30 cm depths) was either negatively or not appreciably associated with soil aggregate stabilities. Overall, regression slope coefficients were consistently negative thereby indicating the general absence of a positive association between measures of plant productivity and soil aggregate stability for the study area. The predicted positive association between factors was likely confounded by variation in plant species composition. Specifically, sampling spanned a local gradient in plant community composition which was likely driven by niche partitioning along a subtle gradient in elevation. Our results suggest an apparent trade-off between some measures of plant biomass production and soil aggregate stability, both known to affect the land's capacity to resist erosion. These findings further highlight the uncertainty of plant biomass-soil stability associations.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4965036?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kurt O Reinhart
Lance T Vermeire
spellingShingle Kurt O Reinhart
Lance T Vermeire
Soil Aggregate Stability and Grassland Productivity Associations in a Northern Mixed-Grass Prairie.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Kurt O Reinhart
Lance T Vermeire
author_sort Kurt O Reinhart
title Soil Aggregate Stability and Grassland Productivity Associations in a Northern Mixed-Grass Prairie.
title_short Soil Aggregate Stability and Grassland Productivity Associations in a Northern Mixed-Grass Prairie.
title_full Soil Aggregate Stability and Grassland Productivity Associations in a Northern Mixed-Grass Prairie.
title_fullStr Soil Aggregate Stability and Grassland Productivity Associations in a Northern Mixed-Grass Prairie.
title_full_unstemmed Soil Aggregate Stability and Grassland Productivity Associations in a Northern Mixed-Grass Prairie.
title_sort soil aggregate stability and grassland productivity associations in a northern mixed-grass prairie.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2016-01-01
description Soil aggregate stability data are often predicted to be positively associated with measures of plant productivity, rangeland health, and ecosystem functioning. Here we revisit the hypothesis that soil aggregate stability is positively associated with plant productivity. We measured local (plot-to-plot) variation in grassland community composition, plant (aboveground) biomass, root biomass, % water-stable soil aggregates, and topography. After accounting for spatial autocorrelation, we observed a negative association between % water-stable soil aggregates (0.25-1 and 1-2 mm size classes of macroaggregates) and dominant graminoid biomass, and negative associations between the % water-stable aggregates and the root biomass of a dominant sedge (Carex filifolia). However, variation in total root biomass (0-10 or 0-30 cm depths) was either negatively or not appreciably associated with soil aggregate stabilities. Overall, regression slope coefficients were consistently negative thereby indicating the general absence of a positive association between measures of plant productivity and soil aggregate stability for the study area. The predicted positive association between factors was likely confounded by variation in plant species composition. Specifically, sampling spanned a local gradient in plant community composition which was likely driven by niche partitioning along a subtle gradient in elevation. Our results suggest an apparent trade-off between some measures of plant biomass production and soil aggregate stability, both known to affect the land's capacity to resist erosion. These findings further highlight the uncertainty of plant biomass-soil stability associations.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4965036?pdf=render
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