Testing relationship between plant productivity and diversity in a desertified steppe in Northwest China

The rapid global plant diversity and productivity loss has resulted in ecosystem functional degeneration in recent decades, and the relationship between plant diversity and productivity is a pressing issue around the world. Here, we sampled six plant communities that have not been grazed for 20 year...

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Main Authors: Yang Yang, Bingru Liu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PeerJ Inc. 2019-07-01
Series:PeerJ
Subjects:
Online Access:https://peerj.com/articles/7239.pdf
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spelling doaj-e056cdce3a1d487fa6cc70b003a6f1102020-11-24T23:55:25ZengPeerJ Inc.PeerJ2167-83592019-07-017e723910.7717/peerj.7239Testing relationship between plant productivity and diversity in a desertified steppe in Northwest ChinaYang Yang0Bingru Liu1Key Lab of Restoration and Reconstruction of Degraded Ecosystem in Northwest China of Ministry of Education, Ningxia University, Yinchuan, ChinaKey Lab of Restoration and Reconstruction of Degraded Ecosystem in Northwest China of Ministry of Education, Ningxia University, Yinchuan, ChinaThe rapid global plant diversity and productivity loss has resulted in ecosystem functional degeneration in recent decades, and the relationship between plant diversity and productivity is a pressing issue around the world. Here, we sampled six plant communities that have not been grazed for 20 years, i.e., Agropyron mongolicum, Stipa bungeana, Cynanchum komarovii, Glycyrrhiza uralensis, Sophora alopecuroides, Artemisia ordosica, located in a desertified steppe, northwestern China, and tested the relationship between plant diversity and productivity in this region. We found a positive linear relationship between AGB (above-ground biomass) and BGB (below-ground biomass), and the curves between plant diversity and AGB were unimodal (R2 = 0.4572, p < 0.05), indicating that plant productivity increased at a low level of diversity but decreased at a high level of diversity. However, there was no significant relationship between BGB and plant diversity (p > 0.05). Further, RDA (redundancy analysis) indicated that soil factors had a strong effect on plant diversity and productivity. Totally, GAMs (generalized additive models) showed that soil factors (especially total nitrogen TN, total carbon TC, soil microbial biomass nitrogen SMB-N, soil microbial biomass carbon SMB-C) explained more variation in plant diversity and productivity (78.24%), which can be regarded as the key factors driving plant diversity and productivity. Therefore, strategies aiming to increase plant productivity and protect plant diversity may concentrate on promoting soil factors (e.g., increasing TC, TN, SMB-N and SMB-C) and plant species, which can be regarded as an effective and simple strategy to stabilize ecosystems to mitigate aridity in desertified steppes in northwestern China.https://peerj.com/articles/7239.pdfDesertified steppePlant communitiesDiversityProductivityRelationship
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yang Yang
Bingru Liu
spellingShingle Yang Yang
Bingru Liu
Testing relationship between plant productivity and diversity in a desertified steppe in Northwest China
PeerJ
Desertified steppe
Plant communities
Diversity
Productivity
Relationship
author_facet Yang Yang
Bingru Liu
author_sort Yang Yang
title Testing relationship between plant productivity and diversity in a desertified steppe in Northwest China
title_short Testing relationship between plant productivity and diversity in a desertified steppe in Northwest China
title_full Testing relationship between plant productivity and diversity in a desertified steppe in Northwest China
title_fullStr Testing relationship between plant productivity and diversity in a desertified steppe in Northwest China
title_full_unstemmed Testing relationship between plant productivity and diversity in a desertified steppe in Northwest China
title_sort testing relationship between plant productivity and diversity in a desertified steppe in northwest china
publisher PeerJ Inc.
series PeerJ
issn 2167-8359
publishDate 2019-07-01
description The rapid global plant diversity and productivity loss has resulted in ecosystem functional degeneration in recent decades, and the relationship between plant diversity and productivity is a pressing issue around the world. Here, we sampled six plant communities that have not been grazed for 20 years, i.e., Agropyron mongolicum, Stipa bungeana, Cynanchum komarovii, Glycyrrhiza uralensis, Sophora alopecuroides, Artemisia ordosica, located in a desertified steppe, northwestern China, and tested the relationship between plant diversity and productivity in this region. We found a positive linear relationship between AGB (above-ground biomass) and BGB (below-ground biomass), and the curves between plant diversity and AGB were unimodal (R2 = 0.4572, p < 0.05), indicating that plant productivity increased at a low level of diversity but decreased at a high level of diversity. However, there was no significant relationship between BGB and plant diversity (p > 0.05). Further, RDA (redundancy analysis) indicated that soil factors had a strong effect on plant diversity and productivity. Totally, GAMs (generalized additive models) showed that soil factors (especially total nitrogen TN, total carbon TC, soil microbial biomass nitrogen SMB-N, soil microbial biomass carbon SMB-C) explained more variation in plant diversity and productivity (78.24%), which can be regarded as the key factors driving plant diversity and productivity. Therefore, strategies aiming to increase plant productivity and protect plant diversity may concentrate on promoting soil factors (e.g., increasing TC, TN, SMB-N and SMB-C) and plant species, which can be regarded as an effective and simple strategy to stabilize ecosystems to mitigate aridity in desertified steppes in northwestern China.
topic Desertified steppe
Plant communities
Diversity
Productivity
Relationship
url https://peerj.com/articles/7239.pdf
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