Response of Polygonum viviparum species and community level to long-term livestock grazing in alpine shrub meadow in Qinghai-Tibet Plateau

Grazing by domestic herbivores is generally recognized as a major ecological factor and an important evolutionary force in grasslands. Grazing has both extensive and profound effects on individual plants and communities. We investigated the response patterns of Polygonum viviparum species and the sp...

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Main Authors: Zhu, Zhi-Hong, Lundholm, Jeremy, Li, Yingnian, Wang, Xiaoan
Format: Report
Language:unknown
Published: 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ir.nwipb.ac.cn/handle/363003/1212
http://210.75.249.4/handle/363003/15048
http://210.75.249.4/handle/363003/20144
http://210.75.249.4/handle/363003/25240
http://210.75.249.4/handle/363003/30336
http://210.75.249.4/handle/363003/35432
http://210.75.249.4/handle/363003/40528
http://210.75.249.4/handle/363003/45608
http://210.75.249.4/handle/363003/50688
http://210.75.249.4/handle/363003/55768
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spelling ftchinacascnwipb:oai:210.75.249.4:363003/55768 2023-05-15T18:03:01+02:00 Response of Polygonum viviparum species and community level to long-term livestock grazing in alpine shrub meadow in Qinghai-Tibet Plateau Zhu, Zhi-Hong Lundholm, Jeremy Li, Yingnian Wang, Xiaoan 2008-06-01 http://ir.nwipb.ac.cn/handle/363003/1212 http://210.75.249.4/handle/363003/15048 http://210.75.249.4/handle/363003/20144 http://210.75.249.4/handle/363003/25240 http://210.75.249.4/handle/363003/30336 http://210.75.249.4/handle/363003/35432 http://210.75.249.4/handle/363003/40528 http://210.75.249.4/handle/363003/45608 http://210.75.249.4/handle/363003/50688 http://210.75.249.4/handle/363003/55768 unknown JOURNAL OF INTEGRATIVE PLANT BIOLOGY Zhu ZhiHong,Lundholm Jeremy, Li Yingnian,Wang Xiaoan.Response of Polygonum viviparum species and community level to long-term livestock grazing in alpine shrub meadow in Qinghai-Tibet Plateau.JOURNAL OF INTEGRATIVE PLANT BIOLOGY,2008,50(6): 659-672 http://ir.nwipb.ac.cn/handle/363003/1212 http://210.75.249.4/handle/363003/15048 http://210.75.249.4/handle/363003/20144 http://210.75.249.4/handle/363003/25240 http://210.75.249.4/handle/363003/30336 http://210.75.249.4/handle/363003/35432 http://210.75.249.4/handle/363003/40528 http://210.75.249.4/handle/363003/45608 http://210.75.249.4/handle/363003/50688 http://210.75.249.4/handle/363003/55768 期刊论文 2008 ftchinacascnwipb 2023-03-26T20:44:20Z Grazing by domestic herbivores is generally recognized as a major ecological factor and an important evolutionary force in grasslands. Grazing has both extensive and profound effects on individual plants and communities. We investigated the response patterns of Polygonum viviparum species and the species diversity of an alpine shrub meadow in response to long-term livestock grazing by a field manipulative experiment controlling livestock numbers on the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau in China. Here, we hypothesize that within a range of grazing pressure, grazing can alter relative allocation to different plant parts without changing total biomass for some plant species if there is life history trade-offs between plant traits. The same type of communities exposed to different grazing pressures may only alter relative species' abundances or species composition and not vary species diversity because plant species differ in resistant capability to herbivory. The results show that plant height and biomass of different organs differed among grazing treatments but total biomass remained constant. Biomass allocation and absolute investments to both reproduction and growth decreased and to belowground storage increased with increased grazing pressure, indicating the increasing in storage function was attained at a cost of reducing reproduction of bulbils and represented an optimal allocation and an adaptive response of the species to long-term aboveground damage. Moreover, our results showed multiform response types for either species groups or single species along the gradient of grazing intensity. Heavy grazing caused a 13.2% increase in species richness. There was difference in species composition of about 18%-20% among grazing treatment. Shannon-Wiener (H') diversity index and species evenness (E) index did not differ among grazing treatments. These results support our hypothesis. Grazing by domestic herbivores is generally recognized as a major ecological factor and an important evolutionary force in grasslands. Grazing has ... Report Polygonum viviparum Northwest Institute of Plateau Biology: NWIPB OpenIR (Chinese Academy of Sciences)
institution Open Polar
collection Northwest Institute of Plateau Biology: NWIPB OpenIR (Chinese Academy of Sciences)
op_collection_id ftchinacascnwipb
language unknown
description Grazing by domestic herbivores is generally recognized as a major ecological factor and an important evolutionary force in grasslands. Grazing has both extensive and profound effects on individual plants and communities. We investigated the response patterns of Polygonum viviparum species and the species diversity of an alpine shrub meadow in response to long-term livestock grazing by a field manipulative experiment controlling livestock numbers on the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau in China. Here, we hypothesize that within a range of grazing pressure, grazing can alter relative allocation to different plant parts without changing total biomass for some plant species if there is life history trade-offs between plant traits. The same type of communities exposed to different grazing pressures may only alter relative species' abundances or species composition and not vary species diversity because plant species differ in resistant capability to herbivory. The results show that plant height and biomass of different organs differed among grazing treatments but total biomass remained constant. Biomass allocation and absolute investments to both reproduction and growth decreased and to belowground storage increased with increased grazing pressure, indicating the increasing in storage function was attained at a cost of reducing reproduction of bulbils and represented an optimal allocation and an adaptive response of the species to long-term aboveground damage. Moreover, our results showed multiform response types for either species groups or single species along the gradient of grazing intensity. Heavy grazing caused a 13.2% increase in species richness. There was difference in species composition of about 18%-20% among grazing treatment. Shannon-Wiener (H') diversity index and species evenness (E) index did not differ among grazing treatments. These results support our hypothesis. Grazing by domestic herbivores is generally recognized as a major ecological factor and an important evolutionary force in grasslands. Grazing has ...
format Report
author Zhu, Zhi-Hong
Lundholm, Jeremy
Li, Yingnian
Wang, Xiaoan
spellingShingle Zhu, Zhi-Hong
Lundholm, Jeremy
Li, Yingnian
Wang, Xiaoan
Response of Polygonum viviparum species and community level to long-term livestock grazing in alpine shrub meadow in Qinghai-Tibet Plateau
author_facet Zhu, Zhi-Hong
Lundholm, Jeremy
Li, Yingnian
Wang, Xiaoan
author_sort Zhu, Zhi-Hong
title Response of Polygonum viviparum species and community level to long-term livestock grazing in alpine shrub meadow in Qinghai-Tibet Plateau
title_short Response of Polygonum viviparum species and community level to long-term livestock grazing in alpine shrub meadow in Qinghai-Tibet Plateau
title_full Response of Polygonum viviparum species and community level to long-term livestock grazing in alpine shrub meadow in Qinghai-Tibet Plateau
title_fullStr Response of Polygonum viviparum species and community level to long-term livestock grazing in alpine shrub meadow in Qinghai-Tibet Plateau
title_full_unstemmed Response of Polygonum viviparum species and community level to long-term livestock grazing in alpine shrub meadow in Qinghai-Tibet Plateau
title_sort response of polygonum viviparum species and community level to long-term livestock grazing in alpine shrub meadow in qinghai-tibet plateau
publishDate 2008
url http://ir.nwipb.ac.cn/handle/363003/1212
http://210.75.249.4/handle/363003/15048
http://210.75.249.4/handle/363003/20144
http://210.75.249.4/handle/363003/25240
http://210.75.249.4/handle/363003/30336
http://210.75.249.4/handle/363003/35432
http://210.75.249.4/handle/363003/40528
http://210.75.249.4/handle/363003/45608
http://210.75.249.4/handle/363003/50688
http://210.75.249.4/handle/363003/55768
genre Polygonum viviparum
genre_facet Polygonum viviparum
op_relation JOURNAL OF INTEGRATIVE PLANT BIOLOGY
Zhu ZhiHong,Lundholm Jeremy, Li Yingnian,Wang Xiaoan.Response of Polygonum viviparum species and community level to long-term livestock grazing in alpine shrub meadow in Qinghai-Tibet Plateau.JOURNAL OF INTEGRATIVE PLANT BIOLOGY,2008,50(6): 659-672
http://ir.nwipb.ac.cn/handle/363003/1212
http://210.75.249.4/handle/363003/15048
http://210.75.249.4/handle/363003/20144
http://210.75.249.4/handle/363003/25240
http://210.75.249.4/handle/363003/30336
http://210.75.249.4/handle/363003/35432
http://210.75.249.4/handle/363003/40528
http://210.75.249.4/handle/363003/45608
http://210.75.249.4/handle/363003/50688
http://210.75.249.4/handle/363003/55768
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