Hotspots of biogeochemical activity linked to aridity and plant traits across global drylands.

David J Eldridge,Jingyi Ding,Josh Dorrough,Manuel Delgado-Baquerizo,Osvaldo Sala,Nicolas Gross,Yoann Le Bagousse-Pinguet,Max Mallen-Cooper,Hugo Saiz,Sergio Asensio,Victoria Ochoa,Beatriz Gozalo,Emilio Guirado,Miguel García-Gómez,Enrique Valencia,Jaime Martínez-Valderrama,César Plaza,Mehdi Abedi,Negar Ahmadian, Rodrigo J Ahumada, Julio M Alcántara,Fateh Amghar, Luísa Azevedo,Farah Ben Salem,Miguel Berdugo,Niels Blaum,Bazartseren Boldgiv,Matthew Bowker,Donaldo Bran,Chongfeng Bu,Rafaella Canessa,Andrea P Castillo-Monroy, Ignacio Castro,Patricio Castro-Quezada,Simone Cesarz,Roukaya Chibani,Abel Augusto Conceição,Anthony Darrouzet-Nardi,Yvonne C Davila, Balázs Deák,Paloma Díaz-Martínez,David A Donoso,Andrew David Dougill,Jorge Durán,Nico Eisenhauer,Hamid Ejtehadi, Carlos Ivan Espinosa,Alex Fajardo,Mohammad Farzam, Ana Foronda,Jorgelina Franzese,Lauchlan H Fraser,Juan Gaitán,Katja Geissler, Sofía Laura Gonzalez, Elizabeth Gusman-Montalvan, Rosa Mary Hernández,Norbert Hölzel,Frederic Mendes Hughes,Oswaldo Jadan,Anke Jentsch,Mengchen Ju, Kudzai F Kaseke,Melanie Köbel,Anika Lehmann,Pierre Liancourt,Anja Linstädter,Michelle A Louw,Quanhui Ma, Mancha Mabaso,Gillian Maggs-Kölling,Thulani P Makhalanyane,Oumarou Malam Issa,Eugene Marais,Mitchel McClaran,Betty Mendoza, Vincent Mokoka, Juan P Mora, Gerardo Moreno,Seth Munson,Alice Nunes,Gabriel Oliva,Gastón R Oñatibia,Brooke Osborne,Guadalupe Peter,Margerie Pierre, Yolanda Pueyo,R Emiliano Quiroga,Sasha Reed,Ana Rey, Pedro Rey, Víctor Manuel Reyes Gómez,Víctor Rolo,Matthias C Rillig,Peter C le Roux,Jan Christian Ruppert, Ayman Salah, Phokgedi Julius Sebei,Anarmaa Sharkhuu,Ilan Stavi, Colton Stephens, Alberto L Teixido, Andrew David Thomas, Katja Tielbörger, Silvia Torres Robles, Samantha Travers, Orsolya Valkó, Liesbeth van den Brink, Frederike Velbert, Andreas von Heßberg, Wanyoike Wamiti, Deli Wang, Lixin Wang, Glenda M Wardle, Laura Yahdjian, Eli Zaady, Yuanming Zhang, Xiaobing Zhou, Fernando T Maestre

Nature plants(2024)

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摘要
Perennial plants create productive and biodiverse hotspots, known as fertile islands, beneath their canopies. These hotspots largely determine the structure and functioning of drylands worldwide. Despite their ubiquity, the factors controlling fertile islands under conditions of contrasting grazing by livestock, the most prevalent land use in drylands, remain virtually unknown. Here we evaluated the relative importance of grazing pressure and herbivore type, climate and plant functional traits on 24 soil physical and chemical attributes that represent proxies of key ecosystem services related to decomposition, soil fertility, and soil and water conservation. To do this, we conducted a standardized global survey of 288 plots at 88 sites in 25 countries worldwide. We show that aridity and plant traits are the major factors associated with the magnitude of plant effects on fertile islands in grazed drylands worldwide. Grazing pressure had little influence on the capacity of plants to support fertile islands. Taller and wider shrubs and grasses supported stronger island effects. Stable and functional soils tended to be linked to species-rich sites with taller plants. Together, our findings dispel the notion that grazing pressure or herbivore type are linked to the formation or intensification of fertile islands in drylands. Rather, our study suggests that changes in aridity, and processes that alter island identity and therefore plant traits, will have marked effects on how perennial plants support and maintain the functioning of drylands in a more arid and grazed world.
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