Shuqi Liu , Dong Cui , Jianghui Liu , Zhenxing Bian
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Global changes in nitrogen deposition, precipitation patterns and land use could have an impact on soil biotas. Soil nematodes are important indicators of ecosystem function in degraded grasslands, and how global climate change affect soil nematode communities in degraded grasslands with poisonous weeds needs further study. This study conducted a control experiment on degraded grasslands with Sophora alopecuroides as a single dominant species. We set up a total of eight treatments, which are no nitrogen, no watering, no mowing (CK), nitrogen addition (N treatment), watering (W treatment), mowing (M treatment), nitrogen × watering (NW treatment), nitrogen × mowing (NM treatment), watering × mowing (WM treatment), nitrogen × watering × mowing (NWM treatment). We analyzed the patterns of change in nematode abundance, richness, ecological indices, and co-occurrence networks, as well as the relationships among nematode trophic taxa, soil salinity, and plants. Our results showed that: (1) Paratylenchus and Acrobeles were the main dominant genera. NW treatment significantly increased the relative abundance of plant parasites and significantly decreased the relative abundance of bacterivores. (2) N and NWM treatments increased nematode community network complexity. W, M, and WM treatments decreased nematode community network complexity. (3) Plant Parasites and Bacterivores nematodes community composition were significantly correlated with the structural characteristics of S. alopecuroides (biomass, height, coverage; biomass, height). Fungivores nematodes and Omnivores/Predators nematodes community composition were significantly correlated with soil salinity ions (Cl-, Mg2+; SO42-). (4) The average degree (characterizing the interaction intensity among nematodes genera and sparsity-density of the nematode ecological network) was significantly positively correlated with soil multifunctionality. In addition, the interaction of nitrogen and watering addition on the abundance of different feeding nematodes than nitrogen and watering addition alone. Mowing can alleviate the negative effects of nitrogen addition and watering on soil food webs. Our study suggested that there are complex interactions between soil nematodes and environmental factors in grassland ecosystems, and provided new insights for understanding the impact of global change on the formation and change of soil fauna diversity in poisonous weed type degraded grasslands.
期刊介绍:
The ultimate aim of Ecological Indicators is to integrate the monitoring and assessment of ecological and environmental indicators with management practices. The journal provides a forum for the discussion of the applied scientific development and review of traditional indicator approaches as well as for theoretical, modelling and quantitative applications such as index development. Research into the following areas will be published.
• All aspects of ecological and environmental indicators and indices.
• New indicators, and new approaches and methods for indicator development, testing and use.
• Development and modelling of indices, e.g. application of indicator suites across multiple scales and resources.
• Analysis and research of resource, system- and scale-specific indicators.
• Methods for integration of social and other valuation metrics for the production of scientifically rigorous and politically-relevant assessments using indicator-based monitoring and assessment programs.
• How research indicators can be transformed into direct application for management purposes.
• Broader assessment objectives and methods, e.g. biodiversity, biological integrity, and sustainability, through the use of indicators.
• Resource-specific indicators such as landscape, agroecosystems, forests, wetlands, etc.