Jiaxin Han , Ruzhen Wang , Jordi Sardans , Heyong Liu , Peng He , Huanhuan Deng , Weiyi Ma , Josep Peñuelas , Xingguo Han , Yong Jiang
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The forest-steppe ecotone (FSE) is vulnerable to climate change and valuable to predict ecosystem succession. Although species diversity covaries with climatic factors and changes gradually across FSE transects, aligning with “Whittaker’s hierarchy theory”, whether soil nutrients follow a similar distribution pattern remains unclear. We studied the ecological gradient changes in effective cation-exchange capacity (ECEC, sum of exchangeable Ca2+, Mg2+, K+ and Na+) in the near-neutral-pH rhizosphere and bulk soils along the north–south zonal transect of the Hulunbuir FSE, China. The 230-km transect includes hierarchical transitions from two closed forests through two FSE to four meadow steppes. For both rhizosphere and bulk soils, soil ECEC were the highest in meadow steppes followed by closed forests and FSE area. ECEC were inversely correlated with soil water content but positively with soil pH. Therefore, the distribution of ECEC along the forest-steppe transect did not conform to a hierarchical distribution and decoupled from vegetation transitions, possibly due to the fact that the distribution of soil pH, plant uptake and leaching break the uniformity of ECEC variation along the gradient. In closed forests and FSE ecosystems, the ECEC and exchangeable Ca2+ in rhizosphere soils were higher than those in bulk soil, indicating that rhizosphere processes may alleviate cation limitation in these ecosystems. The study substantially improves our understanding of soil nutrient mobilization and soil fertility across forest-steppe ecotones which helps projecting ecosystem succession. It further highlights the critical role of rhizosphere processes in modulating hierarchical vegetation transition along environmental gradients and provides avenues for future research opportunities.
期刊介绍:
Catena publishes papers describing original field and laboratory investigations and reviews on geoecology and landscape evolution with emphasis on interdisciplinary aspects of soil science, hydrology and geomorphology. It aims to disseminate new knowledge and foster better understanding of the physical environment, of evolutionary sequences that have resulted in past and current landscapes, and of the natural processes that are likely to determine the fate of our terrestrial environment.
Papers within any one of the above topics are welcome provided they are of sufficiently wide interest and relevance.