表土中未受损草类的干枯导致纳米比亚的仙女圈--对 Jürgens & Gröngröft (2023) 的回应

IF 4.3 3区 材料科学 Q1 ENGINEERING, ELECTRICAL & ELECTRONIC
Stephan Getzin , Hezi Yizhaq
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在一项新颖的研究中,Getzin 等人(2022 年)在纳米布的四个地区挖掘了 500 株草,系统地研究了仙人圈中幼草死亡的时间过程。根据对草根长度的测量、统计测试和对比照片记录,作者发现沙白蚁的食草行为并不会导致仙人圈内新发芽的草死亡。这些死亡的草的根部最初未受损伤,甚至比植被基质外的活草的根部更长,这与白蚁的食草行为背道而驰。功能区中濒临死亡的一年生草的根芽比明显高于基质中的活草,这两种情况都可归因于同一场引发草害的降雨事件。这表明,它们死于水分胁迫,因为干枯的草把生物量资源投入到根部,试图到达有更多水分的土壤深层,但它们失败了。Jürgens 和 Gröngröft(2023 年)对我们的研究结果发表了评论。在此,我们通过调查纳米布仙女圈的现有数据证据,包括对白蚁觅食机制的全面文献综述,以及对仙女圈内部和周围土壤水分性质的描述,对他们的说法进行了澄清。我们的综述显示,迄今为止,还没有任何一项研究以根部测量和纳米布多个地区的数据为形式,通过系统的实地证据证明,仙人圈内的绿色发芽草会被沙白蚁的根部食草动物杀死。在这层表土层中,刚发芽的小草连同 10 厘米长的根系会在降雨后因缺水而迅速死亡,因为这些小植物无法接触和利用较高的土壤含水量,而只有在干燥表土层以下的较深土层中才有较高的土壤含水量。根据 2024 年雨季期间对土壤水分的 400 次测量,我们发现功能区表层土壤明显比外部基质干燥。最后,我们还表明,在草地引发降雨后的最初几周,土壤物理条件允许非常高的水力传导性,从而支持 "吸收-扩散反馈"。在最初的两周里,在几个降雨事件中,功能区 20 厘米深处的土壤湿度介于 9% 到 18% 之间,因此远远高于 6-8% 的临界值,低于这个临界值,水力传导性就会强烈下降。即使在降雨后 20 天,土壤湿度仍高于 8%。在这一生物活跃期,新草会在大约五天后发芽,功能区边缘的大型多年生草类会重新生长,并通过其在 20-30 厘米深处已建立的根系大量汲取水分,而功能区中刚发芽的草类则会在 10-20 天内干枯死亡。通过对土壤水分的连续测量,我们认为,功能区边缘迅速返青、竞争力强的草以及生命力旺盛的基质草从功能区汲取土壤水分。土壤水分的快速消耗和表层土壤的干燥导致了仙人圈中新草的死亡。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Desiccation of undamaged grasses in the topsoil causes Namibia’s fairy circles – Response to Jürgens & Gröngröft (2023)

In a novel study, Getzin et al. (2022) have excavated 500 grasses at four regions of the Namib to systematically investigate the temporal process of how the young grasses die in fairy circles. Based on measurements of the root lengths, statistical testing, and comparative photo documentations the authors showed that sand termite herbivory did not cause the death of the freshly germinated grasses within fairy circles (FCs). Roots of those dead grasses were initially undamaged and even longer than those of the living grasses outside in the vegetation matrix, which is contrary to termite herbivory. The dying annual grasses within FCs had significantly higher root-to-shoot ratios than the vital grasses in the matrix, both of which can be attributed to the same grass-triggering rain event. This indicates that they died from water stress because the desiccating grasses invested biomass resources into roots, trying to reach the deeper soil layers with more moisture, but they failed.

Jürgens and Gröngröft (2023) commented on our research findings. Here, we shed light on their statements by investigating the existing data evidence on the Namib fairy circles, which includes a thorough literature review about the proposed termite-feeding mechanism, as well as describing the properties of soil water within and around the FCs. Our review shows that there is no single study to date that has demonstrated with systematic field evidence in the form of root measurements and data from several regions of the Namib that the green germinating grasses within the FCs would be killed by root herbivory of sand termites.

We emphasize that the top 10 cm of soil in the FCs is very susceptible to drying out. In this topsoil layer, the freshly germinated grasses with their 10 cm long roots die quickly after rainfall due to lack of water, because these small plants cannot reach and utilize the higher soil moisture content, which is only found in deeper soil layers below the dry topsoil. Based on 400 measurements of soil moisture during the rainy season 2024, we show that the topsoil in the FCs is significantly drier than in the matrix outside. Finally, we show that the soil physical conditions allow a very high hydraulic conductivity that supports the “uptake-diffusion feedback” during the first weeks after grass-triggering rainfall. During the first two weeks, the soil moisture at 20 cm depth ranged for several rainfall events between 9% and 18% within the FCs, hence way above the 6–8% threshold below which the hydraulic conductivity strongly declines. Even 20 days after rainfall, soil moisture was still above 8%. During this biologically active period, new grasses germinate after about five days, the large perennial grasses along the FC edge resprout and strongly draw water with their established root system at 20–30 cm depth, and the freshly germinated grasses in the FCs desiccate and die within 10–20 days. With our continuous soil moisture measurements, we argue that the quickly greening and competitively superior grasses on the FC edge, as well as the vital matrix grasses, draw soil water from the FCs. This rapid depletion of soil water and drying out of the topsoil leads to the death of the new grasses in the fairy circles.

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