草地退化导致牛羊这两种常见牲畜的膳食生态位高度重叠

Man Xu, Yueqing Song, Yipeng Zhou, Yao Wang, Tongtong Xu, Xuan Zhao, Zhiqiang Li, Ling Wang
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引用次数: 0

摘要

引言 放牧牲畜的食性选择是影响草地植物群落多样性和组成的关键因素之一,从而对生态系统的功能产生影响。多种家畜共同放牧可能会因家畜种类之间的食性重叠或差异而对植物群落产生叠加或互补效应。然而,对于共生牲畜物种的食性重叠和分化,以及这些食性特征是否或如何随着草地退化而变化,目前的了解还很有限。 材料与方法 我们在非退化、中度退化和严重退化的草地上对两种常见共栖家畜(牛和羊)的食性以及它们之间的食性分区/重叠进行了实验测试。 结果 在非退化草地上,牛的食性比羊广,物种间的食性重叠程度较低。随着草地退化,一年生植物的供应量增加,牛羊之间的种间生态位重叠逐渐增加,牛的饮食生态位因此受到压缩。绵羊则保持了相对狭窄和稳定的食物广度。 结论 随着草原退化程度的增加,牲畜物种间的食物生态位重叠度也在增加,这表明牛羊共牧对植物群落的叠加效应也在增加,从而对植物群落的组成和多样性产生了更强的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Grassland degradation induces high dietary niche overlap between two common livestock: cattle and sheep

Grassland degradation induces high dietary niche overlap between two common livestock: cattle and sheep

Introduction

Diet selection of grazing livestock is one of the critical factors affecting the diversity and composition of plant communities in grasslands, with consequent impacts for ecosystem functioning. Co-grazing of multiple livestock species could create additive or complementary effects on plant communities due to diet overlap or differentiation among livestock species. However, there is only limited knowledge about diet overlap and differentiation of co-occurring livestock species and whether or how these diet characteristics change with grassland degradation.

Materials and Methods

We experimentally test the diets of two commonly co-occurring livestock species (cattle and sheep) and the dietary niche partitioning/overlap between them in non-degraded, moderately and severely degraded grasslands.

Results

Cattle exhibited broader diet than sheep, and diet overlap between species was lower in non-degraded grasslands. As grassland degradation increased the availability of annual plants, interspecific niche overlap between cattle and sheep gradually increased, and cattle suffered a resulting dietary niche compression. Sheep maintained a relatively narrow and constant dietary breadth.

Conclusion

The increasing dietary niche overlap between livestock species with increasing extent of grassland degradation indicated increased additive effects of cattle and sheep co-grazing on plant community, and thus stronger effects on plant community composition and diversity.

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