AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study investigates the impact of long-term mowing on the stability of grasslands in Inner Mongolia, revealing that mowing affects ecosystem stability differently over time.
  • - Initially, mowing reduces stability during the first 12 years, but it enhances stability in the subsequent 5 years, indicating a phase-dependent response.
  • - Key factors influencing stability include species and functional group asynchrony, with portfolio effects being more significant than diversity in stabilizing the ecosystem.

Article Abstract

The temporal stability of grasslands plays a key role in the stable provisioning of multiple ecosystem goods and services for humankind. Despite recent progress, our knowledge on how long-term mowing influences ecosystem stability remains unclear. Using a dataset from an 18-year-long mowing experiment with different treatment intensities (no-mowing, mowing once per year, and mowing twice per year) in grasslands of Inner Mongolia, China, we aimed to determine whether and how long-term mowing influenced grassland temporal stability in a temperate steppe. We found mowing decreased ecosystem stability in the early and intermediate periods (1-12 years of treatment), but increased stability in the later period (13-18 years of treatment), indicating responses of ecosystem stability to long-term mowing were phase dependent. Bivariate correlation and structural equation modeling analyses revealed that the degree of asynchrony both at the species and functional group levels, as well as dominant species stability, played key roles in stabilizing the whole community. In addition, portfolio effects rather than diversity made significant contributions to ecosystem stability. Our results suggest the phase-dependent temporal stability of grassland under long-term mowing is mainly mediated by species and functional group asynchrony. This finding provides a new insight for understanding how dryland grassland responds to long-term anthropogenic perturbations.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2024.175445DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study investigates the impact of long-term mowing on the stability of grasslands in Inner Mongolia, revealing that mowing affects ecosystem stability differently over time.
  • - Initially, mowing reduces stability during the first 12 years, but it enhances stability in the subsequent 5 years, indicating a phase-dependent response.
  • - Key factors influencing stability include species and functional group asynchrony, with portfolio effects being more significant than diversity in stabilizing the ecosystem.
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State Key Laboratory of Efficient Utilization of Arid and Semi-arid Arable Land in Northern China, Institute of Agricultural Resources and Regional Planning, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences, 12 Zhongguancun South Street, Beijing 100081, China; Ghent University, Department of Geology, Krijgslaan 281, 9000 Gent, Belgium. Electronic address:

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