Shrub influence on soil carbon and nitrogen in a semi-arid grassland is mediated by precipitation and largely insensitive to livestock grazing

  • Heather Throop (Contributor)
  • Seth M. Munson (Contributor)
  • Nicole Hornslein (Contributor)
  • Mitchel P Mcclaran (Contributor)

Dataset

Description

Dryland (arid and semi-arid) ecosystems globally provide more than half of livestock production and store roughly one-third of soil organic carbon (SOC). Biogeochemical pools are changing due toshrub encroachment, livestock grazing, and climate change. We assessed how vegetation microsite, grazing, and precipitation interacted to affect SOC and total nitrogen (TN) at a site with long-term grazing manipulations and well-described patterns of shrub encroachment across elevation and mean annual precipitation (MAP) gradients. We analyzed SOC and TN in the context of vegetation cover at ungrazed locations within livestock exclosures, high-inten- sity grazing locations near water sources, and moderate-intensity grazing locations away from water. SOC was enhanced by MAP (p
Date made availableMay 2 2022
PublisherZENODO

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