Abstract

Rangeland desertification is one of the most serious problems threatening the ecological environment and socio-economic development on the eastern Qinghai-Tibet Plateau in China. To combat desertification and reduce its adverse effects, some strategies have been undertaken to stabilize the mobile sand dunes and restore the desertified land. In this study, rangeland desertification with a gradient degree of none, light, medium, severe and extreme was assessed, and short-term effectiveness of different treatments on stabilizing the shifting sand dunes was evaluated by monitoring selected vegetation and soil properties. Results showed that vegetation became thinner and sparser, and soil environment deteriorated significantly under desertification, leading to a poor and low diversity ecosystem. Applying a checkerboard protection strategy in which herb species were planted and using a shrub vegetation planting method without checkerboard protection on mobile dunes for five years, vegetation growth state and soil properties were improved. Soil particles were finer, vegetation restoration was more rapid, and soil nutrient improvement was more apparent at the lower locations of the sand dunes under the checkerboard protection planted with herbs, which performed slightly better in improving soil properties than the shrub planting method alone. A longer time period would be required for vegetation and soils on the sand dunes to be restored to sustain more intensive land use. These findings provide more insight into dune stabilization, allowing effective management in the ecological restoration of desertified rangeland.

Highlights

  • Aeolian desertification, a form of land degradation, is characterized by wind erosion in arid, semiarid and parts of the sub-humid regions in northern China and is mainly induced by excessive human activities [1,2]

  • The lower locations of the dunes under the checkerboard protection planted with herbs, contributed to improving soil nutrients and textures more than the higher locations did, mainly due to the larger vegetation coverage, higher soil water contents, and lower wind speed at the lower locations

  • We assessed the features of desertification and short-term (5 years) effectiveness of three treatments on fixing mobile sand dunes on the windward slope by monitoring selected vegetation indexes and soil properties in an alpine rangeland with an elevation of 3500 m on the eastern Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau (QTP)

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Summary

Introduction

A form of land degradation, is characterized by wind erosion in arid, semiarid and parts of the sub-humid regions in northern China and is mainly induced by excessive human activities [1,2]. Alpine regions on the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau (QTP) are considered to be a unique geographical unit that is fragile and sensitive to environmental changes, due to the high elevation and cold climate [3]. Rangelands in these fragile alpine regions can become desertified. Rangeland desertification in these regions commences with the degradation of grassland or marshland, and continues towards an extremely serious state (e.g., mobile sand dunes), considered the final stage of land degradation [4,5]. Public Health 2019, 16, 4968; doi:10.3390/ijerph16244968 www.mdpi.com/journal/ijerph

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