Abstract

Ecosystem carbon use efficiency (CUE) is a critical variable in quantifying the efficiency and capacity of an ecosystem to sequestrate carbon (C) from the atmosphere. However, how CUE responds to land-use change and climate warming remains elusive and lacks empirical evidence. We implemented a field manipulative experiment to examine the effects of clipping and warming on CUE in an alpine meadow on the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau over 7 years. The results showed that clipping significantly increased CUE by 7.1%, which was mainly attributed to the stronger positive effects of clipping on gross ecosystem productivity (GEP, 13.0%) than on ecosystem respiration (ER, 5.3%). In contrast, warming had a minor effect on CUE due to the synchronized increase in GEP (8.8%) and ER (7.3%). There was no significant interactive effect of clipping and warming on CUE. Moreover, the dominance of grasses played a pivotal role in controlling the responses of CUE to clipping and warming by increasing ecosystem C uptakes but decreasing microbial decomposition. Soil temperature and above-ground net primary productivity also contributed to the changes in CUE under clipping and warming. These results suggest that clipping once a year at the end of the growing season could increase the efficiency of this alpine meadow for C sequestration, while climate warming could not change ecosystem C use efficiency. We highlight that the dominance of grasses is an emerging property in determining CUE under land-use change and climate warming in grasslands.

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