Abstract

In addition to the well-studied impacts of defecation and defoliation, large herbivores also affect plant and arthropod communities through trampling, and the associated soil compaction. Soil compaction can be expected to be particularly important on wet, fine-textured soils. Therefore, we established a full factorial experiment of defoliation (monthly mowing) and soil compaction (using a rammer, annually) on a clay-rich salt marsh at the Dutch coast, aiming to disentangle the importance of these two factors. Additionally, we compared the effects on soil physical properties, plants, and arthropods to those at a nearby cattle-grazed marsh under dry and under waterlogged conditions. Soil physical conditions of the compacted plots were similar to the conditions at cattle-grazed plots, showing decreased soil aeration and increased waterlogging. Soil salinity was doubled by defoliation and quadrupled by combined defoliation and compaction. Cover of the dominant tall grass Elytrigia atherica was decreased by 80% in the defoliated plots, but cover of halophytes only increased under combined defoliation and compaction. Effects on soil micro-arthropods were most severe under waterlogging, showing a fourfold decrease in abundance and a smaller mean body size under compaction. Although the combined treatment of defoliation and trampling indeed proved most similar to the grazed marsh, large discrepancies remained for both plant and soil fauna communities, presumably because of colonization time lags. We conclude that soil compaction and defoliation differently affect plant and arthropod communities in grazed ecosystems, and that the magnitude of their effects depends on herbivore density, productivity, and soil physical properties.

Highlights

  • Large herbivores exert strong impacts on their habitat and other species (Trimble and Mendel 1995; Hobbs 2006)

  • Our experimental plots were located in a longterm ungrazed (>25 years) salt marsh, at a standardized elevation of about 45 cm above mean high tide (MHT)

  • Our results confirmed most of our expectations regarding the simulated large herbivore effects of defoliation and soil compaction treatments on soil, plants, and soil arthropods

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Summary

Introduction

Large herbivores exert strong impacts on their habitat and other species (Trimble and Mendel 1995; Hobbs 2006). It is known that soil compaction decreases pore space and connectivity, and transport of oxygen and water (Horn and others 1995; Hamza and Anderson 2005; Cole and others 2008). This can be detrimental to plant productivity (for example, Lipiec and others 1991), soil fauna abundance (Aritajat and others 1977; Heisler 1994; Beylich and others 2010), and nutrient cycling (Breland and Hansen 1996; Rasiah and Kay 1998). It has been hypothesized that soil compaction is important in fine-textured clay soils, where under wet conditions decreased pore connectivity leads to increased waterlogging and anoxic conditions (Liddle 1997; Schrama and others 2013b)

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