Abstract

Understanding how direct and indirect changes in climatic conditions, management, and species composition affect root production and root traits is of prime importance for the delivery of carbon sequestration services of grasslands. This study considers the effects of climatic variability and gradients of herbage utilisation by grazing on root production over the course of two years. The root and leaf traits of the plant communities were determined to detect their capacity to predict above- and below-ground net primary production, ANPP and BNPP, respectively. A long-term field experiment was used to compare the effects of abandonment and low (Ca-) and high (Ca+) grazing intensities (resulting in mean residual plant heights of 15.2 cm and 7.7 cm, respectively) induced by grazing rotations on upland fertile grasslands after 10 years of treatment application. Ingrowth cores and exclusion cages were used to measure, respectively, the root and shoot mass production several times each year and at an annual scale. The root and leaf traits of the communities were measured near the vegetations peak growing season. We observed strong seasonal root production across treatments in both a wet and a dry year, but the response to grazing intensity was hardly observable within growing seasons. In the abandonment treatment, the spring and autumn root growth peaks were delayed by approximately one month compared to the two cattle treatments, possibly due to a late plant canopy green-up induced by lower soil temperatures and an accumulation of litter. The BNPP was slightly lower in the abandonment treatment compared to the cattle treatments only during the dry year, whereas a decline of the ANPP in the abandonment treatment compared to the Ca+ treatment was observed during the wet year. In response to drought, which occurred during the second year, the root-to-shoot biomass ratio was stable in the cattle treatments but declined in the abandonment treatment. The higher allocation to root mass could benefit plant communities under drier conditions. Rotational grazing pressures and climatic condition variabilities had limited effects on root growth seasonality, although drought had stronger effects on the BNPP than on the ANPP. The stability of the root-to-shoot biomass ratio during the dry year evidenced a higher resistance to drought by grazed versus abandoned grassland communities.

Highlights

  • Permanent grasslands provide many services that connect to human activities through livestock products and contribute to regulate greenhouse gas emissions because their soils accumulate large amounts of carbon (C) in organic matter fractions

  • The complexity of phenomena being direct and indirect effects on plants could explain why no clear trend has been found for the effects of grazing on above- and below-ground production, two meta-analyses have emphasised the negative effect of grazing intensity on above- and below-ground C stocks compared to ungrazed systems (Zhou et al, 2017; Li et al, 2018)

  • Our results suggest that cattle treatments slow the negative effect of aridity on the rootto-shoot biomass ratio, underling that these treatments seem better adapted to buffering the negative effect of drought on grassland root production than abandonment

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Summary

Introduction

Permanent grasslands provide many services that connect to human activities through livestock products and contribute to regulate greenhouse gas emissions because their soils accumulate large amounts of carbon (C) in organic matter fractions. The root mass production is generally lower when grasses are frequently mown and fertilised (Leuschner et al, 2013; Picon-Cochard et al, 2009) This result may be explained by changes in the root-to-shoot allocation with an increase of above-ground growth to maximise light capture. Soil moisture can be modified by high stocking rates through changes in the soil bulk density due to soil compaction and changes in the leaf area index after defoliation (Pineiro et al, 2010) These direct effects of grazing on soil abiotic factors should affect the root growth of grazed grasslands, these phenomena have not been well documented in field conditions

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