Abstract

Selective sheep grazing in the Patagonian Monte induces the reduction of total and perennial grass cover, species replacement within life forms, and the increase in dominance of long-lived evergreen woody plants with slow growth rates and high concentration of secondary compounds in leaves. We hypothesized that these changes in the canopy structure induced by sheep grazing will affect the mass, chemistry and decomposability of leaf litter and fine roots. We selected two sites in the Patagonian Monte, representative of ungrazed and grazed vegetation states. At each site, we assessed canopy structure (total cover and absolute and relative grass and shrub cover), monthly leaf litterfall, and fine-root biomass and production in the upper soil (15 cm). We also estimated the rates of mass, C, soluble phenolics, lignin and N decay in litterbags containing both leaf litter and fine roots of each site under field conditions during two consecutive years. The ungrazed site exhibited higher total plant cover, absolute and relative grass- and shrub-cover than the grazed one. Leaf litterfall was lower at the grazed site than at the ungrazed site. Fine-root production did not vary between sites. Leaf litter and fine root tissues had higher concentration of secondary compounds at the grazed than at the ungrazed site. However, fine roots showed lower mass and C decay than leaf litter, attributable to the predominant secondary compound (lignin and soluble phenolics, respectively). Leaf litter decomposed slower but released more N during decay at the ungrazed than at the grazed site, probably due to its low concentration of secondary compounds. We concluded that changes in canopy structure induced by grazing disturbance such as those explored in our study could reduce leaf litterfall mass and increase the concentration of secondary compounds of both leaf litter and fine roots leading to slow N release to soil during decay.

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