Abstract

Revegetation is among the most efficient methods to improve gully headcut erosion. However, the influencing mechanism of revegetation on the soil properties of the gully head (GHSP) is still unclear. Thus, this study hypothesized that the variations in the GHSP were influenced by vegetation diversity during nature revegetation, and the influence pathways were mainly root traits, aboveground dry biomass (ADB), and vegetation coverage (VC). We studied six grassland communities of the gully head with different natural revegetation ages. The findings showed that the GHSP were improved during 22-year revegetation. The interaction effect of vegetation diversity, roots, aboveground dry biomass, and vegetation coverage on the GHSP was 43 %. In addition, vegetation diversity significantly explained >70.3 % of the changes in the root traits, ADB, and VC of the gully head (P < 0.05). Therefore, we combined vegetation diversity, roots, ADB, and VC to establish the path model to explain the GHSP changes, and the goodness of fit of the model was 82.3 %. The results showed that the model explained 96.1 % of the variation in the GHSP, and the vegetation diversity of the gully head affected the GHSP through roots, ADB, and VC. Therefore, during nature revegetation, vegetation diversity dominates the improvement of the GHSP, which has important significance for designing an optimal vegetation restoration strategy to control gully erosion.

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