Abstract

Predicting the impact of grazing on desert steppes' vegetation is crucial for sustainable management. The competitor, stress-tolerator and ruderal (CSR) theory has offer valuable insights into plant adaptive capacity and predicting changes in vegetation structure. However, whether adaptive strategy of desert steppe change with grazing intensity is not understood yet. We conducted a comprehensive assessment of the effects of 19 years of varying grazing intensities (no grazing: CK; light grazing: LG; moderate grazing: MG; heavy grazing: HG) on plant CSR strategies. Within the desert steppe ecosystem, the prevailing plant community strategy leaned towards SR (Stress-tolerant/Ruderal) under non-grazed conditions (C:S:R = 2:48:50 %). However, as grazing intensity increased, the S-score increased significantly from 48 % to 62 % while the R-score decreased from 50 % to 36 %. This trend persisted across functional groups and species, except for shrubs, due to the convergent response of traits and ecological strategies of these species under intense grazing pressure. Furthermore, our findings reveal that the shift of CSR on the community level was primarily influenced by soil nutrients and soil density, but not by evolutionary history (phylogenetic conservatism of traits). This suggests that plant traits co-evolved under prolonged environmental stress, resulting consistent variation and ecological strategies in desert grasslands. Overall, long-term grazing reinforced selective pressure, creating a simplified plant community structure with low levels of diversity and productivity, dominated by conservative resource-use strategy. This study highlights the mechanisms of plant adaptation to the prolonged grazing disturbance in desert steppes.

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