Soil pH and phosphorus drive species composition and richness in semi-natural heathlands and grasslands unaffected by twentieth-century agricultural intensification
收藏Taylor & Francis Group2018-08-23 更新2026-04-16 收录
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https://tandf.figshare.com/articles/Soil_pH_and_phosphorus_drive_species_composition_and_richness_in_semi-natural_heathlands_and_grasslands_unaffected_by_twentieth-century_agricultural_intensification/7000769/1
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<b><i>Background</i></b>: Increased soil phosphorus (P) caused by agricultural intensification has been associated with decreased plant species richness (SR) in central Europe. How plant communities and soil P gradients are related in unimproved open habitats remains unclear. <b><i>Aims</i></b>: The aim of this article was to characterise the relationship between soil chemical parameters and plant species composition and richness in unimproved open habitats. <b><i>Methods</i></b>: The influence of soil chemical parameters (pH, P, K, Mg) on species composition was assessed, using data from 40 heathland and 54 grassland plots, by non-metric multidimensional scaling and permutational multivariate analysis of variance. The relationship between soil chemical parameters and SR was tested by linear mixed effects models. <b><i>Results</i></b>: A direct relationship between heathland community composition and pH was observed, explaining 10% of variation in species composition, while P, Mg and pH together explained 17% of variation in grassland composition. In heathlands, SR increased with increasing pH, whereas in grasslands, SR decreased with increasing soil P. <b><i>Conclusions</i></b>: Soil chemical parameters were substantially related to plant community composition and richness. In an area spared from a century of agricultural intensification, reduced pH appeared to constrain SR in heathlands, while even slight P increases (<10 mg kg<sup>−1</sup>) depressed plant SR in semi-natural grasslands.
创建时间:
2018-08-23



