Grazing in a megagrazer-dominated savanna does not reduce soil carbon stocks, even at high intensities
收藏DataONE2023-05-15 更新2025-08-09 收录
下载链接:
https://search.dataone.org/view/sha256:79d987fa3af8f54b079d6b163efb7dc132b5b50c1aa41bb6d9b8a17923d94ed3
下载链接
链接失效反馈官方服务:
资源简介:
Recent studies suggest that wild animals can promote ecosystem carbon sinks through their impacts on vegetation and soils. However, livestock studies show that intense levels of grazing reduce soil organic carbon (SOC), leading to concerns that rewilding with large grazers may compromise ecosystem carbon storage. Furthermore, wild grazers can both limit and promote woody plant recruitment and survival on savanna grasslands, with both positive and negative impacts on SOC, depending on the rainfall and soil texture contexts. We used grazing lawns in one of the few African protected savannas that are still dominated by megagrazers (>1000 kg), namely white rhinoceros (Ceratotherium simum), as a model to study the impact of prolonged and intense wild grazing on SOC stocks. We contrasted SOC stocks between patches of varying grazing intensity and woody plant encroachment in sites across different rhino habitat types. We found no differences in SOC stocks between the most- and least-grazed ..., , This dataset consists of two documents:
1) data_hyvarinen_et.al_oikos.csv consists of soil carbon and other attributes data from all sampling plots.
2) grasscommunity_data.csv consists of the grass species composition data from all sampling plots.
创建时间:
2025-07-14



