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Article Dans Une Revue Journal of Vegetation Science Année : 2017

Complex plant community responses to modifications of disturbance and nutrient availability in productive permanent grasslands

Résumé

Question(s) : Do the effects of grazing and fertilisation on taxonomic and functional diversity follow the dynamic equilibrium model? Location : Long-term observatory of permanent upland grasslands in Massif-central, France. Methods : Over eight years, we monitored vegetation changes in 24 experimental plots in two productive grasslands after modification of grazing intensity (including abandonment) or fertilisation regime (including cessation of fertilisation). Botanical surveys and plant trait measurements (leaf dry matter content, LDMC; specific leaf area, SLA and reproductive plant height) were performed within each plot. We analysed taxonomic responses using principal response curves and functional responses from observed temporal changes of community-weighted mean traits and Rao index. Results : Grazing abandonment led to significant reductions in species richness and functional convergence toward taller plants with higher LDMC in both grasslands. Intermediate and high grazing pressure did not differ but showed strong variations in taxonomic diversity between-years. Changes in functional vegetation structure were mostly driven by species turnover and weakly influenced by intraspecific trait variability. Community responses to modified fertilization regime were more complex with strong differences between the two mown grasslands. Species richness did not change significantly although species evenness decreased in the highly-fertilised treatments (NPK), particularly in the most productive grassland. Here, functional changes were largely driven by intraspecific trait variability. Both functional divergence and convergence were found for different traits. In NPK, grassland assemblages converged toward taller plants while SLA diverged. Conclusions : In our upland study system, the different components of grassland diversity responded differently, in terms of direction or rate of change and mostly under extreme modifications of management. Following abandonment, the observed patterns suggest a prominent and consistent role of competitive exclusion as expected under the DEM. However, our findings also suggest the role of additional processes especially the importance of niche differentiation for our mown grassland under NPK. Timing and net effects of these combined assembly drivers were sensitive to even slight differences in initial productivity and species composition.
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Dates et versions

hal-01604329 , version 1 (26-05-2020)

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Frédérique Louault, Julien Pottier, Priscilla Note, Denis Vile, Jean-François Soussana, et al.. Complex plant community responses to modifications of disturbance and nutrient availability in productive permanent grasslands. Journal of Vegetation Science, 2017, 28 (3), pp.538-549. ⟨10.1111/jvs.12509⟩. ⟨hal-01604329⟩
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