Warming reduces the production of a major annual forage crop on the Tibetan Plateau

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作者
Wang, Fuqiang [1 ]
Tang, Jiwang [1 ]
Li, Zhaolei [2 ]
Xiang, Jie [1 ]
Wang, Liwei [1 ]
Tian, Li [1 ]
Jiang, Lifen [3 ]
Luo, Yiqi [3 ]
Hou, Enqing [4 ]
Shao, Xiaoming [1 ,5 ]
机构
[1] College of Resources and Environmental Sciences, Key Laboratory of Biodiversity and Organic Agricultural, China Agricultural University, Beijing, China
[2] College of Resources and Environment, Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Southwest University, Chongqing, China
[3] Center for Ecosystem Science and Society, Northern Arizona University, Flagstaff, United States
[4] Key Laboratory of Vegetation Restoration and Management of Degraded Ecosystems, South China Botanical Garden, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Guangzhou, China
[5] Engineering and Technology Research Center for Prataculture on the Xizang Plateau, Lhasa, China
关键词
Phosphorus; -; Plants; (botany); Phosphatases; Ecology;
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学科分类号
摘要
Climate warming has been proposed to increase primary production of natural grasslands in cold regions. However, how climate warming affects the production of artificial pastures in cold regions remains unknown. To address this question, we used open-top chambers to simulate warming in a major artificial pasture (forage oat) on the cold Tibetan Plateau for three consecutive years. Surprisingly, climate warming decreased aboveground and belowground biomass production by 23.1%–44.8% and 35.0%–46.5%, respectively, without a significant impact on their ratio. The adverse effects on biomass production could be attributed to the adverse effects of high-temperatures on leaf photosynthesis through increases in water vapor pressure deficit (by 0.05–0.10 kPa), damages to the leaf oxidant system, as indicated by a 46.6% increase in leaf malondialdehyde content, as well as reductions in growth duration (by 4.7–6.7 days). The adverse effects were also related to exacerbated phosphorus limitation, as indicated by decreases in soil available phosphorus and plant phosphorus concentrations by 31.9%–40.7% and 14.3%–49.4%, respectively, and increases in the plant nitrogen: phosphorus ratio by 19.2%–108.3%. The decrease in soil available phosphorus concentration could be attributed to reductions in soil phosphatase activities (by 9.6%–18.5%). The findings of this study suggest an urgent need to advance agronomic techniques and cultivate more resilient forage genotypes to meet the increasing demand of forage for feeding livestock and to reduce grazing damage to natural grasslands on the warming-sensitive Tibetan Plateau. © 2021 Elsevier B.V.
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