Elsevier

Ecological Indicators

Volume 129, October 2021, 107876
Ecological Indicators

Cattle grazing mitigates the negative impacts of nitrogen addition on soil nematode communities

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolind.2021.107876Get rights and content
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open access

Highlights

  • Grazing and N addition have interactive effects on soil nematode communities.

  • The presence of cattle decreased nematode abundance and diversity in ambient N plots.

  • Cattle grazing increased nematode abundance and diversity in N addition plots.

  • Nematodes were affected by increasing relative biomass of grasses and soil NO3-N.

  • Cattle grazing is useful to off-set the effects of N deposition on soil nematodes.

Abstract

Livestock grazing and atmospheric nitrogen (N) deposition have been reported as important factors affecting soil communities. However, how different large herbivore grazing and N addition may interact to affect soil biota in grassland ecosystems is unclear. Nematodes are the most abundant metazoan in soil ecosystems, play critical roles in regulating carbon and nutrient dynamics, and are valuable bioindicators. We examined the independent and interactive effects of grazing regimes (no grazing; sheep grazing; cattle grazing; mixed grazing of sheep and cattle) and N addition (ambient N; N addition) on soil nematodes in a meadow steppe. We found that grazing and N addition interacted to influence total nematode abundance, trophic group abundance, generic richness, diversity and several nematode-based indices (maturity index, channel ratio, enrichment index). In cattle grazing treatment, N addition significantly increased total nematode abundance, and the abundance of bacterial feeders, plant feeders, and omnivore-predators, and generic richness. By contrast, in the sheep and mixed grazing treatments, N addition had a negative effect on the same variables. Moreover, N addition reduced nematode maturity, enrichment and structure indices, and enhanced nematode channel ratio, in most grazing treatments, except mixed grazing where N addition had no effect on these variables. Structural equation modeling (SEM) revealed that N addition indirectly reduced nematode abundance and richness through increased soil NO3-N content, whereas the effects of grazing were associated with increased relative biomass of grasses. Our results suggested that the response of soil nematodes to N addition strongly depended on herbivore assemblages. Nitrogen addition enhanced soil nematode diversity and maintained a relatively complex and mature soil food web in the presence of cattle rather than sheep grazing. Furthermore, our study highlighted that under N deposition, cattle grazing could benefit the soil nematode community.

Keywords

Cattle grazing
Grassland management
Mixed grazing
Nitrogen enrichment
Sheep grazing
Soil nematodes

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