INVESTIGADORES
PIÑEIRO Gervasio
artículos
Título:
Pathways of Grazing Effects on Soil Carbon Stocks in Grasslands
Autor/es:
PIÑEIRO, GERVASIO; PARUELO, JOSÉ M.; OESTERHELD, MARTÍN; JOBBAGY, E.G.
Revista:
Rangeland Ecology and Management (ex JRM)
Editorial:
Society for Range Management
Referencias:
Año: 2010 p. 109 - 119
ISSN:
1550-7424
Resumen:
Grazing modifies the structure and function of ecosystems, affecting soil organic carbon (SOC) storage. Although grazing effects on some ecosystem attributes have been thoroughly reviewed, current literature on grazing effects on SOC needs to be synthesized. Our objective was to synthesize the effects of grazing on SOC stocks in grasslands, establishing the major mechanistic pathways involved. Additionally, and due to its importance for C biogeochemistry, we discuss the controls of soil organic nitrogen (SON) stocks. We reviewed articles analyzing grazing effects on soil organic mater (SOM) stocks by comparing grazed vs. ungrazed sites, including 67 paired comparisons. SOC increased, decreased or remained unchanged under contrasting grazing conditions across temperature and precipitation gradients, suggesting that grazing influences the factors that control SOC accumulation in a complex way. However, our review also revealed some general patterns such as: (1) root contents (a primary control of SOC formation) were higher in grazed than in their un-grazed counterparts at the driest and wettest sites, but were lower at sites with intermediate precipitation (400 to 850mm); (2) SOM-C/N ratios frequently increased under grazing conditions, suggesting potential N limitations for SOM formation under grazing; (3) bulk density either increased or did not change in grazed sites. Nearly all sites located in the intermediate precipitation range showed decreases or no changes in SOC. We grouped previously proposed mechanisms of grazing control over SOC into three major pathways which can operate simultaneously: (a) changes in net primary production (NPP pathway), (b) changes in nitrogen stocks (nitrogen pathway) and (c) changes in organic matter decomposition (decomposition pathway). The relative importance of the three pathways may generate variable responses of SOC to grazing. Our conceptual model suggests that rangeland productivity and soil carbon sequestration can be simultaneously increased by management practices aimed at increasing N retention at the landscape level.