Livestock grazing ingestion suppressed the dominant species population (Stipa aliena) germination: a laboratory experiment

被引:8
作者
Chen, Ao [1 ]
Huang, Hai-Zhou [1 ]
Zhang, Zhi-Nan [1 ]
Wu, Gao-Lin [1 ,2 ,3 ]
Liu, Zhen-Heng [4 ]
机构
[1] NW A&F Univ, State Key Lab Soil Eros & Dryland Farming Loess P, CN-712100 Yangling, Shaanxi, Peoples R China
[2] Chinese Acad Sci, Inst Soil & Water Conservat, CN-712100 Yangling, Shaanxi, Peoples R China
[3] MWR, CN-712100 Yangling, Shaanxi, Peoples R China
[4] Maqu Alpine Grassland Workstn, CN-747300 Maqu, Gansu, Peoples R China
关键词
SEED-GERMINATION; SOUTHEAST ALASKA; DIGESTION; PASSAGE; CHINA; GERMINABILITY; ESTABLISHMENT; LEGUME; GROWTH; CATTLE;
D O I
10.1111/j.1756-1051.2012.01389.x
中图分类号
Q94 [植物学];
学科分类号
071001 [植物学];
摘要
Grazing has an important effect on population dynamics in grassland vegetation. This paper aims at providing information on the impact of livestock ingestion on seed germination in a Tibetan meadow. We conducted a laboratory germination experiment in which Stipa aliena seeds were treated by yak and Tibetan sheep rumen fluids and yak dung extract with undiluted, 1-fold and 10-fold diluted solutions. The results showed that seed germinability was restrained in all these treatments. In the control treatment, 66.2% of the seeds germinated, while there was almost no S. aliena germination in the undiluted and 1-fold diluted solutions of both yak and Tibetan sheep rumen fluids. Yak dung extract had relatively less effect on seed germination. Additionally, the primary effect of rumen fluid seems to be that it kills part of the seeds rather than delaying germination. Seed death may be due to the acidity of the fluid or/and due to the effect of microorganisms in the fluid. The negative effects of livestock digestive juices on S. aliena germination may constitute a mechanism explaining the population dynamics in alpine meadows of the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau.
引用
收藏
页码:635 / 639
页数:5
相关论文
共 27 条
[1]
Akiyama Tsuyoshi, 2007, Grassland Science, V53, P1, DOI 10.1111/j.1744-697X.2007.00073.x
[2]
PLANT-ANIMAL INTERACTIONS AFFECTING PLANT ESTABLISHMENT AND PERSISTENCE ON REVEGETATED RANGELAND [J].
ARCHER, S ;
PYKE, DA .
JOURNAL OF RANGE MANAGEMENT, 1991, 44 (06) :558-565
[3]
RUMEN PH AS A FACTOR FOR CONTROLLING FEED INTAKE IN RUMINANTS [J].
BHATTACHARYA, AN ;
WARNER, RG .
JOURNAL OF DAIRY SCIENCE, 1967, 50 (07) :1116-+
[4]
WOODY PLANT INVASION OF GRASSLANDS - ESTABLISHMENT OF HONEY MESQUITE (PROSOPIS-GLANDULOSA VAR GLANDULOSA) ON SITES DIFFERING IN HERBACEOUS BIOMASS AND GRAZING HISTORY [J].
BROWN, JR ;
ARCHER, S .
OECOLOGIA, 1989, 80 (01) :19-26
[5]
Effects of ruminant digestion on germination of Lehmann love-grass seed [J].
Fredrickson, EL ;
Estell, RE ;
Havstad, KM ;
Ksiksi, T ;
vanTol, J ;
Remmenga, MD .
JOURNAL OF RANGE MANAGEMENT, 1997, 50 (01) :20-26
[6]
PASSAGE OF LEGUME AND GRASS SEEDS THROUGH THE DIGESTIVE-TRACT OF CATTLE AND THEIR SURVIVAL IN FECES [J].
GARDENER, CJ ;
MCIVOR, JG ;
JANSEN, A .
JOURNAL OF APPLIED ECOLOGY, 1993, 30 (01) :63-74
[7]
Horiguchi Ken-ichi, 2008, Grassland Science, V54, P160, DOI 10.1111/j.1744-697X.2008.00114.x
[8]
Factors affecting the germination of albaida (Anthyllis cytisoides L), a forage legume of the Mediterranean coast [J].
Ibanez, AN ;
Passera, CB .
JOURNAL OF ARID ENVIRONMENTS, 1997, 35 (02) :225-231
[9]
Effects of ingestion of seeds by sika deer (Cervus nippon) and dung presence on their germination in a herbaceous community [J].
Ishikawa, Haruna .
ECOLOGICAL RESEARCH, 2010, 25 (03) :591-598
[10]
Li XP, 2010, AFR J BIOTECHNOL, V9, P6670