Miehe, G; Schleuss, P-M; Seeber, E; Babel, W; Biermann, T; Braendle, M; Chen, F; Coners, H; Foken, T; Gerken, T; Graf, HF; Guggenberger, G; Holzapfel, M; Ingrisch, J; Kuzyakov, Y; Lai, Z; Lehnert, L; Leuschner, C; Li, X; Liu, J; Liu, S; Ma, Y; Miehe, S; Mosbrugger, V; Schmidt, J; Spielvogel, S; Unteregelsbacher, S; Wang, Y; Willinghöfer, S; Xu, X; Yang, Y; Zhang, S; Opgenoorth, L; Wesche, K: The Kobresia pygmaea ecosystem of the Tibetan highlands – Origin, functioning and degradation of the world's largest pastoral alpine ecosystem, Science of the Total Environment, 648, 754-771 (2019), doi:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2018.08.164 [Link]
Abstract:

With 450,000 km2 Kobresia (syn. Carex) pygmaea dominated pastures in the eastern Tibetan highlands are the world's largest pastoral alpine ecosystem forming a durable turf cover at 3000–6000ma.s.l. Kobresia's resilience and competitiveness is based on dwarf habit, predominantly below-ground allocation of photo assimilates, mixture of seed production and clonal growth, and high genetic diversity. Kobresia growth is co-limited by livestockmediated nutrient withdrawal and, in the drier parts of the plateau, low rainfall during the short and cold growing season. Overstocking has caused pasture degradation and soil deterioration over most parts of the Tibetan highlands and is the basis for this man-made ecosystem. Natural autocyclic processes of turf destruction and soil erosion are initiated through polygonal turf cover cracking, and accelerated by soil-dwelling endemic small mammals in the absence of predators. The major consequences of vegetation cover deterioration include the release of large amounts of C, earlier diurnal formation of clouds, and decreased surface temperatures. These effects decrease the recovery potential of Kobresia pastures and make them more vulnerable to anthropogenic pressure and climate change. Traditional migratory rangeland management was sustainable over millennia, and possibly still offers the best strategy to conserve and possibly increase C stocks in the Kobresia turf.

Aktuelle Termine


BayCEER-Kolloquium:
Do. 25.04.2024 aktuell
Perspectives and challenges in the restoration and conservation of two isolated habitats: gypsum and cliffs
BayCEER Short Courses:
Fr. 26.04.2024
Mobile Film Making Workshop (for students of BayCEER)
Ökologisch-Botanischer Garten:
Fr. 26.04.2024
Aktion | Kräuterreich & regional: Backkunst im ÖBG (zus. mit HWK)
Fr. 26.04.2024
Führung | Erdbeer-Minze und Zimmerknoblauch: Gewürzkräuter
So. 28.04.2024
Führung | Den Sängern auf der Spur: Vogelstimmen im ÖBG (zus. mit LBV)
Wetter Versuchsflächen
Luftdruck (356m): 963.4 hPa
Lufttemperatur: 3.1 °C
Niederschlag: 3.6 mm/24h
Sonnenschein: <1 h/d
Wind (Höhe 17m): 9.5 km/h
Wind (Max.): 18.7 km/h
Windrichtung: SW

...mehr
Lufttemperatur: 2.2 °C
Niederschlag: 2.7 mm/24h

...mehr
Diese Webseite verwendet Cookies. weitere Informationen