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Sawdust Addition Reduces the Productivity of Nitrogen‐Enriched Mountain Grasslands
Authors:T Spiegelberger  H Müller‐Schärer  D Matthies  U Schaffner
Institution:1. CABI Europe‐Switzerland, Rue des Grillons 1, CH‐2800 Delémont, Switzerland;2. Department of Biology, University of Fribourg, Unit Ecology and Evolution, Chemin du Musée 1, CH‐1700 Fribourg, Switzerland;3. Present address: Cemagref de Grenoble, Research Unit Mountain Ecosystems, 2 rue de la Papeterie, F‐38402 Saint‐Martin‐d’Hères, France;4. Department of Biology, University of Marburg, Karl‐von‐Frisch‐Strasse 8, D‐35032 Marburg, Germany
Abstract:Anthropogenic nutrient enrichment of mountain grasslands has boosted grasses and fast‐growing unpalatable plants at the expense of slow‐growing species, resulting in a significant loss in biodiversity. A potential tool to reduce nutrient availability and aboveground productivity without destroying the perennial vegetation is carbon (C) addition. However, little is known about its suitability under severe climatic conditions. Here, we report the results of a 3‐year field study assessing the effects of sawdust addition on soil nutrients, aboveground productivity, and vegetational composition of 10 grazed and ungrazed mountain grasslands. Of particular interest was the effect of C addition on grasses and on the tall unpalatable weed Veratrum album. After 3 years, soil pH, ammonium, and plant‐available phosphorus were not altered by sawdust application, and nitrate concentrations were marginally higher in treatment plots. However, the biomass of grasses and forbs (without V. album) was 20–25% lower in sawdust‐amended plots, whereas the biomass of V. album was marginally higher. Sawdust addition reduced the cover of grasses but did not affect evenness, vegetation diversity, or plant species richness, although species richness generally increased with decreasing biomass at our sites. Our results suggest that sawdust addition is a potent tool to reduce within a relatively short time the aboveground productivity and grass cover in both grazed and ungrazed mountain grasslands as long as they are not dominated by tall unpalatable weeds. The technique has the advantage that it preserves the topsoil and the perennial soil seed bank.
Keywords:carbon addition  competitive interactions  European Alps  multisite field experiment  seminatural grasslands  soil nutrient availability  restoration
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