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Climate-driven ecological thresholds in China’s drylands modulated by grazing

Author

Listed:
  • Changjia Li

    (Beijing Normal University
    Beijing Normal University)

  • Bojie Fu

    (Beijing Normal University
    Beijing Normal University)

  • Shuai Wang

    (Beijing Normal University
    Beijing Normal University)

  • Lindsay C. Stringer

    (University of York
    University of York)

  • Wenxin Zhou

    (Beijing Normal University
    Beijing Normal University)

  • Zhuobing Ren

    (Beijing Normal University
    Beijing Normal University)

  • Mengqi Hu

    (Beijing Normal University)

  • Yujia Zhang

    (Beijing Normal University)

  • Emilio Rodriguez-Caballero

    (Universidad de Almería
    Max Planck Institute for Chemistry)

  • Bettina Weber

    (Max Planck Institute for Chemistry
    University of Graz)

  • Fernando T. Maestre

    (Universidad de Alicante
    Universidad de Alicante)

Abstract

Degradation of ecosystems can occur when certain ecological thresholds are passed below which ecosystem responses remain within ‘safe ecological limits’. Ecosystems such as drylands are sensitive to both aridification and grazing, but the combined effects of such factors on the emergence of ecological thresholds beyond which ecosystem degradation occurs has yet to be quantitatively evaluated. This limits our understanding on ‘safe operating spaces’ for grazing, the main land use in drylands worldwide. Here we assessed how 20 structural and functional ecosystem attributes respond to joint changes in aridity and grazing pressure across China´s drylands. Gradual increases in aridity resulted in abrupt decreases in productivity, soil fertility and plant richness. Rising grazing pressures lowered such aridity thresholds for most ecosystem variables, thus showing how ecological thresholds can be amplified by the joint effects of these two factors. We found that 44.4% of China’s drylands are unsuitable for grazing due to climate change-induced aridification, a percentage that may increase to 50.8% by 2100. Of current dryland grazing areas, 8.9% exceeded their maximum allowable grazing pressure. Our findings provide important insights into the relationship between aridity and optimal grazing pressure and identify safe operating spaces for grazing across China’s drylands.

Suggested Citation

  • Changjia Li & Bojie Fu & Shuai Wang & Lindsay C. Stringer & Wenxin Zhou & Zhuobing Ren & Mengqi Hu & Yujia Zhang & Emilio Rodriguez-Caballero & Bettina Weber & Fernando T. Maestre, 2023. "Climate-driven ecological thresholds in China’s drylands modulated by grazing," Nature Sustainability, Nature, vol. 6(11), pages 1363-1372, November.
  • Handle: RePEc:nat:natsus:v:6:y:2023:i:11:d:10.1038_s41893-023-01187-5
    DOI: 10.1038/s41893-023-01187-5
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