Abstract
Understanding community restoration state and the corresponding assembly
mechanism is helpful to assess the restoration measures and predict
community dynamics. We collected plots by shrub cover (low, medium and
high) in three Caragana mircophylla shrub-encroached grasslands which
were fenced since 1979, 1983, and 2003 (fencing duration) in the
northern China, to explore the effect of fencing duration and shrub
cover on the community restoration by vegetation investigation and
phylogenetic approach. There were significant differences in community
composition among different fencing duration or shrub cover treatments.
Species richness in the site of fencing since 1979 or in the plots of
high shrub cover was relatively higher than that in any other sites or
plots. By phylogenetic analysis, functional traits were phylogenetically
convergent. Based on the standardized effect sizes of mean pairwise
distance (SESMPD) ranged from -1.96 to 1.96 in six out of nine plots,
which suggested that stochastic processes dominated community assembly.
SESMPD were lower than -1.96 in the rest three plots which indicated
that competitive exclusion drove community assembly. These results
indicated that the increase of fencing duration or shrub cover could
enhance competitive exclusion. The present findings highlighted the
importance of shrub in influencing the community composition and
community assembly, supporting that shrub-encroached grassland is
another stable state in the semi-arid northern China. Therefore, it is
essential to distinct shrub-encroached grassland from degraded
grasslands when formulating relevant conservation and management
measures in the semi-arid regions.