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1 March 2016 Responses of Grassland Net Primary Productivity to Environmental Variables in Northern China
Liu Fang, Zhang Hongqi, Xu Erqi, Kang Lei
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Abstract

Various environmental factors affect net primary productivity (NPP) of grassland ecosystem. Extensive reports on the effects of environmental variables on NPP can be found in literature. However, the agreement on the relative importance of various factors in shaping the spatial pattern of grassland NPP has not yet been reached. Here a grassland in situ NPP database comprising 602 samples in northern China for 1980–1999 was developed based on a literature review of published biomass and forage yield field measurements. Correlation analyses and dominance analysis were used to quantify the separate and combined effects of environmental variables (climate, topography and soil) on spatial variation in NPP separately. Grassland NPP ranged from 4.76 g C m-2a-1 to 975.94 g C m-2a-1, showing significant variations in space. NPP increased with annual precipitation and declined with annual mean temperature significantly. Specifically, precipitation had the greatest impact on deserts, followed by steppes and meadows. Grassland NPP decreased with increasing altitude because of water limitation, and positively correlated with slope, but weakly correlated with aspect. Soil quality showed positive effects on NPP. Annual precipitation was the dominant factor affecting the spatial variability of net primary productivity, followed by elevation.

Liu Fang, Zhang Hongqi, Xu Erqi, and Kang Lei "Responses of Grassland Net Primary Productivity to Environmental Variables in Northern China," Journal of Resources and Ecology 7(2), 92-100, (1 March 2016). https://doi.org/10.5814/j.issn.1674-764X.2016.02.003
Received: 20 January 2016; Accepted: 1 February 2016; Published: 1 March 2016
KEYWORDS
Dominant factor
environmental variables
field measurements
Grassland net primary productivity
northern China
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