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Library Natural recovery of steppe vegetation on vehicle tracks in central Mongolia

Natural recovery of steppe vegetation on vehicle tracks in central Mongolia

Natural recovery of steppe vegetation on vehicle tracks in central Mongolia

Resource information

Date of publication
December 2006
Resource Language
ISBN / Resource ID
AGRIS:US201600009496
Pages
85-93

Steppe desertification due to vehicle travel is a severe environmental issue in Mongolia. We studied natural vegetation recovery on abandoned vehicle tracks in the central Mongolia steppe through vegetation surveys and stable isotopic techniques. The following issues were addressed: (i) invasion of pioneering plant species, (ii) alteration of soil surface features, and (iii) contribution of revegetated plants to soil organic matter (SOM). The pioneering plant species that firstly invaded the abandoned tracks are those that could germinate, root and survive in the compacted track surface.Salsola collina is one of these candidate plants. Due to revegetation, soil surface hardness was reduced. With the improvement of surface microenvironmental conditions, other plants began to colonize and establish; concomitantly species richness and species diversity increased. Carbon isotope ratios of SOM at the top surface layer indicated that C₄-derived carbon contributed more to SOM in the early phase of recovery and decreased with further recovery.

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Authors and Publishers

Author(s), editor(s), contributor(s)

Li, Sheng-Gong
Tsujimura, Maki
Sugimoto, Atsuko
Davaa, Gombo
Sugita, Michiaki

Publisher(s)
Data Provider
Geographical focus