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Overall grazing tolerance index (overall GTI) is not an ideal predictor for describing a single‐species tolerance to grazing

Plants' pattern of compensatory growth is often used to intuitively estimate their grazing tolerance. However, this tolerance is sometimes measured by the overall grazing tolerance index (overall GTI), which assumes that tolerance is a multivariate linear function of various underlying mechanis...

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Autores principales: Zhang, Lulu, Zhu, Zhihong, Li, Yingnian, Qian, Zengqiang, Liu, Gang, Wang, Xiaoan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6468136/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31015990
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.5038
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author Zhang, Lulu
Zhu, Zhihong
Li, Yingnian
Qian, Zengqiang
Liu, Gang
Wang, Xiaoan
author_facet Zhang, Lulu
Zhu, Zhihong
Li, Yingnian
Qian, Zengqiang
Liu, Gang
Wang, Xiaoan
author_sort Zhang, Lulu
collection PubMed
description Plants' pattern of compensatory growth is often used to intuitively estimate their grazing tolerance. However, this tolerance is sometimes measured by the overall grazing tolerance index (overall GTI), which assumes that tolerance is a multivariate linear function of various underlying mechanisms. Because the interaction among mechanisms is not independent, the grazing tolerance expression based on overall GTI may be inconsistent with that based on compensatory growth. Through a manipulative field experiment from 2007 to 2012, we measured the responses of 12 traits of Elymus nutans to clipping under different resource availabilities in an alpine meadow and explored the compensatory aboveground biomass and the overall GTI to assess the possible differences between the two expressions of tolerance. Our results showed that these two expressions of tolerance were completely opposite. The expression based on overall GTI was over‐compensatory and did not vary with clipping and resource availability, while the expression based on compensatory aboveground biomass was under‐compensatory and altered to over‐compensation after fertilization. The over‐expression of highly variable traits with extremely high negative mean GTI to defoliation damage, the influence of random errors contained in traits considered, and the doubling weight of functional redundant traits greatly inflated the overall GTI, which leads to the inconsistency of the two tolerance expressions. This inconsistency is also associated with the different determining mechanisms of the two tolerance expressions. Our data suggest that plants' grazing tolerance is not a multivariate linear function of traits or mechanisms that determine grazing tolerance; the overall GTI is only a measure of traits' variability to defoliation damage. Our findings highlight that the tolerance of E. nutans mainly depends on the response of traits with lower variability to defoliation, and the overall GTI is not an ideal predictor for describing a single‐species tolerance to grazing.
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spelling pubmed-64681362019-04-23 Overall grazing tolerance index (overall GTI) is not an ideal predictor for describing a single‐species tolerance to grazing Zhang, Lulu Zhu, Zhihong Li, Yingnian Qian, Zengqiang Liu, Gang Wang, Xiaoan Ecol Evol Original Research Plants' pattern of compensatory growth is often used to intuitively estimate their grazing tolerance. However, this tolerance is sometimes measured by the overall grazing tolerance index (overall GTI), which assumes that tolerance is a multivariate linear function of various underlying mechanisms. Because the interaction among mechanisms is not independent, the grazing tolerance expression based on overall GTI may be inconsistent with that based on compensatory growth. Through a manipulative field experiment from 2007 to 2012, we measured the responses of 12 traits of Elymus nutans to clipping under different resource availabilities in an alpine meadow and explored the compensatory aboveground biomass and the overall GTI to assess the possible differences between the two expressions of tolerance. Our results showed that these two expressions of tolerance were completely opposite. The expression based on overall GTI was over‐compensatory and did not vary with clipping and resource availability, while the expression based on compensatory aboveground biomass was under‐compensatory and altered to over‐compensation after fertilization. The over‐expression of highly variable traits with extremely high negative mean GTI to defoliation damage, the influence of random errors contained in traits considered, and the doubling weight of functional redundant traits greatly inflated the overall GTI, which leads to the inconsistency of the two tolerance expressions. This inconsistency is also associated with the different determining mechanisms of the two tolerance expressions. Our data suggest that plants' grazing tolerance is not a multivariate linear function of traits or mechanisms that determine grazing tolerance; the overall GTI is only a measure of traits' variability to defoliation damage. Our findings highlight that the tolerance of E. nutans mainly depends on the response of traits with lower variability to defoliation, and the overall GTI is not an ideal predictor for describing a single‐species tolerance to grazing. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2019-03-12 /pmc/articles/PMC6468136/ /pubmed/31015990 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.5038 Text en © 2019 The Authors. Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd. This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Research
Zhang, Lulu
Zhu, Zhihong
Li, Yingnian
Qian, Zengqiang
Liu, Gang
Wang, Xiaoan
Overall grazing tolerance index (overall GTI) is not an ideal predictor for describing a single‐species tolerance to grazing
title Overall grazing tolerance index (overall GTI) is not an ideal predictor for describing a single‐species tolerance to grazing
title_full Overall grazing tolerance index (overall GTI) is not an ideal predictor for describing a single‐species tolerance to grazing
title_fullStr Overall grazing tolerance index (overall GTI) is not an ideal predictor for describing a single‐species tolerance to grazing
title_full_unstemmed Overall grazing tolerance index (overall GTI) is not an ideal predictor for describing a single‐species tolerance to grazing
title_short Overall grazing tolerance index (overall GTI) is not an ideal predictor for describing a single‐species tolerance to grazing
title_sort overall grazing tolerance index (overall gti) is not an ideal predictor for describing a single‐species tolerance to grazing
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6468136/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31015990
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.5038
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