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Item Grazing and ecosystem service delivery in global drylands(American Association for the Advancement of Science, 2022-11-24) Maestre, Fernando T.; Bagousse-Pinguet, Yoann Le; Delgado-Baquerizo, Manuel; Eldridge , David J.; Saiz, Hugo; Berdugo, Miguel; Gozalo, Beatriz; Ochoa, Victoria; Guirado, Emilio; García-Gómez, Miguel; Valencia, Enrique; Gaitán, Juan J.; Asensio, Sergio; Mendoza, Betty J.; Plaza, César; Díaz-Martínez, Paloma; Rey, Ana; Hu, Hang-Wei; He, Ji-Zheng; Wang, Jun-Tao; Lehmann, Anika; Rillig, Matthias C.; Cesarz, Simone; Esenhauer, Nico; Martínez-Valderrama, Jaime; Moreno-Jiménez, Eduardo; Sala, Osvaldo; Abedi, Mehdi; Ahmadian, Negar; Alados, Concepción L.; Aramayo, Valeria; Amghar, Fateh; Arredondo, Tulio; Ahumada, Rodrigo J.; Bahalkeh, Khadijeh; Ben Salem , Farah; Blaum, Niels; Boldgiv, Bazartseren; Bowker, Matthew A.; Bran, Donaldo; Bu, Chongfeng; Canessa, Rafaella; Castillo-Monroy, Andrea P.; Castro, Helena; Castro, Ignacio; Castro-Quezada, Patricio; Chibani, Roukaya; Conceição , Abel A.; Currier, Courtney M.; Darrouzet-Nardi, Anthony; Deák, Balázs; Donoso, David A.; Dougill, Andrew J.; Durán, Jorge; Erdenetsetseg, Batdelger; Espinosa, Carlos I.; Fajardo, Alex; Farzam, Mohammad; Ferrante, Daniela; Frank, Anke S. K.; Fraser, Lauchlan H.; Gherardi, Laureano A.; Greenville, Aaron C.; Guerra, Carlos A.; Gusmán-Montalvan, Elizabeth; Hernández-Hernández, Rosa M.; Hölzel, Norbert; Huber-Sannwald, Elisabeth; Hughes, Frederic M.; Jadán-Maza, Oswaldo; Jeltsch, Florian; Jentsch, Anke; Kaseke, Kudzai F.; Köbel, Melanie; Koopman, Jessica E.; Leder, Cintia V.; Linstädter, Anja; Le Roux, Peter C.; Li, Xinkai; Liancourt, Pierre; Liu, Jushan; Louw, Michelle A.; Maggs-Kölling, Gillian; Makhalanyane, Thulani P.; Malam Issa, Oumarou; Manzaneda, Antonio J.; Marais, Eugene; Mora, Juan P.; Moreno, Gerardo; Munson, Seth M.; Nunes, Alice; Oliva, Gabriel; Oñatibia, Gastón R.; Peter, Guadalupe; Pivari, Marco O. D.; Pueyo , Yolanda; Quiroga, R. Emiliano; Rahmanian, Soroor; Reed, Sasha C.; Rey, Pedro J.; Richard, Benoit; Rodríguez, Alexandra; Rolo, Víctor; Rubalcaba, Juan G.; Ruppert, Jan C.; Salah, Ayman; Schuchardt, Max A.; Spann, Sedona; Stavi, Ilan; Stephens, Colton R. A.; Swemmer, Anthony M.; Teixido, Alberto L.; Thomas , Andrew D.; Throop, Heather L.; Tielbörger, Katja; Travers, Samantha; Val, James; Valkó, Orsolya; Van Den Brink , Liesbeth; Ayuso, Sergio Valesco; Velbert, Frederike; Wamiti, Wanyoike; Wang, Deli; Wang, Lixin; Wardel, Glenda M.; Yahdjian, Laura; Zaady, Eli; Zhang, Yuanming; Zhou, Xiaobing; Singh, Brajesh K.; Gross, Nicolas; Earth and Environmental Sciences, School of ScienceGrazing represents the most extensive use of land worldwide. Yet its impacts on ecosystem services remain uncertain because pervasive interactions between grazing pressure, climate, soil properties, and biodiversity may occur but have never been addressed simultaneously. Using a standardized survey at 98 sites across six continents, we show that interactions between grazing pressure, climate, soil, and biodiversity are critical to explain the delivery of fundamental ecosystem services across drylands worldwide. Increasing grazing pressure reduced ecosystem service delivery in warmer and species-poor drylands, whereas positive effects of grazing were observed in colder and species-rich areas. Considering interactions between grazing and local abiotic and biotic factors is key for understanding the fate of dryland ecosystems under climate change and increasing human pressure.Item The interactive nutrient and water effects on vegetation biomass at two African savanna sites with different mean annual precipitation(2012-12) Wang, Lixin; Katjiua, Mutjinde; D'Odorico, Paolo; Okin, Gregory S.Savannahs cover more than 40% of Africa and provide a variety of important ecosystem services. Their productivity is constrained by disturbance and limiting resources. In southern Africa, fine-leaf savannahs typical of arid environments are known for being richer in nutrients than broad-leaf mesic savannahs. However, despite numerous recent studies on the dynamics of southern African savannahs, the interplay between water and nutrient limitations remains poorly investigated in these systems. To better understand the interactions between water, nutrients (N and P in this manuscript) and grazing on the productivity of grasses and trees in fine-leaf savannah ecosystems, a fertilization experiment with controlled grazing was conducted at two sites with different mean annual rainfall in Namibia. The experiment demonstrated that the vegetation at the drier site may not be nutrient-limited (N, P or N + P). At the wetter site, however, vegetation showed significant response to nutrient addition. Grasses exhibited N limitation and trees exhibited P limitation. This experiment also showed that grazing reduces the overall grass biomass, but may not modify the response to nutrient treatments. The results indicated a switch from water to nutrient limitation between dry and wet sites and demonstrated different tree and grass responses to nutrient additions.