The Qilian Mountains serve as a crucial ecological security barrier in western China, and the soil structural stability of alpine meadows directly affects regional ecological security and the sustainable utilization of grasslands. However, current research on grazing mostly relies on short-term artificially controlled experiments, which differ greatly from the pattern of long-term natural grazing. Herein, this study abandoned the artificially controlled grazing method and selected sampling areas with stable grazing regimes for more than a decade. Taking no grazing (CK) as the control, four treatments were established, including light grazing (LG), moderate grazing (MG), heavy grazing (HG) and extreme grazing (EG). The particle size distribution and stability of mechanically stable and water-stable soil aggregates in different soil layers were determined. Combined with environmental and biological factors, the effects of grazing on the structure and stability of soil aggregates were elucidated. The results showed that no grazing improved the mechanical stability of soil aggregates but reduced their water stability. Light and moderate grazing maintained a balanced and resistant soil structure, with the surface soil being more fragile than the subsurface soil. Heavy and extreme grazing led to severe structural degradation, with the subsurface soil being more fragile than the surface soil. Soil aggregate stability was jointly regulated by elevation, soil properties, root biomass, nitrogen forms, mineralization and microbial biomass. In conclusion, from the perspective of soil structural stability and sustainable utilization, light and moderate grazing represent the optimal utilization mode for the alpine meadows of the Qilian Mountains. This mode not only maintains the structural stability of subsurface soil aggregates but also balances biological cementation and physical disturbance, thus avoiding the insufficient water stability under no grazing and the risk of structural fragmentation under heavy or extreme grazing. Environmental and biological factors mediated the divergent responses of mechanical and water stability to different grazing intensities. The findings of this study provide a scientific basis and new insights for the rational grazing management and soil conservation of alpine meadows in the Qilian Mountains.
Liu et al. (Sat,) studied this question.