The degradation of alpine meadows on the Qinghai–Tibet Plateau has seriously affected the structure and productivity of grassland communities. In this experiment, a sample area was set up in Keqihetan of Zexiong Village, Youganning Town, Henan County, Mongolian Autonomous Prefecture. The degraded alpine meadow was divided into three plaque types, bare patches (BP), short-term recovered patches (SRP), and long-term recovered patches (LRP), and Native alpine meadows (NM) as controls, in order to reveal the effects of grassland degradation on community structure and aboveground/belowground biomass allocation in alpine meadow. Here, we measured total biomass (TCB), aboveground biomass (AGB), belowground biomass (BGB), and root/shoot ratio (R/S) of alpine meadows on the Qinghai–Tibetan Plateau and investigated plant community cover and height. The results showed that with the restoration of the patchy alpine meadow, the height decreased first and then increased, the amount of AGB increased first and then decreased, while the coverage and BGB increased in turn, and BGB decreased with the deepening of soil depth. We also found that R/S decreased first and then increased with the patch recovery of the alpine meadow. The overall distribution of AGB and BGB belongs to allometric growth distribution, but the native meadow belongs to isometric growth distribution, while other recovery stages belong to allometric growth distribution. By studying the biomass and its distribution of degraded grassland, we can understand the impact of grassland degradation on the community structure and productivity of the alpine meadow.
Jin et al. (Sat,) studied this question.