| Literature DB >> 26932540 |
Shuli Niu1, Aimée T Classen2, Jeffrey S Dukes3, Paul Kardol4, Lingli Liu5, Yiqi Luo6, Lindsey Rustad7, Jian Sun1, Jianwu Tang8, Pamela H Templer9, R Quinn Thomas10, Dashuan Tian1, Sara Vicca11, Ying-Ping Wang12, Jianyang Xia13,14, Sönke Zaehle15.
Abstract
Nitrogen (N) deposition is impacting the services that ecosystems provide to humanity. However, the mechanisms determining impacts on the N cycle are not fully understood. To explore the mechanistic underpinnings of N impacts on N cycle processes, we reviewed and synthesised recent progress in ecosystem N research through empirical studies, conceptual analysis and model simulations. Experimental and observational studies have revealed that the stimulation of plant N uptake and soil retention generally diminishes as N loading increases, while dissolved and gaseous losses of N occur at low N availability but increase exponentially and become the dominant fate of N at high loading rates. The original N saturation hypothesis emphasises sequential N saturation from plant uptake to soil retention before N losses occur. However, biogeochemical models that simulate simultaneous competition for soil N substrates by multiple processes match the observed patterns of N losses better than models based on sequential competition. To enable better prediction of terrestrial N cycle responses to N loading, we recommend that future research identifies the response functions of different N processes to substrate availability using manipulative experiments, and incorporates the measured N saturation response functions into conceptual, theoretical and quantitative analyses.Entities:
Keywords: Leaching; mineralisation; nitrification; nitrogen deposition; nitrogen loss; plant N uptake; saturation; soil N retention; threshold
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26932540 DOI: 10.1111/ele.12591
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ecol Lett ISSN: 1461-023X Impact factor: 9.492