Literature DB >> 28494115

Disentangling species and functional group richness effects on soil N cycling in a grassland ecosystem.

Xiaorong Wei1,2, Peter B Reich2,3, Sarah E Hobbie4, Clare E Kazanski4.   

Abstract

Species richness (SR) and functional group richness (FGR) are often confounded in both observational and experimental field studies of biodiversity and ecosystem function. This precludes discernment of their separate influences on ecosystem processes, including nitrogen (N) cycling, and how those influences might be moderated by global change factors. In a 17-year field study of grassland species, we used two full factorial experiments to independently vary SR (one or four species, with FGR = 1) and FGR (1-4 groups, with SR = 4) to assess SR and FGR effects on ecosystem N cycling and its response to elevated carbon dioxide (CO2 ) and N addition. We hypothesized that increased plant diversity (either SR or FGR) and elevated CO2 would enhance plant N pools because of greater plant N uptake, but decrease soil N cycling rates because of greater soil carbon inputs and microbial N immobilization. In partial support of these hypotheses, increasing SR or FGR (holding the other constant) enhanced total plant N pools and decreased soil nitrate pools, largely through higher root biomass, and increasing FGR strongly reduced mineralization rates, because of lower root N concentrations. In contrast, increasing SR (holding FGR constant and despite increasing total plant C and N pools) did not alter root N concentrations or net N mineralization rates. Elevated CO2 had minimal effects on plant and soil N metrics and their responses to plant diversity, whereas enriched N increased plant and soil N pools, but not soil N fluxes. These results show that functional diversity had additional effects on both plant N pools and rates of soil N cycling that were independent of those of species richness.
© 2017 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

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Keywords:  CO2 elevation; N enrichment; net N mineralization; plant N pools; plant diversity; soil inorganic N pools

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Year:  2017        PMID: 28494115     DOI: 10.1111/gcb.13757

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Glob Chang Biol        ISSN: 1354-1013            Impact factor:   10.863


  1 in total

1.  Comparative Microbial Nitrogen Functional Gene Abundances in the Topsoil vs. Subsoil of Three Grassland Habitats in Northern China.

Authors:  Yuqing Liu; Qiaodong Chi; Hui Cheng; Huanxin Ding; Teng Wen; Jun Zhao; Xiaojuan Feng; Jinbo Zhang; Zucong Cai; Guohua Liu
Journal:  Front Plant Sci       Date:  2022-01-14       Impact factor: 5.753

  1 in total

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