| Literature DB >> 30043231 |
Wentao Luo1, Chong Xu2, Wang Ma1, Xiyuan Yue3, Xiaosa Liang1, Xiaoan Zuo3, Alan K Knapp4, Melinda D Smith4, Jordi Sardans5,6, Feike A Dijkstra7, Josep Peñuelas5,6, Yongfei Bai8, Zhengwen Wang9, Qiang Yu10, Xingguo Han1,8,11.
Abstract
Both the dominance and the mass ratio hypotheses predict that plant internal nutrient cycling in ecosystems is determined by the dominant species within plant communities. We tested this hypothesis under conditions of extreme drought by assessing plant nutrient (N, P and K) uptake and resorption in response to experimentally imposed precipitation reductions in two semiarid grasslands of northern China. These two communities shared similar environmental conditions, but had different dominant species-one was dominated by a rhizomatous grass (Leymus chinensis) and the other by a bunchgrass (Stipa grandis). Results showed that responses of N to drought differed between the two communities with drought decreasing green leaf N concentration and resorption in the community dominated by the rhizomatous grass, but not in the bunchgrass-dominated community. In contrast, negative effects of drought on green leaf P and K concentrations and their resorption efficiencies were consistent across the two communities. Additionally, in each community, the effects of extreme drought on soil N, P and K supply did not change synchronously with that on green leaf N, P and K concentrations, and senesced leaf N, P and K concentrations showed no response to extreme drought. Consistent with the dominance/mass ratio hypothesis, our findings suggest that differences in dominant species and their growth form (i.e., rhizomatous vs bunch grass) play an important nutrient-specific role in mediating plant internal nutrient cycling across communities within a single region.Entities:
Keywords: Dominance/mass ratio hypothesis; Dominant species; Extreme drought; Nutrient cycling
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30043231 DOI: 10.1007/s00442-018-4232-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oecologia ISSN: 0029-8549 Impact factor: 3.225