| Literature DB >> 30223219 |
Mingxin Zhou1, Guoyong Yan2, Yajuan Xing3, Fei Chen1, Xin Zhang4, Jianyu Wang1, Junhui Zhang5, Guanhua Dai5, Xingbo Zheng5, Wenjing Sun1, Qinggui Wang6, Tong Liu7.
Abstract
Decreased precipitation and increased anthropogenical by derived nitrogen (N) are important climate change factors that alter the availability of soil water and N which are crucial to root function and morphological traits. However, these factors are seldom explored in forests. To clarify how altered precipitation and N addition affect the uptake of organic and inorganic N by fine roots, a field hydroponic experiment using brief 15N exposures was conducted in a temperate forest in northern China. The root traits related to nutrient foraging (root morphology and mycorrhizal colonization) were measured simultaneously. Our results showed that all three tree species preferred ammonium (NH4+) over glycine and nitrate (NO3-), and NH4+ contributed 73% to the total N uptake from the soil. Uptake of glycine was higher than that of NO3-. Decreased precipitation, N addition, and their interaction increased NH4+ uptake rate compared with the control. Decreased precipitation decreased the glycine and NO3- uptake rate. Moreover, N addition, decreased precipitation and their interaction changed root morphological traits and significantly decreased mycorrhizal colonization. Although our treatments resulted in changes to the root traits and the forms of N uptake by plants, the total amount of N uptake did not change among all treatments. We conclude that although fine root traits of dominant tree species in temperate forests have high plasticity in response to climate change, nutrient balance in plants causes the total amount of N uptake to remain unchanged.Entities:
Keywords: Decreased precipitation; Nitrogen addition; Nitrogen uptake; Root plasticity; Temperate forest
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30223219 DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2018.09.166
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Total Environ ISSN: 0048-9697 Impact factor: 7.963