| Literature DB >> 30349095 |
Joseph M Craine1, Andrew J Elmore2, Lixin Wang3, Julieta Aranibar4, Marijn Bauters5,6, Pascal Boeckx5, Brooke E Crowley7,8, Melissa A Dawes9, Sylvain Delzon10, Alex Fajardo11, Yunting Fang12, Lei Fujiyoshi13, Alan Gray14, Rossella Guerrieri15, Michael J Gundale16, David J Hawke17, Peter Hietz18, Mathieu Jonard19, Elizabeth Kearsley20, Tanaka Kenzo21, Mikhail Makarov22, Sara Marañón-Jiménez23,24,25, Terrence P McGlynn26,27, Brenden E McNeil28, Stella G Mosher7, David M Nelson2, Pablo L Peri29, Jean Christophe Roggy30, Rebecca Sanders-DeMott31,32, Minghua Song33, Paul Szpak34, Pamela H Templer31, Dewidine Van der Colff35, Christiane Werner36, Xingliang Xu32, Yang Yang37, Guirui Yu33,38, Katarzyna Zmudczyńska-Skarbek39.
Abstract
Human societies depend on an Earth system that operates within a constrained range of nutrient availability, yet the recent trajectory of terrestrial nitrogen (N) availability is uncertain. Examining patterns of foliar N concentrations and isotope ratios (δ15N) from more than 43,000 samples acquired over 37 years, here we show that foliar N concentration declined by 9% and foliar δ15N declined by 0.6-1.6‰. Examining patterns across different climate spaces, foliar δ15N declined across the entire range of mean annual temperature and mean annual precipitation tested. These results suggest declines in N supply relative to plant demand at the global scale. In all, there are now multiple lines of evidence of declining N availability in many unfertilized terrestrial ecosystems, including declines in δ15N of tree rings and leaves from herbarium samples over the past 75-150 years. These patterns are consistent with the proposed consequences of elevated atmospheric carbon dioxide and longer growing seasons. These declines will limit future terrestrial carbon uptake and increase nutritional stress for herbivores.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30349095 DOI: 10.1038/s41559-018-0694-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Ecol Evol ISSN: 2397-334X Impact factor: 15.460