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Ecophysiological adjustment of two Sphagnum species in response to anthropogenic nitrogen deposition
Authors:Wiedermann Magdalena M  Gunnarsson Urban  Ericson Lars  Nordin Annika
Affiliation:Department of Ecology and Environmental Science, UmeåUniversity, SE-901 87 Umeå, Sweden;;Evolutionary Biology Centre, Department of Plant Ecology, Uppsala University, Villavägen 14, SE-752 36 Uppsala, Sweden;;UmeåPlant Science Centre, Department of Forest Genetics and Plant Physiology, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, SE-901 83 Umeå, Sweden
Abstract:
Here, it was investigated whether Sphagnum species have adjusted their nitrogen (N) uptake in response to the anthropogenic N deposition that has drastically altered N-limited ecosystems, including peatlands, worldwide. A lawn species, Sphagnum balticum, and a hummock species, Sphagnum fuscum, were collected from three peatlands along a gradient of N deposition (2, 8 and 12 kg N ha(-1) yr(-1)). The mosses were subjected to solutions containing a mixture of four N forms. In each solution one of these N forms was labeled with (15)N (namely (15)NH(+)(4), (15)NO(-)(3) and the amino acids [(15)N]alanine (Ala) and [(15)N]glutamic acid (Glu)). It was found that for both species most of the N taken up was from , followed by Ala, Glu, and very small amounts from NO(-)(3). At the highest N deposition site N uptake was reduced, but this did not prevent N accumulation as free amino acids in the Sphagnum tissues. The reduced N uptake may have been genetically selected for under the relatively short period with elevated N exposure from anthropogenic sources, or may have been the result of plasticity in the Sphagnum physiological response. The negligible Sphagnum NO(-)(3) uptake may make any NO(-)(3) deposited readily available to co-occurring vascular plants.
Keywords:amino acids    nitrogen (N) deposition gradient    N uptake       eqmu1"   alt="  "  />         eqmu2"   alt="  "  />      Sphagnum
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