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1.
Increases in atmospheric CO2 and tropospheric O3 may affect forest N cycling by altering plant litter production and the availability of substrates for microbial metabolism. Three years following the establishment of our free‐air CO2–O3 enrichment experiment, plant growth has been stimulated by elevated CO2 resulting in greater substrate input to soil; elevated O3 has counteracted this effect. We hypothesized that rates of soil N cycling would be enhanced by greater plant productivity under elevated CO2, and that CO2 effects would be dampened by O3. We found that elevated CO2 did not alter gross N transformation rates. Elevated O3 significantly reduced gross N mineralization and microbial biomass N, and effects were consistent among species. We also observed significant interactions between CO2 and O3: (i) gross N mineralization was greater under elevated CO2 (1.0 mg N kg?1 day?1) than in the presence of both CO2 and O3 (0.5 mg N kg?1 day?1) and (ii) gross NH4+ immobilization was also greater under elevated CO2 (0.8 mg N kg?1 day?1) than under CO2 plus O3 (0.4 mg N kg?1 day?1). We used a laboratory 15N tracer method to quantify transfer of inorganic N to organic pools. Elevated CO2 led to greater recovery of NH4+15N in microbial biomass and corresponding lower recovery in the extractable NO3? pool. Elevated CO2 resulted in a substantial increase in NO3?15N recovery in soil organic matter. We observed no O3 main effect and no CO2 by O3 interaction effect on 15N recovery in any soil pool. All of the above responses were most pronounced beneath Betula papyrifera and Populus tremuloides, which have grown more rapidly than Acer saccharum. Although elevated CO2 has increased plant productivity, the resulting increase in plant litter production has yet to overcome the influence of the pre‐existing pool of soil organic matter on soil microbial activity and rates of N cycling. Ozone reduces plant litter inputs and also appears to affect the composition of plant litter in a way that reduces microbial biomass and activity.  相似文献   

2.
The nitrogen requirement of plants is predominantly supplied by NH4+ and/or NO3? from the soil solution, but the energetic cost of uptake and assimilation is generally higher for NO3? than for NH4+. We found that CO2 enrichment of the atmosphere enhanced the root uptake capacity for NO3?, but not for NH4+, in field-grown loblolly pine saplings. Increased preference for NO3? at the elevated CO2 concentration was accompanied by increased carbohydrate levels in roots. The results have important implications for the potential consequences of global climate change on plant-and ecosystem-level processes in many temperate forest ecosystems.  相似文献   

3.
The fate of immobilized N in soils is one of the great uncertainties in predicting C sequestration at increased CO2 and N deposition. In a dual isotope tracer experiment (13C, 15N) within a 4‐year CO2 enrichment (+200 ppmv) study with forest model ecosystems, we (i) quantified the effects of elevated CO2 on the partitioning of N; (ii) traced immobilized N into physically separated pools of soil organic matter (SOM) with turnover rates known from their 13C signals; and (iii) estimated the remobilization and thus, the bio‐availability of newly sequestered C and N. (1) CO2 enrichment significantly decreased NO3? concentrations in soil waters and export from 1.5 m deep lysimeters by 30–80%. Consequently, elevated CO2 increased the overall retention of N in the model ecosystems. (2) About 60–80% of added 15NH415NO3 were retained in soils. The clay fraction was the greatest sink for the immobilized 15N sequestering 50–60% of the total new soil N. SOM associated with clay contained only 25% of the total new soil C pool and had small C/N ratios (<13), indicating that it consists of humified organic matter with a relatively slow turn over rate. This implies that added 15N was mainly immobilized in stable mineral‐bound SOM pools. (3) Incubation of soils for 1 year showed that the remobilization of newly sequestered N was three to nine times smaller than that of newly sequestered C. Thus, inorganic inputs of N were stabilized more effectively in soils than C. Significantly less newly sequestered N was remobilized from soils previously exposed to elevated CO2. In summary, our results show firstly that a large fraction of inorganic N inputs becomes effectively immobilized in relative stable SOM pools and secondly that elevated CO2 can increase N retention in soils and hence it may tighten N cycling and diminish the risk of nitrate leaching to groundwater.  相似文献   

4.
This study investigated simultaneous plant and soil feedbacks on growth enhancement with elevated [CO2] within microcosms of yellow birch (Betula alleghaniensis Britt.) in the second year of growth. Understanding the integrated responses of model ecosystems may provide key insight into the potential net nutrient feedbacks on [CO2] growth enhancements in temperate forests. We measured the net biomass production, C:N ratios, root architecture, and mycorrhizal responses of yellow birch, in situ rates gross nitrogen mineralization and the partitioning of available NH4+ between yellow birch and soil microbes. Elevated atmospheric [CO2] resulted in significant alterations in the cycling of N within the microcosms. Plant C/N ratios were significantly increased, gross mineralization and NH4+ consumption rates were decreased, and relative microbial uptake of NH4+ was increased, representing a suite of N cycling negative feedbacks on N availability. However, increased C/N ratios may also be a mechanism which allows plants to maintain higher growth with a constant or reduced N supply. Total plant N content was increased with elevated [CO2], suggesting that yellow birch had successfully increased their ability to acquire nutrients during the first year of growth. However, plant uptake rates of NH4+ had decreased in the second year. This discrepancy implies that, in this study, nitrogen uptake showed a trend through ontogeny of decreasing enhancement under elevated [CO2]. The reduced N mineralization and relatively increased N immobilization are a potential feedback which may drive this ontogenetic trend. This study has demonstrated the importance of using an integrated approach to exploring potential nutrient-cycling feedbacks in elevated [CO2].  相似文献   

5.
The impact of elevated CO2 on terrestrial ecosystem C balance, both in sign or magnitude, is not clear because the resulting alterations in C input, plant nutrient demand and water use efficiency often have contrasting impacts on microbial decomposition processes. One major source of uncertainty stems from the impact of elevated CO2 on N availability to plants and microbes. We examined the effects of atmospheric CO2 enrichment (ambient+370 μmol mol?1) on plant and microbial N acquisition in two different mesocosm experiments, using model plant species of annual grasses of Avena barbata and A. fatua, respectively. The A. barbata experiment was conducted in a N‐poor sandy loam and the A. fatua experiment was on a N‐rich clayey loam. Plant–microbial N partitioning was examined through determining the distribution of a 15N tracer. In the A. barbata experiment, 15N tracer was introduced to a field labeling experiment in the previous year so that 15N predominantly existed in nonextractable soil pools. In the A. fatua experiment, 15N was introduced in a mineral solution [(15NH4)2SO4 solution] during the growing season of A. fatua. Results of both N budget and 15N tracer analyses indicated that elevated CO2 increased plant N acquisition from the soil. In the A. barbata experiment, elevated CO2 increased plant biomass N by ca. 10% but there was no corresponding decrease in soil extractable N, suggesting that plants might have obtained N from the nonextractable organic N pool because of enhanced microbial activity. In the A. fatua experiment, however, the CO2‐led increase in plant biomass N was statistically equal to the reduction in soil extractable N. Although atmospheric CO2 enrichment enhanced microbial biomass C under A. barbata or microbial activity (respiration) under A. fatua, it had no significant effect on microbial biomass N in either experiment. Elevated CO2 increased the colonization of A. fatua roots by arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi, which coincided with the enhancement of plant competitiveness for soluble soil N. Together, these results suggest that elevated CO2 may tighten N cycling through facilitating plant N acquisition. However, it is unknown to what degree results from these short‐term microcosm experiments can be extrapolated to field conditions. Long‐term studies in less‐disturbed soils are needed to determine whether CO2‐enhancement of plant N acquisition can significantly relieve N limitation over plant growth in an elevated CO2 environment.  相似文献   

6.
Northern forests are exposed to relatively high ammonia inputs due to high atmospheric deposition and the common practise of forest fertilization. It is not known how increased soil NH4 +concentrations affect acquisition of symbiosis-mediated N from organic sources. We examined the effect of inorganic N and P availability on N acquisition from alanine by 43 weeks old birch (Betula pendula) seedlings in symbiosis with the ectomycorrhizal fungus Paxillus involutus. The seedlings were exposed for 9 weeks to nutrient additions equivalent to 43 kg N and 6.4 kg P ha-1 (low N and P availability), 250 kg N and 38 kg P ha-1(high N and P availability) or to 250 kg N and 6.4 kg P ha-1 (high N and low P availability). Carbon and nitrogen allocation between the symbionts was assessed by exposing the foliage to 14CO2 and the mycelium to 15N-alanine or 15NH4 + simultaneously and measuring the distribution of the isotopic tracers after a three-day chase period. High inorganic N combined with low P availability did not have marked effect on symbiosis-mediated N uptake from alanine, whilst high N and P availability reduced alanine-derived 15N translocation by the fungus to the plant. Shoot 15N concentration and concentration of 14C in the extramatrical mycelium correlated significantly across treatments pointing to controlled reciprocity of transactions between the partners.  相似文献   

7.
The response of temperate forest ecosystems to elevated atmospheric CO2 concentrations is important because these ecosystems represent a significant component of the global carbon cycle. Two important but not well understood processes which elevated CO2 may substantially alter in these systems are regeneration and nitrogen cycling. If elevated CO2 leads to changes in species composition in regenerating forest communities then the structure and function of these ecosystems may be affected. In most temperate forests, nitrogen appears to be a limiting nutrient. If elevated CO2 leads to reductions in nitrogen cycling through increased sequestration of nitrogen in plant biomass or reductions in mineralization rates, long-term forest productivity may be constrained. To study these processes, we established mesocosms of regenerating forest communities in controlled environments maintained at either ambient (375 ppm) or elevated (700 ppm) CO2 concentrations. Mesocosms were constructed from intact monoliths of organic forest soil. We maintained these mesocosms for 2 years without any external inputs of nitrogen and allowed the plants naturally present as seeds and rhizomes to regenerate. We used 15N pool dilution techniques to quantify nitrogen fluxes within the mesocosms at the end of the 2 years. Elevated atmospheric CO2 concentration significantly affected a number of plant and soil processes in the experimental regenerating forest mesocosms. These changes included increases in total plant biomass production, plant C/N ratios, ectomycorrhizal colonization of tree fine roots, changes in tree fine root architecture, and decreases in plant NH4 + uptake rates, gross NH4 + mineralization rates, and gross NH4 + consumption rates. In addition, there was a shift in the relative biomass contribution of the two dominant regenerating tree species; the proportion of total biomass contributed by white birch (Betula papyrifera) decreased and the proportion of total biomass contributed by yellow birch (B. alleghaniensis) increased. However, elevated CO2 had no significant effect on the total amount of nitrogen in plant and soil microbial biomass. In this study we observed a suite of effects due to elevated CO2, some of which could lead to increases in potential long term growth responses to elevated CO2, other to decreases. The reduced plant NH4 + uptake rates we observed are consistent with reduced NH4 + availability due to reduced gross mineralization rates. Reduced NH4 + mineralization rates are consistent with the increases in C/N ratios we observed for leaf and fine root material. Together, these data suggest the positive increases in plant root architectural parameters and mycorrhizal colonization may not be as important as the potential negative effects of reduced nitrogen availability through decreased decomposition rates in a future atmosphere with elevated CO2. Received: 10 January 1997 / Accepted: 25 July 1997  相似文献   

8.
The soil nitrogen cycle was investigated in a pre‐established Lolium perenne sward on a loamy soil and exposed to ambient and elevated atmospheric CO2 concentrations (350 and 700 μL L?1) and, at elevated [CO2], to a 3 °C temperature increase. At two levels of mineral nitrogen supply, N– (150 kgN ha?1 y?1) and N+ (533 kgN ha?1 y?1), 15N‐labelled ammonium nitrate was supplied in split applications over a 2.5‐y period. The recovery of the labelled fertilizer N was measured in the harvests, in the stubble and roots, in the macro‐organic matter fractions above 200 μm in size (MOM) and in the aggregated organic matter below 200 μM (AOM). Elevated [CO2] reduced the total amount of N harvested in the clipped parts of the sward. The harvested N derived from soil was reduced to a greater extent than that derived from fertilizer. At both N supplies, elevated [CO2] modified the allocation of the fertilizer N in the sward, in favour of the stubble and roots and significantly increased the recovery of fertilizer N in the soil macro‐organic matter fractions. The increase of fertilizer N immobilization in the MOM was associated with a decline of fertilizer N uptake by the grass sward, which supported the hypothesis of a negative feedback of elevated [CO2] on the sward N yield and uptake. Similar and even more pronounced effects were observed for the native N mineralized in the soil. At N–, a greater part of the fertilizer N organized in the root phytomass resulted in an underestimation of N immobilized in dead roots and, in turn, an underestimation of N immobilization in the MOM. The 3 °C temperature increase alleviated the [CO2] effect throughout much of the N cycle, increasing soil N mineralization, N derived from soil in the harvests, and the partitioning of the assimilated fertilizer N to shoots. In conclusion, at ambient temperature, the N cycle was slowed down under elevated [CO2], which restricted the increase in the aboveground production of the grass sward, and apparently contributed to the sequestration of carbon belowground. In contrast, a temperature increase under elevated [CO2] stimulated the soil nitrogen cycle, improved the N nutrition of the sward and restricted the magnitude of the soil C sequestration.  相似文献   

9.
Studies of nitrogen (N) cycling have traditionally focused on N mineralization as the primary process limiting plant assimilation of N. Recent evidence has shown that plants may assimilate amino acids (AAs) directly, circumventing the mineralization pathway. However, the general abundance of soil AAs and their relative importance in plant N uptake remains unclear in most ecosystems. We compared the concentrations and potential production rates of AAs and NH4 +, as well as the edaphic factors that influence AA dynamics, in 84 soils across the United States. Across all sites, NH4 + and AA-N comprised similar proportions of the total bioavailable N pool (~20%), with NO3 being the dominant form of extractable N everywhere but in tundra and boreal forest soils. Potential rates of AA production were at least comparable to those of NH4 + production in all ecosystems, particularly in semi-arid grasslands, where AA production rates were six times greater than for NH4 + (P < 0.01). Potential rates of proteolytic enzyme activity were greatest in bacteria-dominated soils with low NH4 + concentrations, including many grassland soils. Based on research performed under standardized laboratory conditions, our continental-scale analyses suggest that soil AA and NH4 + concentrations are similar in most soils and that AAs may contribute to plant and microbial N demand in most ecosystems, particularly in ecosystems with N-poor soils.  相似文献   

10.
Interactive effects of K+ and N (principally NH4+) on plant growth and ion uptake were investigated using hydroponically grown rice (Oryza sativa L. cv. M202) seedlings by varying the availability of NH4+ or NO3? and K+ during an 18d growth period, a 3d pretreatment period and during flux measurements. Plants grew best in media containing 100 mmol m?3 NH4+ and 200mmolm?3 K+ (N100/K200), followed by N2/K200 < N100/K2 < N2/K2. 86Rb+(K+) fluxes were increased by exposure to N during the 18 d growth period and the 3 d of pretreatment, but decreased by the presence of NH4+ during flux measurements. This inhibition was a function of prior N/K provision and the [NH4+]0 present during flux determinations. NH4+ was least inhibitory to 86Rb+(K+) influx in high-N/low-K plants. Pretreatments with K+ failed to stimulate NH4+ uptake, and the presence of K+ in the uptake solutions reduced NH4+ fluxes only in high-N/low-K plants.  相似文献   

11.
We assessed the effects of doubling atmospheric CO2 concentration, [CO2], on C and N allocation within pedunculate oak plants (Quercus robur L.) grown in containers under optimal water supply. A short-term dual 13CO2 and 15NO3? labelling experiment was carried out when the plants had formed their third growing flush. The 22-week exposure to 700 μl l?1 [CO2] stimulated plant growth and biomass accumulation (+53% as compared with the 350 μl l?1 [CO2] treatment) but decreased the root/shoot biomass ratio (-23%) and specific leaf area (-18%). Moreover, there was an increase in net CO2 assimilation rate (+37% on a leaf dry weight basis; +71% on a leaf area basis), and a decrease in both above- and below-ground CO2 respiration rates (-32 and -26%, respectively, on a dry mass basis) under elevated [CO2]. 13C acquisition, expressed on a plant mass basis or on a plant leaf area basis, was also markedly stimulated under elevated [CO2] both after the 12-h 13CO2 pulse phase and after the 60-h chase phase. Plant N content was increased under elevated CO2 (+36%), but not enough to compensate for the increase in plant C content (+53%). Thus, the plant C/N ratio was increased (+13%) and plant N concentration was decreased (-11%). There was no effect of elevated [CO2] on fine root-specific 15N uptake (amount of recently assimilated 15N per unit fine root dry mass), suggesting that modifications of plant N pools were merely linked to root size and not to root function. N concentration was decreased in the leaves of the first and second growing flushes and in the coarse roots, whereas it was unaffected by [CO2] in the stem and in the actively growing organs (fine roots and leaves of the third growth flush). Furthermore, leaf N content per unit area was unaffected by [CO2]. These results are consistent with the short-term optimization of N distribution within the plants with respect to growth and photosynthesis. Such an optimization might be achieved at the expense of the N pools in storage compartments (coarse roots, leaves of the first and second growth flushes). After the 60-h 13C chase phase, leaves of the first and second growth flushes were almost completely depleted in recent 13C under ambient [CO2], whereas these leaves retained important amounts of recently assimilated 13C (carbohydrate reserves?) under elevated [CO2].  相似文献   

12.
We compared influxes and internal transport in soybean plants (Glycine max cv. Kingsoy) of labelled N from external solutions where either ammonium or nitrate was labelled with the stable isotope15N and the radioactive isotope13N. The objective was to see whether mass spectrometric determinations of tissue 15N content were sufficiently sensitive to measure influxes accurately over short time periods. Our findings were as follows. (1) There was a close quantitative correspondence between estimates of N influx of individual plants using 15N or 13N measurements with either NO3/? or NH4+ at 4 or 2 mol?3, respectively in the external solution. (2) Transport to the shoot of N from NO3 absorbed over a 5–15 min period could be monitored when the external NO3? concentration ranged from 0–05 to 4 mol m?3. NH4+ as the N source labelled shoot tissue more slowly, and estimates of the transport between root and shoot could be made only with 13N. (3) Influx of NO3? into root tissue could be measured by 15N enrichment after 5–10 min at concentrations approaching the probable KM of the high-affinity transport system. (4) There was some indication of isotope discrimination, especially with respect to the movement of labelled N to the shoot, when NO3? is the N source. For many purposes, 15N tracing can be used satisfactorily to estimate influxes of both NO3? and NH4+ in soybean roots. Use of the short-lived radio nuclide 13N remains the method of choice for more refined measurements of internal distribution and assimilation.  相似文献   

13.
In the atmosphere, ammonia (NH3) is the third most abundant N species which, due to various natural and anthropogenic sources, can locally reach high concentrations. The acquisition of atmospheric NH3 by plant shoots will lead to two opposing effects on acid-base balance. Absorption and dissolution of NH3 will cause an alkalinisation, while the assimilation of NH3 results in an acidification. Different rates of these processes would lead to an acid-base imbalance with consequences for the ionic balance of the plant. As there is only a limited capacity for biochemical disposal of excess H+ in shoots, pH regulation may involve a pattern of (in)organic ion flow between shoots and roots followed by H+/OH? extrusion into the media via roots. The acquisition of NH3 as additional N source should lead to a reduction in the ratio of mol H+/OH? gained per mol N assimilated. We have recently investigated the NH3 acquisition by Lolium perenne L. cv. Centurion and studied the effects of gas phase NH3 on growth, acid-base balance and water-use efficiency. The experiments, therefore, included the application of a range of 14NH3 to the shoots and of 15N as NO3?, NH4+ or NH4NO3 to the roots. After a summary of the main conclusions from those experiments, we discuss the implications of the use of atmospheric NH3 for the mineral composition of the plants. Over the range of NH3 supplied, plants from all treatments could utilize gas-phase NH3. Plants receiving NO3? via their roots had a higher capacity to use gaseous NH3 than those growing with NH4+. NH3 assimilation in shoots reduced both the acid load with NH4+ nutrition and the alkaline load with NO3? supply to the roots. The most significant effect of fumigation on the ion balance was an increase in K+ within all treatments, and this effect was highest in the NH4+-fed plants. The results of the experiments support predictions of a combination of neutralizing biochemical reactions as well as transport of organic anion salts between shoots and roots as possible acid-base regulation mechanisms of the whole plant.  相似文献   

14.
Nitrogen availability in terrestrial ecosystems strongly influences plant productivity and nutrient cycling in response to increasing atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2). Elevated CO2 has consistently stimulated forest productivity at the Duke Forest free‐air CO2 enrichment experiment throughout the decade‐long experiment. It remains unclear how the N cycle has changed with elevated CO2 to support this increased productivity. Using natural‐abundance measures of N isotopes together with an ecosystem‐scale 15N tracer experiment, we quantified the cycling of 15N in plant and soil pools under ambient and elevated CO2 over three growing seasons to determine how elevated CO2 changed N cycling between plants, soil, and microorganisms. After measuring natural‐abundance 15N differences in ambient and CO2‐fumigated plots, we applied inorganic 15N tracers and quantified the redistribution of 15N for three subsequent growing seasons. The natural abundance of leaf litter was enriched under elevated compared to ambient CO2, consistent with deeper rooting and enhanced N mineralization. After tracer application, 15N was initially retained in the organic and mineral soil horizons. Recovery of 15N in plant biomass was 3.5 ± 0.5% in the canopy, 1.7 ± 0.2% in roots and 1.7 ± 0.2% in branches. After two growing seasons, 15N recoveries in biomass and soil pools were not significantly different between CO2 treatments, despite greater total N uptake under elevated CO2. After the third growing season, 15N recovery in trees was significantly higher in elevated compared to ambient CO2. Natural‐abundance 15N and tracer results, taken together, suggest that trees growing under elevated CO2 acquired additional soil N resources to support increased plant growth. Our study provides an integrated understanding of elevated CO2 effects on N cycling in the Duke Forest and provides a basis for inferring how C and N cycling in this forest may respond to elevated CO2 beyond the decadal time scale.  相似文献   

15.
The increasing concentration of atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) is expected to lead to enhanced competition between plants and microorganisms for the available nitrogen (N) in soil. Here, we present novel results from a 15N tracing study conducted with a sheep‐grazed pasture soil that had been under 10 years of CO2 enrichment. Our study aimed to investigate changes in process‐specific gross N transformations in a soil previously exposed to an elevated atmospheric CO2 (eCO2) concentration and to examine indicators for the occurrence of progressive nitrogen limitation (PNL). Our results show that the mineralization–immobilization turnover (MIT) was enhanced under eCO2, which was driven by the mineralization of recalcitrant organic N. The retention of N in the grassland was enhanced by increased dissimilatory NO3? reduction to NH4+ (DNRA) and decreased NH4+ oxidation. Our results indicate that heterotrophic processes become more important under eCO2. We conclude that higher MIT of recalcitrant organic N and enhanced N retention are mechanisms that may alleviate PNL in grazed temperate grassland.  相似文献   

16.
Kinetic parameters for NH4+ and NO3? uptake were measured in intact roots of Lolium perenne and actively N2-fixing Trifolium repens. Simultaneously, net H+ fluxes between the roots and the root medium were recorded, as were the net photosynthetic rate and transpiration of the leaves. A Michaelis–Menten-type high-affinity system operated in the concentration range up to about 500 mmol m?3 NO3? or NH4+. In L. perenne, the Vmax of this system was 9–11 and 13–14 μmol g?1 root FW h?1 for NO3? and NH4+, respectively. The corresponding values in T. repens were 5–7 and 2 μmol g?1 root FW h?1. The Km for NH4+ uptake was much lower in L. perenne than in T. repens (c. 40 compared with 170 mmol m?3), while Km values for NO3? absorption were roughly similar (around 130 mmol m?3) in the two species. There were no indications of a significant efflux component in the net uptake of the two ions. The translocation rate to the shoots of nitrogen derived from absorbed NO3?-N was higher in T. repens than in L. perenne, while the opposite was the case for nitrogen absorbed as NH4+. Trifolium repens had higher rates of transpiration and net photosynthesis than L. perenne. Measurements of net H+ fluxes between roots and nutrient solution showed that L. perenne absorbing NO3? had a net uptake of H+, while L. perenne with access to NH4+ and T. repens, with access to NO3? or NH4+, in all cases acidified the nutrient solution. Within the individual combinations of plant species and inorganic N form, the net H+ fluxes varied only a little with external N concentration and, hence, with the absorption rate of inorganic N. Based on assessment of the net H+ fluxes in T. repens, nitrogen absorption rate via N2 fixation was similar to that of inorganic N and was not down-regulated by exposure to inorganic N for 2 h. It is concluded that L. perenne will have a competitive advantage over T. repens with respect to inorganic N acquisition.  相似文献   

17.
Leaf 15N signature is a powerful tool that can provide an integrated assessment of the nitrogen (N) cycle and whether it is influenced by rising atmospheric CO2 concentration. We tested the hypothesis that elevated CO2 significantly changes foliage δ15N in a wide range of plant species and ecosystem types. This objective was achieved by determining the δ15N of foliage of 27 field‐grown plant species from six free‐air CO2 enrichment (FACE) experiments representing desert, temperate forest, Mediterranean‐type, grassland prairie, and agricultural ecosystems. We found that within species, the δ15N of foliage produced under elevated CO2 was significantly lower (P<0.038) compared with that of foliage grown under ambient conditions. Further analysis of foliage δ15N by life form and growth habit revealed that the CO2 effect was consistent across all functional groups tested. The examination of two chaparral shrubs grown for 6 years under a wide range of CO2 concentrations (25–75 Pa) also showed a significant and negative correlation between growth CO2 and leaf δ15N. In a select number of species, we measured bulk soil δ15N at a depth of 10 cm, and found that the observed depletion of foliage δ15N in response to elevated CO2 was unrelated to changes in the soil δ15N. While the data suggest a strong influence of elevated CO2 on the N cycle in diverse ecosystems, the exact site(s) at which elevated CO2 alters fractionating processes of the N cycle remains unclear. We cannot rule out the fact that the pattern of foliage δ15N responses to elevated CO2 reported here resulted from a general drop in δ15N of the source N, caused by soil‐driven processes. There is a stronger possibility, however, that the general depletion of foliage δ15N under high CO2 may have resulted from changes in the fractionating processes within the plant/mycorrhizal system.  相似文献   

18.
Identifying soil microbial responses to anthropogenically driven environmental changes is critically important as concerns intensify over the potential degradation of ecosystem function. We assessed the effects of elevated atmospheric CO2 on microbial carbon (C) and nitrogen (N) cycling in Mojave Desert soils using extracellular enzyme activities (EEAs), community‐level physiological profiles (CLPPs), and gross N transformation rates. Soils were collected from unvegetated interspaces between plants and under the dominant shrub (Larrea tridentata) during the 2004–2005 growing season, an above‐average rainfall year. Because most measured variables responded strongly to soil water availability, all significant effects of soil water content were used as covariates to remove potential confounding effects of water availability on microbial responses to experimental treatment effects of cover type, CO2, and sampling date. Microbial C and N activities were lower in interspace soils compared with soils under Larrea, and responses to date and CO2 treatments were cover specific. Over the growing season, EEAs involved in cellulose (cellobiohydrolase) and orthophosphate (alkaline phosphatase) degradation decreased under ambient CO2, but increased under elevated CO2. Microbial C use and substrate use diversity in CLPPs decreased over time, and elevated CO2 positively affected both. Elevated CO2 also altered microbial C use patterns, suggesting changes in the quantity and/or quality of soil C inputs. In contrast, microbial biomass N was higher in interspace soils than soils under Larrea, and was lower in soils exposed to elevated CO2. Gross rates of NH4+ transformations increased over the growing season, and late‐season NH4+ fluxes were negatively affected by elevated CO2. Gross NO3 fluxes decreased over time, with early season interspace soils positively affected by elevated CO2. General increases in microbial activities under elevated CO2 are likely attributable to greater microbial biomass in interspace soils, and to increased microbial turnover rates and/or metabolic levels rather than pool size in soils under Larrea. Because soil water content and plant cover type dominates microbial C and N responses to CO2, the ability of desert landscapes to mitigate or intensify the impacts of global change will ultimately depend on how changes in precipitation and increasing atmospheric CO2 shift the spatial distribution of Mojave Desert plant communities.  相似文献   

19.
It has been hypothesized that greater production of total nonstructural carbohydrates (TNC) in foliage grown under elevated atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) will result in higher concentrations of defensive compounds in tree leaf litter, possibly leading to reduced rates of decomposition and nutrient cycling in forest ecosystems of the future. To evaluate the effects of elevated atmospheric CO2 on litter chemistry and decomposition, we performed a 111 day laboratory incubation with leaf litter of trembling aspen (Populus tremuloides Michaux) produced at 36 Pa and 56 Pa CO2 and two levels of soil nitrogen (N) availability. Decomposition was quantified as microbially respired CO2 and dissolved organic carbon (DOC) in soil solution, and concentrations of nonstructural carbohydrates, N, carbon (C), and condensed tannins were monitored throughout the incubation. Growth under elevated atmospheric CO2 did not significantly affect initial litter concentrations of TNC, N, or condensed tannins. Rates of decomposition, measured as both microbially respired CO2 and DOC did not differ between litter produced under ambient and elevated CO2. Total C lost from the samples was 38 mg g?1 litter as respired CO2 and 138 mg g?1 litter as DOC, suggesting short‐term pulses of dissolved C in soil solution are important components of the terrestrial C cycle. We conclude that litter chemistry and decomposition in trembling aspen are minimally affected by growth under higher concentrations of CO2.  相似文献   

20.
1. This study was part of the Lotic Intersite Nitrogen eXperiment (LINX); a series of identical 15NH4 tracer additions to streams throughout North America. 15NH4Cl was added at tracer levels to a Puerto Rican stream for 42 days. Throughout the addition, and for several weeks afterwards, samples were collected to determine the uptake, retention and transformation pathways of nitrogen in the stream. 2. Ammonium uptake was very rapid. Nitrification was immediate, and was a very significant transformation pathway, accounting for over 50% of total NH4 uptake. The large fraction of NH4 uptake accounted for by nitrification (a process that provides energy to the microbes involved) suggests that energy limitation of net primary production, rather than N limitation, drives N dynamics in this stream. 3. There was a slightly increased 15N label in dissolved organic nitrogen (DON) the day after the 15NH4 addition was stopped. This DO15N was < 0.02% of DON concentration in the stream water at the time, suggesting that nearly all of the DON found in‐stream is allochthonous, or that in‐stream DON production is very slow. 4. Leptophlebiidae and Atya appear to be selectively feeding or selectively assimilating a very highly labelled fraction of the epilithon, as the label found in the consumers became much higher than the label found in the food source. 5. A large spate (>20‐fold increase in discharge) surprisingly removed only 37% of in‐stream fine benthic organic matter (FBOM), leaves and epilithon. The fraction that was washed out travelled downstream a long distance (>220 m) or was washed onto the stream banks. 6. While uptake of 15NH4 was very rapid, retention was low. Quebrada Bisley retained only 17.9% of the added 15N after 42 days of 15N addition. Most of this was in FBOM and epilithon. Turnover rates for these pools were about 3 weeks. The short turnover times of the primary retention pools suggest that long‐term retention (>1 month) is minimal, and is probably the result of N incorporation into shrimp biomass, which accounted for < 1% of the added 15N.  相似文献   

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