The Growth and N Retention of Two Annual Desert Plants Varied Under Different Nitrogen Deposition Rates

Nitrogen (N) partitioning between plant and soil pools is closely related to biomass accumulation and allocation, and is of great importance for quantifying the biomass dynamics and N fluxes of ecosystems, especially in low N-availability desert ecosystems. However, partitioning can differ among spe...

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Veröffentlicht in:Frontiers in plant science 2019-03, Vol.10, p.356
Hauptverfasser: Cui, Xiaoqing, Yue, Ping, Wu, Wenchao, Gong, Yanming, Li, Kaihui, Misselbrook, Tom, Goulding, Keith, Liu, Xuejun
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Nitrogen (N) partitioning between plant and soil pools is closely related to biomass accumulation and allocation, and is of great importance for quantifying the biomass dynamics and N fluxes of ecosystems, especially in low N-availability desert ecosystems. However, partitioning can differ among species even when growing in the same habitat. To better understand the variation of plant biomass allocation and N retention within ephemeral and annual species we studied the responses of (an ephemeral) and (an annual) to N addition, including plant growth, N retention by the plant and soil, and N lost to the environment using N (double-labeled NH NO (5.16% abundance) added at 0, 0.8, 1.6, 3.2, and 6.4 g pot , equivalent to 0, 15, 30, 60, and 120 kg N ha ) in a pot experiment. Higher N addition (N120) inhibited plant growth and biomass accumulation of the ephemeral but not the annual. In addition, the aboveground:belowground partitioning of N (the R:S ratio) of the ephemeral decreased with increasing N addition, but that of the annual increased. The N input corresponding to maximum biomass and N retention of the ephemeral was significantly less than that of the annual. The aboveground and belowground retention of N in the ephemeral were significantly less than those of the annual, except at low N rates. The average plant-soil system recovery of added N by the ephemeral was 70%, significantly higher than that of the annual with an average of 50%. Although the whole plant-soil N recovery of this desert ecosystem decreased with increasing N deposition, our results suggested that it may vary with species composition and community change under future climate and elevated N deposition.
ISSN:1664-462X
1664-462X
DOI:10.3389/fpls.2019.00356