Muted responses to chronic experimental nitrogen deposition on the Colorado Plateau

Anthropogenic nitrogen (N) deposition is significantly altering both community structure and ecosystem processes in terrestrial ecosystems across the globe. However, our understanding of the consequences of N deposition in dryland systems remains relatively poor, despite evidence that drylands may b...

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Veröffentlicht in:Oecologia 2021-02, Vol.195 (2), p.513-524
Hauptverfasser: Phillips, Michala L., Winkler, Daniel E., Reibold, Robin H., Osborne, Brooke B., Reed, Sasha C.
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container_issue 2
container_start_page 513
container_title Oecologia
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creator Phillips, Michala L.
Winkler, Daniel E.
Reibold, Robin H.
Osborne, Brooke B.
Reed, Sasha C.
description Anthropogenic nitrogen (N) deposition is significantly altering both community structure and ecosystem processes in terrestrial ecosystems across the globe. However, our understanding of the consequences of N deposition in dryland systems remains relatively poor, despite evidence that drylands may be particularly vulnerable to increasing N inputs. In this study, we investigated the influence of 7 years of multiple levels of simulated N deposition (0, 2, 5, and 8 kg N ha⁻¹ year⁻¹) on plant community structure and biological soil crust (biocrust) cover at three semi-arid grassland sites spanning a soil texture gradient. Biocrusts are a surface community of mosses, lichens, cyanobacteria, and/or algae, and have been shown to be sensitive to N inputs. We hypothesized that N additions would decrease plant diversity, increase abundance of the invasive annual grass Bromus tectorum, and decrease biocrust cover. Contrary to our expectations, we found that N additions did not affect plant diversity or B. tectorum abundance. In partial support of our hypotheses, N additions negatively affected biocrust cover in some years, perhaps driven in part by inter-annual differences in precipitation. Soil inorganic N concentrations showed rapid but ephemeral responses to N additions and plant foliar N concentrations showed no response, indicating that the magnitude of plant and biocrust responses to N fertilization may be buffered by endogenous N cycling. More work is needed to determine N critical load thresholds for plant community and biocrust dynamics in semi-arid systems and the factors that determine the fate of N inputs.
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subjects Abundance
Algae
Annual precipitation
Anthropogenic factors
Aquatic plants
Arid lands
Arid zones
Aridity
Biological diversity
Biological fertilization
Biomedical and Life Sciences
Bromus tectorum
Bryophyta
Colorado
Community structure
Cyanobacteria
Deposition
Ecology
Ecosystem
Fertilization
GLOBAL CHANGE ECOLOGY – ORIGINAL RESEARCH
Grasslands
Human influences
Hydrology/Water Resources
Lichens
Life Sciences
Nitrogen
Plant communities
Plant diversity
Plant Sciences
Soil
Soil properties
Soil structure
Soil texture
Soils
Surface layers
Terrestrial ecosystems
Texture
title Muted responses to chronic experimental nitrogen deposition on the Colorado Plateau
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