TY - JOUR
T1 - Nitrogen deposition weakens plant-microbe interactions in grassland ecosystems
AU - Wei, Cunzheng
AU - Yu, Qiang
AU - Bai, Edith
AU - Lü, Xiaotao
AU - Li, Qi
AU - Xia, Jianyang
AU - Kardol, Paul
AU - Liang, Wenju
AU - Wang, Zhengwen
AU - Han, Xingguo
PY - 2013/12
Y1 - 2013/12
N2 - Soil carbon (C) and nitrogen (N) stoichiometry is a main driver of ecosystem functioning. Global N enrichment has greatly changed soil C : N ratios, but how altered resource stoichiometry influences the complexity of direct and indirect interactions among plants, soils, and microbial communities has rarely been explored. Here, we investigated the responses of the plant-soil-microbe system to multi-level N additions and the role of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) and inorganic N stoichiometry in regulating microbial biomass in semiarid grassland in northern China. We documented a significant positive correlation between DOC and inorganic N across the N addition gradient, which contradicts the negative nonlinear correlation between nitrate accrual and DOC availability commonly observed in natural ecosystems. Using hierarchical structural equation modeling, we found that soil acidification resulting from N addition, rather than changes in the plant community, was most closely related to shifts in soil microbial community composition and decline of microbial respiration. These findings indicate a down-regulating effect of high N availability on plant-microbe interactions. That is, with the limiting factor for microbial biomass shifting from resource stoichiometry to soil acidity, N enrichment weakens the bottom-up control of soil microorganisms by plant-derived C sources. These results highlight the importance of integratively studying the plant-soil-microbe system in improving our understanding of ecosystem functioning under conditions of global N enrichment.
AB - Soil carbon (C) and nitrogen (N) stoichiometry is a main driver of ecosystem functioning. Global N enrichment has greatly changed soil C : N ratios, but how altered resource stoichiometry influences the complexity of direct and indirect interactions among plants, soils, and microbial communities has rarely been explored. Here, we investigated the responses of the plant-soil-microbe system to multi-level N additions and the role of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) and inorganic N stoichiometry in regulating microbial biomass in semiarid grassland in northern China. We documented a significant positive correlation between DOC and inorganic N across the N addition gradient, which contradicts the negative nonlinear correlation between nitrate accrual and DOC availability commonly observed in natural ecosystems. Using hierarchical structural equation modeling, we found that soil acidification resulting from N addition, rather than changes in the plant community, was most closely related to shifts in soil microbial community composition and decline of microbial respiration. These findings indicate a down-regulating effect of high N availability on plant-microbe interactions. That is, with the limiting factor for microbial biomass shifting from resource stoichiometry to soil acidity, N enrichment weakens the bottom-up control of soil microorganisms by plant-derived C sources. These results highlight the importance of integratively studying the plant-soil-microbe system in improving our understanding of ecosystem functioning under conditions of global N enrichment.
KW - Aboveground-belowground linkages
KW - Compensatory effects
KW - Microbial carbon limitation
KW - N saturation
KW - Resource stoichiometry
KW - Structural equation modeling
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/84887433567
U2 - 10.1111/gcb.12348
DO - 10.1111/gcb.12348
M3 - 文章
C2 - 23925948
AN - SCOPUS:84887433567
SN - 1354-1013
VL - 19
SP - 3688
EP - 3697
JO - Global Change Biology
JF - Global Change Biology
IS - 12
ER -