4.7 Article

Responses of nutrient resorption to warming and nitrogen fertilization in contrasting wet and dry years in a desert grassland

Journal

PLANT AND SOIL
Volume 432, Issue 1-2, Pages 65-73

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11104-018-3775-6

Keywords

Global change; Increased temperature; Nitrogen deposition; Phosphorus; Precipitation; Resorption efficiency; Senesced and green leaves; Temperate grassland

Funding

  1. Scientific Research Foundation for Advanced Talents by Inner Mongolia Agricultural University [NDGCC2016-19]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31760146, 31770500, 31570438]
  3. Ministry of Education of China [IRT_17R59]

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Aims As global climate warms and atmospheric nitrogen deposition increases, plants are likely to respond by altering community composition, thus affecting the nutrient cycle. Although it is well-known that feedback between plants and soils is linked by nutrient resorption occurring during senescence, our understanding of how long-term warming and nitrogen deposition (> 10 years) influence nutrient resorption remains limited. Methods In a desert grassland in northern China, we explored the effects of warming and nitrogen fertilization on leaf nutrient resorption for three dominant species during two hydrologically contrasting years (wet with 52% above the long-term mean precipitation of 222 mm, and dry with precipitation 16% below the mean), based on a manipulative experiment initiated in 2006. Results In the wet year, both warming and nitrogen fertilization significantly increased nitrogen and phosphorus concentrations in soils and plants and thus decreased resorption efficiency of both nitrogen and phosphorus with significant interactions, but these effects did not occur in the dry year. Changes in resorption efficiency were associated with plant available nitrogen and phosphorus in soils and water availability. Conclusions Our study suggests that the responses of nutrient resorption to warming and nitrogen fertilization could be modified by natural precipitation variations in a desert grassland that is sensitive to abrupt changes in weather patterns.

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