4.7 Article

Nitrogen addition affects chemical compositions of plant tissues, litter and soil organic matter

Journal

ECOLOGY
Volume 97, Issue 7, Pages 1796-1806

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1890/15-1683.1

Keywords

carbon cycle; cellulose; lignin; meta-analysis; nitrogen deposition; non-structural carbohydrate

Categories

Funding

  1. National Basic Research Program of China (973 Program) [2014CB954400]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31522010, 41175138]
  3. State Key Laboratory of Forest and Soil Ecology [20121083]

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Increasing nitrogen (N) deposition or fertilization has been found to significantly affect carbon (C) cycling. However, a comprehensive understanding of how different C chemical components of plant, litter, and soil would respond to external N addition is still lacking. We compiled data of 1,160 observations from 52 individual studies and conducted a meta--analysis of N addition effects on 18 variables related to C chemical compositions in terrestrial ecosystems. Results showed that plant lignin (+7.13%), plant protein (+25.94%), and soil lignin (+7.30%) were significantly increased by N addition, and plant hemicellulose (-4.39%) was significantly decreased, whereas plant fiber, plant cellulose, plant non-structural carbohydrate (NSC), litter lignin, and litter cellulose were not significantly changed. The effects of N addition on C chemical composition varied among different ecosystems/plant types and different forms of N addition. Increasing treatment duration did not significantly change the effects of N addition on the chemical composition of plant, litter, and soil C. With increasing N addition rate, the effect of N addition on plant lignin, plant fiber, plant cellulose, and plant protein increased, while the effect of N addition on plant hemicellulose, plant NSC, and litter cellulose became more negative. Our meta--analysis provided a systematic evaluation of the responses of different C chemical components to N addition in the plant-litter-soil continuum. Results suggest that the change of plant and soil C chemical composition under N addition may be beneficial for ecosystem C sequestration and could affect ecosystem structure and function in the future.

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