4.6 Article

Common mechanisms explain nitrogen-dependent growth of Arctic shrubs over three decades despite heterogeneous trends and declines in soil nitrogen availability

Journal

NEW PHYTOLOGIST
Volume 233, Issue 2, Pages 670-686

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/nph.17529

Keywords

Arctic greening; dendroecology; model-fitting; model-selection; nitrogen limitation; ordinary differential equations; plant-resource coupling; Salix lanata; stable isotopes

Categories

Funding

  1. Natural Environment Research Council of the United Kingdom [NE/L011859/1, NE/L002612/1]
  2. Academy of Finland [256991]
  3. European Commission Research and Innovation action [869471]
  4. John Fell Oxford University Press Research Fund
  5. JPI-Climate [291581]
  6. Academy of Finland (AKA) [256991, 256991] Funding Source: Academy of Finland (AKA)
  7. NERC [NE/L011859/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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Heterogeneity in responses of Arctic shrubs to climate variability has been observed, with nitrogen limitation identified as a key factor affecting shrub growth at the northern fringe of tall shrub expansion. Analysis of nitrogen isotopes in wood rings indicated individualistic nitrogen trajectories, but a common linear mechanism of nitrogen-dependent growth and the importance of plant-soil feedbacks were confirmed across the shrubs studied.
Heterogeneity has been observed in the responses of Arctic shrubs to climate variability over recent decades, which may reflect landscape-scale variability in belowground resources. At a northern fringe of tall shrub expansion (Yuribei, Yamal Peninsula, Russia), we sought to determine the mechanisms relating nitrogen (N) limitation to shrub growth over decadal time. We analysed the ratio of N-15 to N-14 isotopes in wood rings of 10 Salix lanata individuals (399 measurements) to reconstruct annual point-based bioavailable N between 1980 and 2013. We applied a model-fitting/model-selection approach with a suite of competing ecological models to assess the most-likely mechanisms that explain each shrub's individual time-series. Shrub delta(15) N time-series indicated declining (seven shrubs), increasing (two shrubs) and no trend (one shrub) in N availability. The most appropriate model for all shrubs included N-dependent growth of linear rather than saturating form. Inclusion of plant-soil feedbacks better explained ring width and delta(15) N for eight of 10 individuals. Although N trajectories were individualistic, common mechanisms of varying strength confirmed the N-dependency of shrub growth. The linear mechanism may reflect intense scavenging of scarce N; the importance of plant-soil feedbacks suggests that shrubs subvert the microbial bottleneck by actively controlling their environment.

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