4.7 Article

Effects of functional and phylogenetic diversity on the temporal dynamics of soil N availability

Journal

PLANT AND SOIL
Volume 472, Issue 1-2, Pages 629-640

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11104-021-05277-1

Keywords

Ammonium (NH4+-N); Functional and phylogenetic diversity; Ion-exchange membranes; Nitrate (NO3--N); Nitrogen availability; Seasonal variability

Funding

  1. British Ecological Society [SR16/1364]
  2. Young Researchers R&D Project - Community of Madrid [M2165]
  3. Rey Juan Carlos University
  4. Czech Science Foundation [GA16-15012]
  5. 2017 program for attracting and retaining talent of Comunidad de Madrid [2017-T2/AMB-5406]
  6. Estonian Research Council [PSG293]
  7. Fundacao para a Ciencia e a Tecnologia [IF/00950/2014, 2020.03670.CEECIND]
  8. R&D Unit Center for Functional Ecology -Science for People and the Planet (CFE) - FCT/MCTES through national funds (PIDDAC) [UIDB/04004/2020]

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The diversity of plant species affects soil nitrogen availability, and this effect may be related to the ecological differences among coexisting species. However, there is limited evidence for the independent and combined effects of functional diversity (FD) and phylogenetic diversity (PD) on ecosystem functions.
Purpose Plant species diversity is expected to affect multiple ecosystem functions, such as soil nitrogen (N) availability. However, this effect may be related to the ecological differentiation between coexisting species, often expressed as either functional diversity (FD; diversity in traits) or phylogenetic diversity (PD; diversity in phylogenetic ancestry) within plant communities. Evidence for the independent and combined role of FD and PD on ecosystem functions is generally missing, as measures of FD and PD are usually confounded in empirical studies. Methods To solve this challenge we used an ad-hoc designed biodiversity experiment, with sown meadow plant communities forming independent combinations of FD and PD (low/low, low/high, high/low, high/high values, plus monocultures) and used ion-exchange membranes to monitor changes in soil N (i.e. NH4+-N and NO3--N) availability through time (four sampling times per year; i.e. seasonality). Results Our results showed a positive diversity effect for soil NH4+-N, with mixture communities yielding higher levels of NH4+-N than the corresponding monocultures. Within mixtures, communities with combinations of both high FD and PD showed the highest NH4+-N availability. Most importantly, although seasonality strongly affected soil N availability, diversity effects were generally consistent through time in the case of NH4+-N. In addition to these diversity effects, communities with higher proportion of nitrogen-fixing species also showed higher soil N availability. Conclusions Plant communities composed of species with larger ecological differences can sustain high levels of available NH4+-N throughout the year, suggesting a stimulation of decomposition processes via the coexistence of plants with multiple strategies.

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