4.8 Article

Warming drives sustained plant phosphorus demand in a humid tropical forest

Journal

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
Volume 28, Issue 13, Pages 4085-4096

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/gcb.16194

Keywords

iron reduction; phosphatase activity; phosphorus cycling; phosphorus resorption; tropics; warming

Funding

  1. Key Research and Development Program of Guangdong Province [2020B1111530004]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41991285, 32101342, 41977287, 41825020]
  3. China Postdoctoral Science Foundation [2021M693220]

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Phosphorus plays a crucial role in the carbon feedback to climate warming in humid tropical forests. This study conducted a 7-year continuous warming experiment and found that warming increased plant phosphorus content, indicating enhanced biological and geochemical controls on the plant-soil phosphorus cycle.
Phosphorus (P) is often one of the most limiting nutrients in highly weathered soils of humid tropical forests and may regulate the responses of carbon (C) feedback to climate warming. However, the response of P to warming at the ecosystem level in tropical forests is not well understood because previous studies have not comprehensively assessed changes in multiple P processes associated with warming. Here, we detected changes in the ecosystem P cycle in response to a 7-year continuous warming experiment by translocating model plant-soil ecosystems across a 600-m elevation gradient, equivalent to a temperature change of 2.1 degrees C. We found that warming increased plant P content (55.4%) and decreased foliar N:P. Increased plant P content was supplied by multiple processes, including enhanced plant P resorption (9.7%), soil P mineralization (15.5% decrease in moderately available organic P), and dissolution (6.8% decrease in iron-bound inorganic P), without changing litter P mineralization and leachate P. These findings suggest that warming sustained plant P demand by increasing the biological and geochemical controls of the plant-soil P-cycle, which has important implications for C fixation in P-deficient and highly productive tropical forests in future warmer climates.

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