4.6 Article

Element stoichiometry and nutrient limitation in bog plant and lichen species

Journal

BIOGEOCHEMISTRY
Volume 160, Issue 3, Pages 355-379

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10533-022-00968-y

Keywords

Bog; Lichen; Nutrient limitation; Plants; Sphagnum; Stoichiometry

Funding

  1. Oil Sands Monitoring Program, Canada [18GRAEM07]

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Research indicates that there is evidence of element stoichiometric homeostasis in lichen/plant tissues in bogs globally, including the Athabasca Oil Sands Region in northern Alberta, Canada. Some species may have shifted from nitrogen limitation prior to the Industrial Revolution to phosphorus or potassium limitation today due to regionally high atmospheric nitrogen deposition.
Ombrotrophic bogs receive new inputs of elements solely through atmospheric deposition, except for N where inputs are predominantly through N-2-fixation, at least in low N deposition environments. At various locations across the globe, including the Athabasca Oil Sands Region (AOSR) of northern Alberta, Canada, element atmospheric deposition has increased as a result of anthropogenic activities. Regional and/or global deposition gradients offer an opportunity to examine questions related to nutrient limitation and element stoichiometry, i.e., the maintenance of relatively constant element ratios in bog lichen/plant tissues despite differing element deposition/availability. Using a dataset of tissue element concentrations in eight lichen/plant species in six AOSR bogs, supplemented with literature data from other sites globally, this synthesis asks: is there evidence of element stoichiometric homeostasis in lichen or plant species in AOSR bogs; if so, do stoichiometric homeostasis relationships extend globally beyond the AOSR, and; do element ratios provide insight into element limitation for the eight species? Mean element ratios and their coefficients of variation, ternary NPK and CaMgK plots, and scaling coefficients revealed widespread evidence of stoichiometric homeostasis. Stoichiometric relationships generally were unaffected by differences in element deposition among the AOSR bogs. Stoichiometric relationships sometimes extended to a species globally, but sometimes did not. Element ratios and ternary diagrams suggested a combination of N-, P-, and K-limitation, both within and beyond the AOSR bogs. Regionally high atmospheric N deposition may have shifted some species from N-limitation prior to the Industrial Revolution to P- or K-limitation today.

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