4.4 Article

Nitrogen addition affects plant biomass allocation but not allometric relationships among different organs across the globe

Journal

JOURNAL OF PLANT ECOLOGY
Volume 14, Issue 3, Pages 361-371

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/jpe/rtaa100

Keywords

meta-analysis; allometry; biomass fraction; ecosystem; plant functional type; global

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31922052, 31800373, 32022056, 31800521]

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The study found that nitrogen addition significantly increased whole plant biomass and the biomass of different organs, while decreasing root:shoot ratio and root mass fraction. The effects of nitrogen addition on biomass allocation were influenced by moderator variables such as experimental conditions, plant functional types, latitudes, and rates of nitrogen addition. Despite changes in ratio-based biomass allocation, allometric scaling relationships among different organs remained unaffected, supporting the isometric allocation hypothesis over the optimal partitioning hypothesis.
Aims Biomass allocation to different organs is a fundamental plant ecophysiological process to better respond to changing environments; yet, it remains poorly understood how patterns of biomass allocation respond to nitrogen (N) additions across terrestrial ecosystems worldwide. Methods We conducted a meta-analysis using 5474 pairwise observations from 333 articles to assess how N addition affected plant biomass and biomass allocation among different organs. We also tested the 'ratio-based optimal partitioning' vs. the 'isometric allocation' hypotheses to explain potential N addition effects on biomass allocation. Important Findings We found that (i) N addition significantly increased whole plant biomass and the biomass of different organs, but decreased root:shoot ratio (RS) and root mass fraction (RMF) while no effects of N addition on leaf mass fraction and stem mass fraction at the global scale; (ii) the effects of N addition on ratio-based biomass allocation were mediated by individual or interactive effects of moderator variables such as experimental conditions, plant functional types, latitudes and rates of N addition and (iii) N addition did not affect allometric relationships among different organs, suggesting that decreases in RS and RMF may result from isometric allocation patterns following increases in whole plant biomass. Despite alteration of ratio-based biomass allocation between root and shoot by N addition, the unaffected allometric scaling relationships among different organs (including root vs. shoot) suggest that plant biomass allocation patterns are more appropriately explained by the isometric allocation hypothesis rather than the optimal partitioning hypothesis. Our findings contribute to better understand N-induced effects on allometric relationships of terrestrial plants, and suggest that these ecophysiological responses should be incorporated into models that aim to predict how terrestrial ecosystems may respond to enhanced N deposition under future global change scenarios.

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