4.7 Article

Variations of leaf N and P concentrations in shrubland biomes across northern China: phylogeny, climate, and soil

Journal

BIOGEOSCIENCES
Volume 13, Issue 15, Pages 4429-4438

Publisher

COPERNICUS GESELLSCHAFT MBH
DOI: 10.5194/bg-13-4429-2016

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Program on Key Basic Research Project [2014CB954004]
  2. NSFC [31470486, 31321061]
  3. Strategic Priority Research Program-Climate Change: Carbon Budget and Related Issues of CAS [XDA05050301]

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Concentrations of leaf nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) are two key traits of plants for ecosystem functioning and dynamics. Foliar stoichiometry varies remarkably among life forms. However, previous studies have focused on the stoichiometric patterns of trees and grasses, leaving a significant knowledge gap for shrubs. In this study, we explored the intraspecific and interspecific variations of leaf N and P concentrations in response to the changes in climate, soil property, and evolutionary history. We analysed 1486 samples composed of 163 shrub species from 361 shrubland sites in northern China encompassing 46.1A degrees (86.7-132.8A degrees aEuro-E) in longitude and 19.8A degrees (32.6-52.4A degrees aEuro-N) in latitude. Leaf N concentrations decreased with precipitation, while leaf P concentrations decreased with temperature and increased with precipitation and soil total P concentrations. Both leaf N and P concentrations were phylogenetically conserved, but leaf P concentrations were less conserved than leaf N concentrations. At the community level, climate explained more interspecific variation of leaf nutrient concentrations, while soil nutrients explained most of the intraspecific variation. These results suggested that leaf N and P concentrations responded to climate, soil, and phylogeny in different ways. Climate influenced the community chemical traits through the shift in species composition, whereas soil directly influenced the community chemical traits. New patterns were discovered using our observations on specific regions and vegetation types, which improved our knowledge of broad biogeographic patterns of leaf chemical traits.

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