4.3 Article

Water and nitrogen addition differentially impact plant competition in a native rough fescue grassland

Journal

PLANT ECOLOGY
Volume 192, Issue 1, Pages 21-33

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11258-006-9222-4

Keywords

aboveground competition; belowground competition; nitrogen fertilization; soil moisture

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We examined how water and nitrogen addition and water-nitrogen interactions affect root and shoot competition intensity and competition-productivity relationships in a native rough fescue grassland in central Alberta, Canada. Water and nitrogen were added in a factorial design to plots and root exclusion tubes and netting were used to isolate root and shoot competition on two focal species (Artemisia firigida and Chenopodium leptophyllum). Both water and nitrogen were limiting to plant growth, and focal plant survival rates increased with nitrogen but not water addition. Relative allocation to root biomass increased with water addition. Competition was almost entirely belowground, with focal plants larger when released from root but not shoot competition. There were no significant relationships between productivity and root, shoot, or total competition intensity, likely because in this system shoot biomass was too low to cause strong shoot competition and root biomass was above the levels at which root competition saturates. Water addition had few effects on the intensity of root competition suggesting that root competition intensity is invariant along soil moisture gradients. Contrary to general expectation, the strength of root competition increased with nitrogen addition demonstrating that the relationship between root competition intensity and nitrogen is more complex than a simple monotonic decline as nitrogen increases. Finally, there were few interactions between nitrogen and water affecting competition. Together these results indicate that the mechanisms of competition for water and nitrogen likely differ.

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