4.8 Article

Warming and drought reduce temperature sensitivity of nitrogen transformations

期刊

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
卷 19, 期 2, 页码 662-676

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/gcb.12063

关键词

apparent Q(10); Boston-Area Climate Experiment; climate change; multifactor experiment; nitrogen cycling; old-field community

资金

  1. Sigma Xi
  2. National Science Foundation [DEB-0546670]
  3. U.S. Department of Energy's Office of Science (BER) through Northeastern Regional Center of the National Institute for Climatic Change Research

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Shifts in nitrogen (N) mineralization and nitrification rates due to global changes can influence nutrient availability, which can affect terrestrial productivity and climate change feedbacks. While many single-factor studies have examined the effects of environmental changes on N mineralization and nitrification, few have examined these effects in a multifactor context or recorded how these effects vary seasonally. In an old-field ecosystem in Massachusetts, USA, we investigated the combined effects of four levels of warming (up to 4 degrees C) and three levels of precipitation (drought, ambient, and wet) on net N mineralization, net nitrification, and potential nitrification. We also examined the treatment effects on the temperature sensitivity of net N mineralization and net nitrification and on the ratio of C mineralization to net N mineralization. During winter, freeze-thaw events, snow depth, and soil freezing depth explained little of the variation in net nitrification and N mineralization rates among treatments. During two years of treatments, warming and altered precipitation rarely influenced the rates of N cycling, and there was no evidence of a seasonal pattern in the responses. In contrast, warming and drought dramatically decreased the apparent Q(10) of net N mineralization and net nitrification, and the warming-induced decrease in apparent Q(10) was more pronounced in ambient and wet treatments than the drought treatment. The ratio of C mineralization to net N mineralization varied over time and was sensitive to the interactive effects of warming and altered precipitation. Although many studies have found that warming tends to accelerate N cycling, our results suggest that warming can have little to no effect on N cycling in some ecosystems. Thus, ecosystem models that assume that warming will consistently increase N mineralization rates and inputs of plant-available N may overestimate the increase in terrestrial productivity and the magnitude of an important negative feedback to climate change.

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