Since the azo dyes widely used in textile-dyeing industry are toxic, highly persistent, and ubiquitously distributed in the environment, their treatment efficiencies and fade in ecosystems have received worldwide atte...Since the azo dyes widely used in textile-dyeing industry are toxic, highly persistent, and ubiquitously distributed in the environment, their treatment efficiencies and fade in ecosystems have received worldwide attention. Due to the microbes play important roles in azo-dye degradation, exogenous nutrient addition is used as a promising biostimulation strategy to improve the treatment efficiencies of azo-dye wastewater. However, little is known about the effects of different kinds of exogenous nutrients on the azo-dye wastewater treatment directly. Here, three kinds of common nutrients, glucose, starch and yeast extract, were added to the sequencing batch reactors (SBR) for the treatment of wastewater containing acid red 73 to compare the biostimulation efficiencies by investigating the dye's removal efficiencies and the changes of related water qualities. Our results showed that the reactors added yeast extract had highest removal efficiencies and chemical oxygen demand (COD) as well, followed by glucose and starch. The removal rates of acid red 73 and COD were 90.63% and 8713% in the reactors added yeast extract, respectively, while 86.49% and 78.4% in those with glucose and 85.38% and 75.2% in those with starch. This study provided some useful information for the biostimulation strategy of azo-dye wastewater treatment and preliminarily suggested that yeast extract would be the optimal choice.展开更多
Aims From the light-competition hypothesis,competition for light is asymmetric and the observed increases in plant-size variability with increasingly denser canopies are primarily due to competition for light.Greater ...Aims From the light-competition hypothesis,competition for light is asymmetric and the observed increases in plant-size variability with increasingly denser canopies are primarily due to competition for light.Greater plant height provides pre-emptive access to light and produces increased height differences among species.The question is what produces these differences in plant height or height growth response among species in response to fertilization.Methods In 2009,a field experiment of N,P and N+P enrichments at three levels each was initiated in an alpine meadow on the northeast Qinghai-Tibet Plateau.Effects of fertilization on species richness,aboveground net primary production(ANPP),relative light intensity and plant height of different plant functional groups were determined.Festuca ovina(grass),Kobresia humilis(sedge),Oxytropis ochrocephala(legume),Taraxacum lugubre(rosette forb)and Geranium pylzowianum(upright forb)were selected as exemplars of each of the indicated functional groups.The N:C ratios in aboveground biomass,gibberellic acid(GA_(3))concentrations in leaves,plant heights and height relative growth rate(RGR)of these exemplar species were analyzed in detail.Important Findings Species richness of grasses significantly increased with increasing N+P levels.Species richness of legumes and upright forbs decreased after N and N+P additions.P addition had no significant effect on species richness.The effects of N+P addition on species richness and ANPP were consistently stronger than those of the single N or P fertilization.Reductions in species richness caused by nutrient addition paralleled the increases in ANPP and decreases in light intensity under the canopies,indicating indirect effect of nutrient addition on species richness via ANPP-induced light competition.The exemplar species that responded most positively to fertilization in height and RGR also displayed stronger increases in their GA_(3) content and N:C ratios.GA_(3) concentrations and N:C ratios were positively correlated with height RGR when the data were pooled for all species.The tallest and the fastest-growing grass,F.ovina,had the largest increase in N:C ratios and the highest leaf GA_(3) concentrations after nutrient addition.These results indicated that differential responses of GA_(3) concentrations and N:C ratios to fertilization were related to the inequality in plant heights among species.展开更多
Shifts in tree species and their mycorrhizal associations driven by global change play key roles in biogeochemical cycles. In this paper, we proposed a framework of the mycorrhizal-associated nutrient economy(MANE), a...Shifts in tree species and their mycorrhizal associations driven by global change play key roles in biogeochemical cycles. In this paper, we proposed a framework of the mycorrhizal-associated nutrient economy(MANE), and tested it using nutrient addition experiments conducted in two tropical rainforests. We selected two tropical rainforests dominated by arbuscular mycorrhizal(AM) and ectomycorrhizal(ECM) trees, and established eighteen20 m×20 m plots in each rainforest. Six nitrogen(N) and phosphorus(P) addition treatments were randomly distributed in each rainforest with three replicates. We examined the differences in soil carbon(C) and nutrient cycling, plant and litter productivity between the two rainforests and their responses to 10-year inorganic N and P additions. We also quantified the P pools of plants, roots, litter, soil and microbes in the two rainforests. Overall,distinct MANE frameworks were applicable for tropical rainforests, in which soil C, N and P were cycled primarily in an inorganic form in the AM-dominated rainforest, whereas they were cycled in an organic form in the ECMdominated rainforest. Notably, the effects of mycorrhizal types on soil P cycling were stronger than those on C and N cycling. The intensified N and P deposition benefited the growth of AM-dominated rainforests instead of ECMdominated rainforests. Our findings underpin the key role of mycorrhizal types in regulating biogeochemical processes, and have important implications for predicting the ecological consequences of global changes.展开更多
Soil microbial diversity is extremely vulnerable to fertilization,which is one of the main anthropogenic activities associated with global changes.Yet we know little about how and why soil microbial diversity responds...Soil microbial diversity is extremely vulnerable to fertilization,which is one of the main anthropogenic activities associated with global changes.Yet we know little about how and why soil microbial diversity responds to fertilization across contrasting local ecological contexts.This knowledge is fundamental for predicting changes in soil microbial diversity in response to ongoing global changes.We analyzed soils from ten 20-year field fertilization(organic and/or inorganic)experiments across China and found that the national-scale responses of soil bacterial diversity to fertilization are dependent on ecological context.In acidic soils from regions with high precipitation and soil fertility,inorganic fertilization can result in further acidification,resulting in negative impacts on soil bacterial diversity.In comparison,organic fer-tilization causes a smaller disturbance to soil bacterial diversity.Despite the overall role of environmental contexts in driving soil microbial diversity,a small group of bacterial taxa were found to respond to fer-tilization in a consistent way across contrasting regions throughout China.Taxa such as Nitrosospira and Nitrososphaera,which benefit from nitrogen fertilizer addition,as well as Chitinophagaceae,Bacilli,and phototrophic bacteria,which respond positively to organic fertilization,could be used as bioindicators for soil fertility in response to fertilization at the national scale.Overall,our work provides new insights into the importance of local environmental context in determining the responses of soil microbial diver-sity to fertilization,and identifies regions with acidic soils wherein soil microbial diversity is more vul-nerable to fertilization at the national scale.展开更多
Mangroves are one of the most ecologically sensitive ecosystems to global climate change,which have cascading impacts on soil carbon(C),nitrogen(N)and phosphorus(P)cycling.Moreover,mangroves are experiencing increasin...Mangroves are one of the most ecologically sensitive ecosystems to global climate change,which have cascading impacts on soil carbon(C),nitrogen(N)and phosphorus(P)cycling.Moreover,mangroves are experiencing increasing N and P loadings and reduced oxygen availability due to intensified climate change and human activities.However,both direct and interactive effects of these perturbations on microbially mediated soil C,N and P cycling are poorly understood.Here,we simultaneously investigated the effects of N and P loadings and reduced oxygen on microbial biomass,microbial respiration,and extracellular enzyme activities(EEAs)in mangrove soils.We calculated the microbial metabolic quotient(qCO_(2)),which is regarded as a useful inverse metric of microbial C use efficiency(CUE).Our results show that reduced oxygen significantly increases both qCO_(2) and microbial specific EEAs(enzyme activity per unit of microbial biomass)for C-,N-and P-acquisition regardless of N or P loadings.Furthermore,we found that qCO_(2) positively correlated with microbial specific EEAs under reduced oxygen,whereas no clear relationship was detected under ambient oxygen.These results suggest that reduced oxygen increases microbial specific EEAs at the expense of increasing microbial respiration per unit biomass,indicating higher energy cost per unit enzyme production.展开更多
Aims Nitrogen(N)-fixing legumes,despite being highly phosphorus(P)-demanding,constitute an important plant functional group and play key roles in N-poor ecosystems such as alpine grasslands.However,legume performance,...Aims Nitrogen(N)-fixing legumes,despite being highly phosphorus(P)-demanding,constitute an important plant functional group and play key roles in N-poor ecosystems such as alpine grasslands.However,legume performance,including biomass,abundance and species richness,is expected to change,because anthropogenic activities have drastically increased soil N and P availability world-wide.We conducted a field experiment to assess the effects of N and P addition,alone and in combination,on legume performance in an alpine grassland,and identified and clarified the mechanisms underlying these changes.Methods A three year field experiment of N addition(10 g N m−2 year−1),P addition(5 g P m−2 year−1),and N+P combined addition(both N and P,same amounts as solo treatments)was conducted in an alpine grassland on the tibetan Plateau in china from 2011 to 2013.Effects of nutrient addition were assessed at the community level(above-ground net primary production(ANPP),height and light intensity),functional group level(biomass,species richness,relative height,relative coverage and relative density of legumes)and species level(foliar N,P concentration of two legumes).Important findings Overall,adding N alone significantly increased ANPP by 20.82%,but adding P alone did not;whereas,addition of N and P together resulted in a large increase in ANPP(+37.03%)than addition of either alone,indicating potential co-limitation of alpine grasslands.In contrast,adding P alone significantly promoted legume perfor-mance as measured by 65.22%increase in biomass and 58.45%increase in relative abundance,while adding N alone reduced leg-ume performance as measured by 39.54%decrease in biomass and 50.36%in relative abundance.combining P and N addition did not mitigate the negative effect of N addition on legume performance and,surprisingly,suppressed legume biomass by 53.14%and relative abundance by 63.51%.N and P addition altered the balance of light competition between grasses and legumes as indicated by the changes in light levels,plant heights and litter accumulation.However,there were no obvious changes in legume species richness in response to N and P within our experimental timeframe.this study provides further evidence of the importance of P as a co-limiting nutrient in alpine grasslands,contrary to the traditional view that N limitation predominates in such regions.the contrasting effects of N and P addition on legume performance provide important insights into potential changes in legume performance in nutrient-limited grasslands following N and P enrichment under climate change,with implications for nutrient management in alpine grasslands.展开更多
In non-flooded lowland rain forests with low soil phosphorus(P)in parts of Amazonia,P cycling largely occurs via leaf litter recycling by arbuscular mycorrhizal(AM)fungal symbionts.Occasional high input of P into thes...In non-flooded lowland rain forests with low soil phosphorus(P)in parts of Amazonia,P cycling largely occurs via leaf litter recycling by arbuscular mycorrhizal(AM)fungal symbionts.Occasional high input of P into these ecosystems occurs during drought years with increased litterfall.As the length and frequency of drought events are projected to increase in the region,a single-dose nutrient addition experiment was carried out to test how this would impact P cycling.An application rate of 4 kg P ha^(-1) was used,which corresponds to twice the amount of litter-derived P in an average year.It was hypothesized that i)the added mineral P would be immobilized by soil microorganisms,leading to measurable increase in soil microbial biomass carbon(C)and P and ii)AM colonization rate would be reduced by the pulse in mineral P available for plant uptake.The results did not support either of our hypotheses.The addition of P did not have an effect on AM root colonization,nor was P immobilized by soil microbiota during the experimental period.The lack of a difference between the control and treatment at our study site could be attributed to the relatively low one-off dose of P applied that did not change either the colonization rate of roots by AM fungi or the amount of soil available labile P.To obtain a mechanistic understanding of the availability,capture,and use of P by plant-symbiont associations in tropical rain forest ecosystems,further integrated studies of the soil-plant system combining long-term nutrient manipulations,modeling,and experimental approaches are required.展开更多
Aims In plants,resource allocation to growth and reproduction may depart from trade-off expectations if(i)investment in growth and reproduction relies on different resource pools,(ii)allocation to reproduction is depe...Aims In plants,resource allocation to growth and reproduction may depart from trade-off expectations if(i)investment in growth and reproduction relies on different resource pools,(ii)allocation to reproduction is dependent upon reaching some growth threshold or(iii)reproduction is developmentally linked to growth,both functions relying on the same resource pool.We examined the effects of enhanced resource level on patterns of resource allocation to growth and reproduction in holm oak(Quercus ilex sbsp.ballota),a Mediterranean evergreen tree.Methods In the experimental year(2003),we manipulated the amount of soil nutrients in autumn(to increase nutrient uptake during shoot elongation in the following spring)and soil water in summer(to increase water uptake during acorn growth).Indicators of growth and male and female reproduction were estimated in the preexperimental(2002),experimental(2003)and post-experimental(2004)years.Important Findings Fertilized trees produced significantly longer shoots,but the number of female flowers per shoot was not affected by treatments.The production of male catkins was also enhanced by fertilization.Irrigation did not affect the production of female flowers or abortion rates.Growth and female reproduction showed no consistent relationship in untreated trees,but resource addition elicited a growth-female reproduction trade-off in the experimental year.The sign of this significant relationship changed in the post-experimental year,indicating the existence of lagged effects of resource manipulation on acorn production.Overall,patterns of allocation to growth and reproduction varied as a function of sex,resource availability and year,a result consistent with extreme allocational plasticity in holm oak.展开更多
Aims Seasonally tropical dry forests of the Yucatan Peninsula are typically found in sites with nutrient-poor soils because of the recent geologi-cal origin of the region.The landscape is dominated by extensive karsti...Aims Seasonally tropical dry forests of the Yucatan Peninsula are typically found in sites with nutrient-poor soils because of the recent geologi-cal origin of the region.The landscape is dominated by extensive karstic plates that shape environments where vegetation regenera-tion through seed germination may be limited by the availability of suitable microsites.In this study,we documented the survival and growth of seedlings from three dominant tree species(Bursera simaruba,Piscidia piscipula and Lysiloma latisiliquum)in seasonally tropical dry forests in Yucatan.Specifically,we evaluated the effect of nutrient addition(N and P,separately and in combination)on seedling survival and growth across three sites with differing levels of precipitation.Methods We conducted a nutrient addition experiment,whereby we estab-lished 12 plots of dimensions 10×10 m(100 m^(2))at each site,from which three plots were randomly selected to receive one of four treatments:N addition,P addition,N and P addition and no nutri-ent addition(controls).Prior to treatment application,in each plot,we planted 10 seedlings of each species in October 2010 and sub-sequently conducted surveys of plant growth and survival every 20 days from November 2010 to April 2011.Important Findings Overall,nutrient addition increased seedling survival and the mag-nitude of this effect was similar among sites.We did not observe an additive effect of the N+P treatment on survival.Similarly,we observed a positive effect of nutrient addition on seedling growth,but this effect was contingent upon site;regarding survival,the effects of N and P on seedling growth were not additive.These results suggest that seedling recruitment and growth in the three dominant species of trees in Yucatan are limited by nutrient avail-ability but that the magnitude of this effect,particularly on seedling growth,is specific for species and site.展开更多
基金supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China(51308133)Guangdong Provincial National Natural Science Foundation(2014A030308019)+1 种基金Science and Technology Planning Project of Guangdong Province(2015A020215016)the support of Guangdong Institute of Microbiology
文摘Since the azo dyes widely used in textile-dyeing industry are toxic, highly persistent, and ubiquitously distributed in the environment, their treatment efficiencies and fade in ecosystems have received worldwide attention. Due to the microbes play important roles in azo-dye degradation, exogenous nutrient addition is used as a promising biostimulation strategy to improve the treatment efficiencies of azo-dye wastewater. However, little is known about the effects of different kinds of exogenous nutrients on the azo-dye wastewater treatment directly. Here, three kinds of common nutrients, glucose, starch and yeast extract, were added to the sequencing batch reactors (SBR) for the treatment of wastewater containing acid red 73 to compare the biostimulation efficiencies by investigating the dye's removal efficiencies and the changes of related water qualities. Our results showed that the reactors added yeast extract had highest removal efficiencies and chemical oxygen demand (COD) as well, followed by glucose and starch. The removal rates of acid red 73 and COD were 90.63% and 8713% in the reactors added yeast extract, respectively, while 86.49% and 78.4% in those with glucose and 85.38% and 75.2% in those with starch. This study provided some useful information for the biostimulation strategy of azo-dye wastewater treatment and preliminarily suggested that yeast extract would be the optimal choice.
基金National Natural Science Foundation of China(31270472)Specific Fund for Agro-scientific Research in the Public Interest(201203006).
文摘Aims From the light-competition hypothesis,competition for light is asymmetric and the observed increases in plant-size variability with increasingly denser canopies are primarily due to competition for light.Greater plant height provides pre-emptive access to light and produces increased height differences among species.The question is what produces these differences in plant height or height growth response among species in response to fertilization.Methods In 2009,a field experiment of N,P and N+P enrichments at three levels each was initiated in an alpine meadow on the northeast Qinghai-Tibet Plateau.Effects of fertilization on species richness,aboveground net primary production(ANPP),relative light intensity and plant height of different plant functional groups were determined.Festuca ovina(grass),Kobresia humilis(sedge),Oxytropis ochrocephala(legume),Taraxacum lugubre(rosette forb)and Geranium pylzowianum(upright forb)were selected as exemplars of each of the indicated functional groups.The N:C ratios in aboveground biomass,gibberellic acid(GA_(3))concentrations in leaves,plant heights and height relative growth rate(RGR)of these exemplar species were analyzed in detail.Important Findings Species richness of grasses significantly increased with increasing N+P levels.Species richness of legumes and upright forbs decreased after N and N+P additions.P addition had no significant effect on species richness.The effects of N+P addition on species richness and ANPP were consistently stronger than those of the single N or P fertilization.Reductions in species richness caused by nutrient addition paralleled the increases in ANPP and decreases in light intensity under the canopies,indicating indirect effect of nutrient addition on species richness via ANPP-induced light competition.The exemplar species that responded most positively to fertilization in height and RGR also displayed stronger increases in their GA_(3) content and N:C ratios.GA_(3) concentrations and N:C ratios were positively correlated with height RGR when the data were pooled for all species.The tallest and the fastest-growing grass,F.ovina,had the largest increase in N:C ratios and the highest leaf GA_(3) concentrations after nutrient addition.These results indicated that differential responses of GA_(3) concentrations and N:C ratios to fertilization were related to the inequality in plant heights among species.
基金supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China(No.31988102)National Key Research and Development Program of China(No.2017YFC0503906)。
文摘Shifts in tree species and their mycorrhizal associations driven by global change play key roles in biogeochemical cycles. In this paper, we proposed a framework of the mycorrhizal-associated nutrient economy(MANE), and tested it using nutrient addition experiments conducted in two tropical rainforests. We selected two tropical rainforests dominated by arbuscular mycorrhizal(AM) and ectomycorrhizal(ECM) trees, and established eighteen20 m×20 m plots in each rainforest. Six nitrogen(N) and phosphorus(P) addition treatments were randomly distributed in each rainforest with three replicates. We examined the differences in soil carbon(C) and nutrient cycling, plant and litter productivity between the two rainforests and their responses to 10-year inorganic N and P additions. We also quantified the P pools of plants, roots, litter, soil and microbes in the two rainforests. Overall,distinct MANE frameworks were applicable for tropical rainforests, in which soil C, N and P were cycled primarily in an inorganic form in the AM-dominated rainforest, whereas they were cycled in an organic form in the ECMdominated rainforest. Notably, the effects of mycorrhizal types on soil P cycling were stronger than those on C and N cycling. The intensified N and P deposition benefited the growth of AM-dominated rainforests instead of ECMdominated rainforests. Our findings underpin the key role of mycorrhizal types in regulating biogeochemical processes, and have important implications for predicting the ecological consequences of global changes.
基金funding from the National Key R&D Program of China (2016YFD0300802)the Field Station Consortium Program of The Chinese Academy of Sciences (KFJ-SWYW035)+1 种基金funding from the National Key R&D Program (2019YFC1520700)Manuel Delgado-Baquerizo is supported by a Ramón y Cajal grant from the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation (RYC2018-025483-I)
文摘Soil microbial diversity is extremely vulnerable to fertilization,which is one of the main anthropogenic activities associated with global changes.Yet we know little about how and why soil microbial diversity responds to fertilization across contrasting local ecological contexts.This knowledge is fundamental for predicting changes in soil microbial diversity in response to ongoing global changes.We analyzed soils from ten 20-year field fertilization(organic and/or inorganic)experiments across China and found that the national-scale responses of soil bacterial diversity to fertilization are dependent on ecological context.In acidic soils from regions with high precipitation and soil fertility,inorganic fertilization can result in further acidification,resulting in negative impacts on soil bacterial diversity.In comparison,organic fer-tilization causes a smaller disturbance to soil bacterial diversity.Despite the overall role of environmental contexts in driving soil microbial diversity,a small group of bacterial taxa were found to respond to fer-tilization in a consistent way across contrasting regions throughout China.Taxa such as Nitrosospira and Nitrososphaera,which benefit from nitrogen fertilizer addition,as well as Chitinophagaceae,Bacilli,and phototrophic bacteria,which respond positively to organic fertilization,could be used as bioindicators for soil fertility in response to fertilization at the national scale.Overall,our work provides new insights into the importance of local environmental context in determining the responses of soil microbial diver-sity to fertilization,and identifies regions with acidic soils wherein soil microbial diversity is more vul-nerable to fertilization at the national scale.
基金funding from EU H2020 Marie SkłodowskaCurie Actions(No.839806)Aarhus Universitets Forskningsfond(AUFF-E-2019-7-1)+3 种基金Danish Independent Research Foundation(1127-00015B)Nordic Committee of Agriculture and Food Researchsupported by Natural Environment Research Council(NERC)EAO Doctoral Training Partnership(NE/L002469/1)supported by a Ramon Areces Foundation research Fellowship and BBSRC Discovery Fellowship(BB/S010661/1).
文摘Mangroves are one of the most ecologically sensitive ecosystems to global climate change,which have cascading impacts on soil carbon(C),nitrogen(N)and phosphorus(P)cycling.Moreover,mangroves are experiencing increasing N and P loadings and reduced oxygen availability due to intensified climate change and human activities.However,both direct and interactive effects of these perturbations on microbially mediated soil C,N and P cycling are poorly understood.Here,we simultaneously investigated the effects of N and P loadings and reduced oxygen on microbial biomass,microbial respiration,and extracellular enzyme activities(EEAs)in mangrove soils.We calculated the microbial metabolic quotient(qCO_(2)),which is regarded as a useful inverse metric of microbial C use efficiency(CUE).Our results show that reduced oxygen significantly increases both qCO_(2) and microbial specific EEAs(enzyme activity per unit of microbial biomass)for C-,N-and P-acquisition regardless of N or P loadings.Furthermore,we found that qCO_(2) positively correlated with microbial specific EEAs under reduced oxygen,whereas no clear relationship was detected under ambient oxygen.These results suggest that reduced oxygen increases microbial specific EEAs at the expense of increasing microbial respiration per unit biomass,indicating higher energy cost per unit enzyme production.
文摘Aims Nitrogen(N)-fixing legumes,despite being highly phosphorus(P)-demanding,constitute an important plant functional group and play key roles in N-poor ecosystems such as alpine grasslands.However,legume performance,including biomass,abundance and species richness,is expected to change,because anthropogenic activities have drastically increased soil N and P availability world-wide.We conducted a field experiment to assess the effects of N and P addition,alone and in combination,on legume performance in an alpine grassland,and identified and clarified the mechanisms underlying these changes.Methods A three year field experiment of N addition(10 g N m−2 year−1),P addition(5 g P m−2 year−1),and N+P combined addition(both N and P,same amounts as solo treatments)was conducted in an alpine grassland on the tibetan Plateau in china from 2011 to 2013.Effects of nutrient addition were assessed at the community level(above-ground net primary production(ANPP),height and light intensity),functional group level(biomass,species richness,relative height,relative coverage and relative density of legumes)and species level(foliar N,P concentration of two legumes).Important findings Overall,adding N alone significantly increased ANPP by 20.82%,but adding P alone did not;whereas,addition of N and P together resulted in a large increase in ANPP(+37.03%)than addition of either alone,indicating potential co-limitation of alpine grasslands.In contrast,adding P alone significantly promoted legume perfor-mance as measured by 65.22%increase in biomass and 58.45%increase in relative abundance,while adding N alone reduced leg-ume performance as measured by 39.54%decrease in biomass and 50.36%in relative abundance.combining P and N addition did not mitigate the negative effect of N addition on legume performance and,surprisingly,suppressed legume biomass by 53.14%and relative abundance by 63.51%.N and P addition altered the balance of light competition between grasses and legumes as indicated by the changes in light levels,plant heights and litter accumulation.However,there were no obvious changes in legume species richness in response to N and P within our experimental timeframe.this study provides further evidence of the importance of P as a co-limiting nutrient in alpine grasslands,contrary to the traditional view that N limitation predominates in such regions.the contrasting effects of N and P addition on legume performance provide important insights into potential changes in legume performance in nutrient-limited grasslands following N and P enrichment under climate change,with implications for nutrient management in alpine grasslands.
基金a M.Sc.grant from the Brazilian Coordination for the Improvement of Higher Education Personnel(CAPES)a post-doctoral grant from the Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology(No.SFRH/BPD/77795/2011)。
文摘In non-flooded lowland rain forests with low soil phosphorus(P)in parts of Amazonia,P cycling largely occurs via leaf litter recycling by arbuscular mycorrhizal(AM)fungal symbionts.Occasional high input of P into these ecosystems occurs during drought years with increased litterfall.As the length and frequency of drought events are projected to increase in the region,a single-dose nutrient addition experiment was carried out to test how this would impact P cycling.An application rate of 4 kg P ha^(-1) was used,which corresponds to twice the amount of litter-derived P in an average year.It was hypothesized that i)the added mineral P would be immobilized by soil microorganisms,leading to measurable increase in soil microbial biomass carbon(C)and P and ii)AM colonization rate would be reduced by the pulse in mineral P available for plant uptake.The results did not support either of our hypotheses.The addition of P did not have an effect on AM root colonization,nor was P immobilized by soil microbiota during the experimental period.The lack of a difference between the control and treatment at our study site could be attributed to the relatively low one-off dose of P applied that did not change either the colonization rate of roots by AM fungi or the amount of soil available labile P.To obtain a mechanistic understanding of the availability,capture,and use of P by plant-symbiont associations in tropical rain forest ecosystems,further integrated studies of the soil-plant system combining long-term nutrient manipulations,modeling,and experimental approaches are required.
基金SAFE(European Union QLK5-CT-2001-0560)PAC-02-008(Junta de Castilla-La Mancha)+1 种基金REN2003-07048/GLO(MCYT)09/2022(MMA).J.J.O.and E.G.were supported by grants from ANUIES(Mexico).
文摘Aims In plants,resource allocation to growth and reproduction may depart from trade-off expectations if(i)investment in growth and reproduction relies on different resource pools,(ii)allocation to reproduction is dependent upon reaching some growth threshold or(iii)reproduction is developmentally linked to growth,both functions relying on the same resource pool.We examined the effects of enhanced resource level on patterns of resource allocation to growth and reproduction in holm oak(Quercus ilex sbsp.ballota),a Mediterranean evergreen tree.Methods In the experimental year(2003),we manipulated the amount of soil nutrients in autumn(to increase nutrient uptake during shoot elongation in the following spring)and soil water in summer(to increase water uptake during acorn growth).Indicators of growth and male and female reproduction were estimated in the preexperimental(2002),experimental(2003)and post-experimental(2004)years.Important Findings Fertilized trees produced significantly longer shoots,but the number of female flowers per shoot was not affected by treatments.The production of male catkins was also enhanced by fertilization.Irrigation did not affect the production of female flowers or abortion rates.Growth and female reproduction showed no consistent relationship in untreated trees,but resource addition elicited a growth-female reproduction trade-off in the experimental year.The sign of this significant relationship changed in the post-experimental year,indicating the existence of lagged effects of resource manipulation on acorn production.Overall,patterns of allocation to growth and reproduction varied as a function of sex,resource availability and year,a result consistent with extreme allocational plasticity in holm oak.
基金Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnología of México(PhD to L.S.P.,128856 to V.P.T.).
文摘Aims Seasonally tropical dry forests of the Yucatan Peninsula are typically found in sites with nutrient-poor soils because of the recent geologi-cal origin of the region.The landscape is dominated by extensive karstic plates that shape environments where vegetation regenera-tion through seed germination may be limited by the availability of suitable microsites.In this study,we documented the survival and growth of seedlings from three dominant tree species(Bursera simaruba,Piscidia piscipula and Lysiloma latisiliquum)in seasonally tropical dry forests in Yucatan.Specifically,we evaluated the effect of nutrient addition(N and P,separately and in combination)on seedling survival and growth across three sites with differing levels of precipitation.Methods We conducted a nutrient addition experiment,whereby we estab-lished 12 plots of dimensions 10×10 m(100 m^(2))at each site,from which three plots were randomly selected to receive one of four treatments:N addition,P addition,N and P addition and no nutri-ent addition(controls).Prior to treatment application,in each plot,we planted 10 seedlings of each species in October 2010 and sub-sequently conducted surveys of plant growth and survival every 20 days from November 2010 to April 2011.Important Findings Overall,nutrient addition increased seedling survival and the mag-nitude of this effect was similar among sites.We did not observe an additive effect of the N+P treatment on survival.Similarly,we observed a positive effect of nutrient addition on seedling growth,but this effect was contingent upon site;regarding survival,the effects of N and P on seedling growth were not additive.These results suggest that seedling recruitment and growth in the three dominant species of trees in Yucatan are limited by nutrient avail-ability but that the magnitude of this effect,particularly on seedling growth,is specific for species and site.