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Interactions among nutrients govern the global grassland biomass–precipitation relationship
Resumen
Ecosystems are experiencing changing global patterns of mean annual precipitation (MAP) and enrichment with multiple nutrients that potentially colimit plant biomass production. In grasslands, mean aboveground plant biomass is closely related to MAP,
but how this relationship changes after enrichment with multiple nutrients remains unclear. We hypothesized the global biomass–MAP relationship becomes steeper with an increasing number of added nutrients,
[ver mas...]
Ecosystems are experiencing changing global patterns of mean annual precipitation (MAP) and enrichment with multiple nutrients that potentially colimit plant biomass production. In grasslands, mean aboveground plant biomass is closely related to MAP,
but how this relationship changes after enrichment with multiple nutrients remains unclear. We hypothesized the global biomass–MAP relationship becomes steeper with an increasing number of added nutrients, with increases in steepness corresponding to
the form of interaction among added nutrients and with increased mediation by changes in plant community diversity. We measured aboveground plant biomass production and species diversity in 71 grasslands on six continents representing the global span of
grassland MAP, diversity, management, and soils. We fertilized all sites with nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium with micronutrients in all combinations to identify which nutrients limited biomass at each site. As hypothesized, fertilizing with one, two, or three
nutrients progressively steepened the global biomass–MAP relationship. The magnitude of the increase in steepness corresponded to whether sites were not limited by nitrogen or phosphorus, were limited by either one, or were colimited by both in additive, or synergistic forms. Unexpectedly, we found only weak evidence for mediation of biomass–MAP relationships by plant community diversity because relationships of species richness, evenness, and beta diversity to MAP and to biomass were weak or opposing. Site-level properties including baseline biomass production, soils, and management explained little variation in biomass–MAP relationships. These findings reveal multiple nutrient colimitation as a defining feature of the global grassland biomass–MAP relationship.
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Autor
Fay, Philip A.;
Gherardi, Laureano A.;
Yahdjian, Laura;
Adler, Peter B.;
Bakker, Jonathan D.;
Bharath, Siddharth;
Borer, Elizabeth T.;
Harpole, William Stanley;
Hersch-Green, Erika I.;
Huxman, Travis E.;
Peri, Pablo Luis;
Wheeler, George R.;
Fuente
PNAS 122 (15) : e2410748122. (April 2025)
Fecha
2025-04-11
Editorial
National Academy of Sciences
ISSN
1091-6490
Formato
pdf
Tipo de documento
artículo
Palabras Claves
Derechos de acceso
Restringido
