Elevated concentrations of atmospheric CO increase plant biomass, net primary production (NPP) and plant demand for nitrogen (N). The demand for N set by rapid plant growth under elevated CO could be met by increasing soil N availability or by greater efficiency of N uptake. Alternatively, plants could increase their nitrogen-use efficiency (NUE), thereby maintaining high rates of growth and NPP in the face of nutrient limitation. We quantified dry matter and N budgets for a young pine forest exposed to 4 years of elevated CO using free-air CO enrichment technology. We addressed three questions: Does elevated CO increase forest NPP and the demand for N by vegetation? Is demand for N met by greater uptake from soils, a shift in the distribution of N between plants, microbes, and soils, or increases in NUE under elevated CO? Will soil N availability constrain the NPP response of this forest as CO fumigation continues? A step-function increase in atmospheric CO significantly increased NPP during the first 4 years of this study. Significant increases in NUE under elevated CO modulated the average annual requirement for N by vegetation in the first and third growing seasons under elevated CO; the average stimulation of NPP in these years was 21% whereas the average annual stimulation of the N requirement was only 6%. In the second and fourth growing seasons, increases in NPP increased the annual requirement for N by 27-33%. Increases in the annual requirement for N were largely met by increases in N uptake from soils. Retranslocation of nutrients prior to senescence played only a minor role in supplying the additional N required by trees growing under elevated CO. NPP was highly correlated with between-plot variation in the annual rate of net N mineralization and CO treatment. This demonstrates that NPP is co-limited by C availability, as CO from the atmosphere, and N availability from soils. There is no evidence that soil N mineralization rates have increased under elevated CO. The correlation between NPP and N mineralization rates and the increase in the annual requirement for N in certain years imply that soil N availability may control the long-term productivity response of this ecosystem to elevated CO. Although we have no evidence suggesting that NPP is declining in response to >4 years of CO fumigation, if the annual requirement of N continues to be stimulated by elevated CO, we predict that the productivity response of this forest ecosystem will decline over time.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00442-002-0996-3 | DOI Listing |
West J Nurs Res
January 2025
Golden Apple Healing Arts, LLC, Wauwatosa, WI, USA.
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Approach: We hosted and encouraged active participation in a World Café that focused on 7 inclusion topics in nursing during the 2024 Midwestern Nursing Research Society Annual Research Conference.
J Family Med Prim Care
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Department of Pediatrics, Lady Hardinge Medical College, New Delhi, India.
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J Family Med Prim Care
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Department of Family Medicine, Head Quarters Hospital, Cuddalore, Tamil Nadu, India.
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View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnn Thorac Surg Short Rep
December 2024
Division of Nephrology, Department of Internal Medicine, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California.
Background: Contemporary population-based data examining the rates of cardiac surgery and the relationship between non-dialysis-requiring chronic kidney disease (CKD) and postoperative outcomes in cardiac surgery are limited.
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J Health Econ Outcomes Res
January 2025
Ultragenyx Pharmaceutical Inc., Novato, CA, USA.
Glycogen storage disease type Ia (GSDIa) is a rare inherited disorder resulting in potentially life-threatening hypoglycemia, metabolic abnormalities, and complications often requiring hospitalization. This retrospective database analysis assessed the complications, resource utilization, and costs in a large cohort of patients with GSDIa. We conducted a retrospective cohort study of GSDIa patients and matched non-GSDIa comparators utilizing the PharMetrics® Plus database.
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