AI Article Synopsis

  • High nitrogen (N) availability in the Anthropocene has led to a decline in plant diversity in northwest Europe, prompting the EU to legislate reductions in N deposition to aid plant recovery.
  • Research indicates that phosphorus (P) availability is actually more critical than nitrogen or potassium (K) for plant diversity, challenging the simplification in EU policies focused solely on N.
  • Ecosystems with low P availability host threatened species with specific nutrient needs, suggesting that without addressing P levels, efforts to reduce N may inadvertently worsen the situation for these vulnerable plants; hence, a new EU Phosphate Directive is necessary.

Article Abstract

The greater bioavailability of nitrogen (N), phosphorus (P) and potassium (K) in the Anthropocene has strongly impacted terrestrial plant communities. In northwest Europe, because high N deposition is considered the main driver of plant diversity loss, European Union (EU) legislation to reduce N deposition is expected to promote plant species recovery. However, this expectation is simplistic: it ignores the role of other macronutrients. Analysing the relationship between plant species pools and species stoichiometric niches along nutrient gradients across northern Eurasia's herbaceous ecosystems, we found that both absolute and relative P availability are more critical than N or K availability. This result is consistent with stoichiometric niche theory, and with findings from studies of hyperdiverse forests and shrublands at lower latitudes. We show that ecosystems with low absolute and relative P availability harbour a unique set of threatened species that have narrower nutrient-based niche widths than non-threatened species. Such ecosystems represent a conservation priority, but may be further threatened by latent effects of relative P enrichment arising from reduction of N availability without simultaneous reduction of P. The narrow focus of EU legislation on reducing N, but not P, may therefore inadvertently increase the threat to many of Europe's already threatened plant species. An EU Phosphate Directive is needed.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41559-020-01323-wDOI Listing

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