AI Article Synopsis

  • Previous research has shown that plants react to nutrient availability, but how they respond to different levels of nutrient enrichment, particularly nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P), is not well understood.
  • A field experiment tested three levels of N (0, 10, and 40 g/m²/year) and P (0, 5, and 10 g/m²/year) to observe their effects on seed production in a dominant plant species in a temperate steppe.
  • Results indicated that N addition dramatically increased seed production, while P addition only enhanced seed output when nitrogen was also present, suggesting that nitrogen is the primary limiting nutrient for seed production in these ecosystems.

Article Abstract

Previous studies have demonstrated changes in plant growth and reproduction in response to nutrient availability, but responses of plant growth and reproduction to multiple levels of nutrient enrichment remain unclear. In this study, a factorial field experiment was performed with manipulation of nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) availability to examine seed production of the dominant species, , in response to N and P addition in a temperate steppe. There were three levels of N and P addition in this experiment, including no N addition (0 g N m year), low N addition (10 g N m year), and high N addition (40 g N m year) for N addition treatment, and no P addition (0 g P m year), low P addition (5 g P m year), and high P addition (10 g P m year) for P addition treatment. Low N addition enhanced seed production by 814%, 1371%, and 1321% under ambient, low, and high P addition levels, respectively. High N addition increased seed production by 2136%, 3560%, and 3550% under ambient, low, and high P addition levels, respectively. However, P addition did not affect seed production in the absence of N addition, but enhanced it under N addition. N addition enhanced seed production mainly by increasing the tiller number and inflorescence abundance per plant, whereas P addition stimulated it by decreasing the plant density yet stimulating height of plants and their seed number per inflorescence. Our results indicate seed production is not limited by P availability but rather by N availability in the temperate steppe, whereas seed production will be increased by P addition when N availability is improved. These findings enable a better understanding of plant reproduction dynamics in the temperate steppe under intensified nutrient enrichment and can inform their improved management in the future.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8571611PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.8185DOI Listing

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