Nitrogen:phosphorous supply ratio and allometry in five alpine plant species

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Standard

Nitrogen:phosphorous supply ratio and allometry in five alpine plant species. / Luo, Xi; Mazer, Susan J.; Guo, Hui; Zhang, Nan; Weiner, Jacob; Hu, Shuijin.

I: Ecology and Evolution, Bind 6, Nr. 24, 2016, s. 8881-8892.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Luo, X, Mazer, SJ, Guo, H, Zhang, N, Weiner, J & Hu, S 2016, 'Nitrogen:phosphorous supply ratio and allometry in five alpine plant species', Ecology and Evolution, bind 6, nr. 24, s. 8881-8892. https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.2587

APA

Luo, X., Mazer, S. J., Guo, H., Zhang, N., Weiner, J., & Hu, S. (2016). Nitrogen:phosphorous supply ratio and allometry in five alpine plant species. Ecology and Evolution, 6(24), 8881-8892. https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.2587

Vancouver

Luo X, Mazer SJ, Guo H, Zhang N, Weiner J, Hu S. Nitrogen:phosphorous supply ratio and allometry in five alpine plant species. Ecology and Evolution. 2016;6(24):8881-8892. https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.2587

Author

Luo, Xi ; Mazer, Susan J. ; Guo, Hui ; Zhang, Nan ; Weiner, Jacob ; Hu, Shuijin. / Nitrogen:phosphorous supply ratio and allometry in five alpine plant species. I: Ecology and Evolution. 2016 ; Bind 6, Nr. 24. s. 8881-8892.

Bibtex

@article{f05f4468ba744e948a4d95a7de08a943,
title = "Nitrogen:phosphorous supply ratio and allometry in five alpine plant species",
abstract = "In terrestrial ecosystems, atmospheric nitrogen (N) deposition has greatly increased N availability relative to other elements, particularly phosphorus (P). Alterations in the availability of N relative to P can affect plant growth rate and functional traits, as well as resource allocation to above- versus belowground biomass (MA and MB). Biomass allocation among individual plants is broadly size-dependent, and this can often be described as an allometric relationship between MA and MB, as represented by the equation MA=αMBβ, or log MA = logα + βlog MB. Here, we investigated whether the scaling exponent or regression slope may be affected by the N:P supply ratio. We hypothesized that the regression slope between MA and MB should be steeper under a high N:P supply ratio due to P limitation, and shallower under a low N:P supply ratio due to N limitation. To test these hypotheses, we experimentally altered the levels of N, P, and the N:P supply ratio (from 1.7:1 to 135:1) provided to five alpine species representing two functional groups (grasses and composite forbs) under greenhouse conditions; we then measured the effects of these treatments on plant morphology and tissue content (SLA, leaf area, and leaf and root N/P concentrations) and on the scaling relationship between MA and MB. Unbalanced N:P supply ratios generally negatively affected plant biomass, leaf area, and tissue nutrient concentration in both grasses and composite forbs. High N:P ratios increased tissue N:P ratios in both functional groups, but more in the two composite forbs than in the grasses. The positive regression slopes between log MA and log MB exhibited by plants raised under a N:P supply ratio of 135:1 were significantly steeper than those observed under the N:P ratio of 1.7:1 and 15:1. Synthesis: Plant biomass allocation is highly plastic in response to variation in the N:P supply ratio. Studies of resource allocation of individual plants should focus on the effects of nutrient ratios as well as the availability of individual elements. The two forb species were more sensitive than grasses to unbalanced N:P supplies. To evaluate the adaptive significance of this plasticity, the effects of unbalanced N:P supply ratio on individual lifetime fitness must be measured.",
keywords = "above- and belowground biomass, allocation, allometry, N:P ratio, nutrient balance, P limitation, Tibetan Plateau",
author = "Xi Luo and Mazer, {Susan J.} and Hui Guo and Nan Zhang and Jacob Weiner and Shuijin Hu",
year = "2016",
doi = "10.1002/ece3.2587",
language = "English",
volume = "6",
pages = "8881--8892",
journal = "Ecology and Evolution",
issn = "2045-7758",
publisher = "Wiley",
number = "24",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Nitrogen:phosphorous supply ratio and allometry in five alpine plant species

AU - Luo, Xi

AU - Mazer, Susan J.

AU - Guo, Hui

AU - Zhang, Nan

AU - Weiner, Jacob

AU - Hu, Shuijin

PY - 2016

Y1 - 2016

N2 - In terrestrial ecosystems, atmospheric nitrogen (N) deposition has greatly increased N availability relative to other elements, particularly phosphorus (P). Alterations in the availability of N relative to P can affect plant growth rate and functional traits, as well as resource allocation to above- versus belowground biomass (MA and MB). Biomass allocation among individual plants is broadly size-dependent, and this can often be described as an allometric relationship between MA and MB, as represented by the equation MA=αMBβ, or log MA = logα + βlog MB. Here, we investigated whether the scaling exponent or regression slope may be affected by the N:P supply ratio. We hypothesized that the regression slope between MA and MB should be steeper under a high N:P supply ratio due to P limitation, and shallower under a low N:P supply ratio due to N limitation. To test these hypotheses, we experimentally altered the levels of N, P, and the N:P supply ratio (from 1.7:1 to 135:1) provided to five alpine species representing two functional groups (grasses and composite forbs) under greenhouse conditions; we then measured the effects of these treatments on plant morphology and tissue content (SLA, leaf area, and leaf and root N/P concentrations) and on the scaling relationship between MA and MB. Unbalanced N:P supply ratios generally negatively affected plant biomass, leaf area, and tissue nutrient concentration in both grasses and composite forbs. High N:P ratios increased tissue N:P ratios in both functional groups, but more in the two composite forbs than in the grasses. The positive regression slopes between log MA and log MB exhibited by plants raised under a N:P supply ratio of 135:1 were significantly steeper than those observed under the N:P ratio of 1.7:1 and 15:1. Synthesis: Plant biomass allocation is highly plastic in response to variation in the N:P supply ratio. Studies of resource allocation of individual plants should focus on the effects of nutrient ratios as well as the availability of individual elements. The two forb species were more sensitive than grasses to unbalanced N:P supplies. To evaluate the adaptive significance of this plasticity, the effects of unbalanced N:P supply ratio on individual lifetime fitness must be measured.

AB - In terrestrial ecosystems, atmospheric nitrogen (N) deposition has greatly increased N availability relative to other elements, particularly phosphorus (P). Alterations in the availability of N relative to P can affect plant growth rate and functional traits, as well as resource allocation to above- versus belowground biomass (MA and MB). Biomass allocation among individual plants is broadly size-dependent, and this can often be described as an allometric relationship between MA and MB, as represented by the equation MA=αMBβ, or log MA = logα + βlog MB. Here, we investigated whether the scaling exponent or regression slope may be affected by the N:P supply ratio. We hypothesized that the regression slope between MA and MB should be steeper under a high N:P supply ratio due to P limitation, and shallower under a low N:P supply ratio due to N limitation. To test these hypotheses, we experimentally altered the levels of N, P, and the N:P supply ratio (from 1.7:1 to 135:1) provided to five alpine species representing two functional groups (grasses and composite forbs) under greenhouse conditions; we then measured the effects of these treatments on plant morphology and tissue content (SLA, leaf area, and leaf and root N/P concentrations) and on the scaling relationship between MA and MB. Unbalanced N:P supply ratios generally negatively affected plant biomass, leaf area, and tissue nutrient concentration in both grasses and composite forbs. High N:P ratios increased tissue N:P ratios in both functional groups, but more in the two composite forbs than in the grasses. The positive regression slopes between log MA and log MB exhibited by plants raised under a N:P supply ratio of 135:1 were significantly steeper than those observed under the N:P ratio of 1.7:1 and 15:1. Synthesis: Plant biomass allocation is highly plastic in response to variation in the N:P supply ratio. Studies of resource allocation of individual plants should focus on the effects of nutrient ratios as well as the availability of individual elements. The two forb species were more sensitive than grasses to unbalanced N:P supplies. To evaluate the adaptive significance of this plasticity, the effects of unbalanced N:P supply ratio on individual lifetime fitness must be measured.

KW - above- and belowground biomass, allocation, allometry, N:P ratio, nutrient balance, P limitation, Tibetan Plateau

U2 - 10.1002/ece3.2587

DO - 10.1002/ece3.2587

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 28035276

VL - 6

SP - 8881

EP - 8892

JO - Ecology and Evolution

JF - Ecology and Evolution

SN - 2045-7758

IS - 24

ER -

ID: 169990243