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外来草本入侵后森林林下植物对氮的吸收和偏好。

Nitrogen uptake and preference in a forest understory following invasion by an exotic grass.

机构信息

Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Sciences, University of Illinois, Urbana, IL 61801, USA.

出版信息

Oecologia. 2011 Nov;167(3):781-91. doi: 10.1007/s00442-011-2030-0. Epub 2011 May 29.

Abstract

Plant-soil interactions have been proposed as a causative mechanism explaining how invasive plant species impact ecosystem processes. We evaluate whether an invasive plant influences plant and soil-microbe acquisition of nitrogen to elucidate the mechanistic pathways by which invaders might alter N availability. Using a (15)N tracer, we quantify differences in nitrogen uptake and allocation in communities with and without Microstegium vimineum, a shade-tolerant, C(4) grass that is rapidly invading the understories of eastern US deciduous forests. We further investigate if plants or the microbial biomass exhibit preferences for certain nitrogen forms (glycine, nitrate, and ammonium) to gain insight into nitrogen partitioning in invaded communities. Understory native plants and M. vimineum took up similar amounts of added nitrogen but allocated it differently, with native plants allocating primarily to roots and M. vimineum allocating most nitrogen to shoots. Plant nitrogen uptake was higher in invaded communities due primarily to the increase in understory biomass when M. vimineum was present, but for the microbial biomass, nitrogen uptake did not vary with invasion status. This translated to a significant reduction (P < 0.001) in the ratio of microbial biomass to plant biomass nitrogen uptake, which suggests that, although the demand for nitrogen has intensified, microbes continue to be effective nitrogen competitors. The microbial biomass exhibited a strong preference for ammonium over glycine and nitrate, regardless of invasion status. By comparison, native plants showed no nitrogen preferences and M. vimineum preferred inorganic nitrogen species. We interpret our findings as evidence that invasion by M. vimineum leads to changes in the partitioning of nitrogen above and belowground in forest understories, and to decreases in the microbial biomass, but it does not affect the outcome of plant-microbe-nitrogen interactions, possibly due to functional shifts in the microbial community as a result of invasion.

摘要

植物-土壤相互作用被认为是一种解释入侵植物如何影响生态系统过程的因果机制。我们评估了一种入侵植物是否会影响植物和土壤微生物对氮的获取,以阐明入侵物种可能改变氮供应的机制途径。使用(15)N 示踪剂,我们量化了有和没有耐荫 C(4)草薇甘菊的群落中氮的吸收和分配的差异,薇甘菊正在迅速入侵美国东部落叶林的林下。我们进一步研究了植物或微生物生物量是否对某些氮形式(甘氨酸、硝酸盐和铵盐)表现出偏好,以深入了解入侵群落中的氮分配。林下本地植物和薇甘菊吸收的外加氮量相似,但分配方式不同,本地植物主要将氮分配到根部,而薇甘菊将大部分氮分配到地上部分。由于薇甘菊的存在增加了林下生物量,林下植物的氮吸收量在入侵群落中更高,但对于微生物生物量,氮吸收量并不随入侵状态而变化。这导致微生物生物量与植物生物量氮吸收量的比例显著降低(P < 0.001),这表明,尽管对氮的需求加剧了,但微生物仍然是有效的氮竞争者。微生物生物量对铵盐表现出强烈的偏好,而不是甘氨酸和硝酸盐,无论入侵状态如何。相比之下,本地植物对氮没有偏好,而薇甘菊则更喜欢无机氮。我们将我们的发现解释为证据,表明薇甘菊的入侵导致了森林林下地上和地下氮分配的变化,以及微生物生物量的减少,但它并没有影响植物-微生物-氮相互作用的结果,可能是由于入侵导致微生物群落的功能发生了转变。

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