Department of Biological Sciences, University of Denver, Denver, Colorado, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2012;7(8):e43929. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0043929. Epub 2012 Aug 28.
Anthropogenic nutrient inputs into native ecosystems cause fluctuations in resources that normally limit plant growth, which has important consequences for associated food webs. Such inputs from agricultural and urban habitats into nearby natural systems are increasing globally and can be highly variable, spanning the range from sporadic to continuous. Despite the global increase in anthropogenically-derived nutrient inputs into native ecosystems, the consequences of variation in subsidy duration on native plants and their associated food webs are poorly known. Specifically, while some studies have examined the effects of nutrient subsidies on native ecosystems for a single year (a nutrient pulse), repeated introductions of nutrients across multiple years (a nutrient press) better reflect the persistent nature of anthropogenic nutrient enrichment. We therefore contrasted the effects of a one-year nutrient pulse with a four-year nutrient press on arthropod consumers in two salt marshes. Salt marshes represent an ideal system to address the differential impacts of nutrient pulses and presses on ecosystem and community dynamics because human development and other anthropogenic activities lead to recurrent introductions of nutrients into these natural systems. We found that plant biomass and %N as well as arthropod density fell after the nutrient pulse ended but remained elevated throughout the nutrient press. Notably, higher trophic levels responded more strongly than lower trophic levels to fertilization, and the predator/prey ratio increased each year of the nutrient press, demonstrating that food web responses to anthropogenic nutrient enrichment can take years to fully manifest themselves. Vegetation at the two marshes also exhibited an apparent tradeoff between increasing %N and biomass in response to fertilization. Our research emphasizes the need for long-term, spatially diverse studies of nutrient enrichment in order to understand how variation in the duration of anthropogenic nutrient subsidies affects native ecosystems.
人为向原生生态系统输入营养物质会导致资源波动,而这些资源通常会限制植物的生长,这对相关的食物网有重要影响。这种来自农业和城市栖息地的输入物正不断增加,且具有高度的可变性,范围从零星的到连续的都有。尽管全球原生生态系统中的人为衍生营养输入不断增加,但营养物质供应持续时间变化对原生植物及其相关食物网的后果还知之甚少。具体来说,虽然一些研究已经研究了营养物质补贴对原生生态系统的单一年度(营养脉冲)的影响,但多年来多次引入营养物质(营养压力)更能反映人为营养富集的持续性质。因此,我们在两个盐沼中对比了一年期营养脉冲和四年期营养压力对节肢动物消费者的影响。盐沼是一个理想的系统,可以用来解决营养脉冲和压力对生态系统和群落动态的不同影响,因为人类发展和其他人为活动会导致这些自然系统中反复引入营养物质。我们发现,在营养脉冲结束后,植物生物量和氮含量以及节肢动物密度下降,但在整个营养压力期间仍保持升高。值得注意的是,与较低的营养水平相比,较高的营养水平对施肥的反应更强烈,并且在营养压力的每一年,捕食者/猎物比都增加,这表明食物网对人为营养富集的反应可能需要数年才能完全显现出来。两个沼泽地的植被也表现出明显的权衡,即随着施肥,氮含量和生物量都在增加。我们的研究强调需要对营养富集进行长期的、空间多样化的研究,以了解人为营养补贴持续时间的变化如何影响原生生态系统。