State Key Laboratory of Soil Erosion and Dryland Farming on the Loess Plateau, Northwest A&F University, Yangling, China.
Department of Forest Resources, University of Minnesota, St. Paul, Minnesota.
Glob Chang Biol. 2019 Jul;25(7):2396-2409. doi: 10.1111/gcb.14636. Epub 2019 Apr 29.
Legumes are an important component of plant diversity that modulate nitrogen (N) cycling in many terrestrial ecosystems. Limited knowledge of legume effects on soil N cycling and its response to global change factors and plant diversity hinders a general understanding of whether and how legumes broadly regulate the response of soil N availability to those factors. In a 17-year study of perennial grassland species grown under ambient and elevated (+180 ppm) CO and ambient and enriched (+4 g N m year ) N environments, we compared pure legume plots with plots dominated by or including other herbaceous functional groups (and containing one or four species) to assess the effect of legumes on N cycling (net N mineralization rate and inorganic N pools). We also examined the effects of numbers of legume species (from zero to four) in four-species mixed plots on soil N cycling. We hypothesized that legumes would increase N mineralization rates most in those treatments with the greatest diversity and the greatest relative limitation by and competition for N. Results partially supported these hypotheses. Plots with greater dominance by legumes had greater soil nitrate concentrations and mineralization rates. Higher species richness significantly increased the impact of legumes on soil N metrics, with 349% and 505% higher mineralization rates and nitrate concentrations in four-species plots containing legumes compared to legume-free four-species plots, in contrast to 185% and 129% greater values, respectively, in pure legume than nonlegume monoculture plots. N-fertilized plots had greater legume effects on soil nitrate, but lower legume effects on net N mineralization. In contrast, neither elevated CO nor its interaction with legumes affected net N mineralization. These results indicate that legumes markedly influence the response of soil N cycling to some, but not all, global change drivers.
豆科植物是植物多样性的重要组成部分,可调节许多陆地生态系统中的氮(N)循环。由于对豆科植物对土壤 N 循环的影响及其对全球变化因素和植物多样性的响应知之甚少,因此,人们普遍不清楚豆科植物是否以及如何广泛调节土壤 N 有效性对这些因素的响应。在一项为期 17 年的研究中,我们在大气和升高(+180 ppm)CO 以及大气和富氮(+4 g N m 年 )环境下,对多年生草地物种进行了研究,比较了纯豆科植物与以其他草本功能群为主或包括其他草本功能群(含有一种或四种物种)的植物的影响,以评估豆科植物对 N 循环(净 N 矿化率和无机 N 库)的影响。我们还研究了四种混合植物中,豆科植物物种数量(从零到四)对土壤 N 循环的影响。我们假设,在多样性最大且对 N 的限制和竞争最大的处理中,豆科植物将最大程度地提高 N 矿化率。结果部分支持了这些假设。豆科植物占主导地位的植物具有更高的土壤硝酸盐浓度和矿化率。更高的物种丰富度显著增加了豆科植物对土壤 N 指标的影响,与不含豆科植物的四种植物混合相比,含有豆科植物的四种植物混合中,矿化率和硝酸盐浓度分别增加了 349%和 505%,而纯豆科植物与非豆科植物的单作相比,分别增加了 185%和 129%。施氮肥的植物对土壤硝酸盐的影响更大,但对净 N 矿化的影响更小。相比之下,升高的 CO 或其与豆科植物的相互作用都不会影响净 N 矿化。这些结果表明,豆科植物显著影响了土壤 N 循环对一些但不是所有全球变化驱动因素的响应。