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Citation. Knops, J.M.H; Naeemw, S.; Reich, P.B. 2007. The impact of elevated CO2, increased nitrogen availability and biodiversity on plant tissue quality and decomposition. GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY 13:1960-1971.
Abstract. Elevated CO2, increased nitrogen (N) deposition and increasing species richness can
increase net primary productivity (NPP). However, unless there are comparable changes
in decomposition, increases in productivity will most likely be unsustainable. Without
comparable increases in decomposition nutrients would accumulate in dead organic
matter leading to nutrient limitations that could eventually prohibit additional increases in
productivity. To address this issue, we measured aboveground plant and litter quality and
belowground root quality, as well as decomposition of aboveground litter for one and 2-
year periods using in situ litterbags in response to a three-way factorial manipulation of
CO2 (ambient vs. 560 ppm), N deposition (ambient vs. the addition of 4 g N m−2 yr−1) and
plant species richness (one, four, nine and 16 species) in experimental grassland plots.
Litter chemistry responded to the CO2, N and plant diversity treatments, but
decomposition was much less responsive. Elevated CO2 induced decreases in % N and %
lignin in plant tissues. N addition led to increases in % N and decreases in % lignin.
Increasing plant diversity led to decreases in % N and % lignin and an increase in %
cellulose. In contrast to the litter chemistry changes, elevated CO2 had a much lower
impact on decomposition and resulted in only a 2.5% decrease in carbon (C) loss.
Detectable responses were not observed either to N addition or to species richness.
These results suggest that global change factors such as biodiversity loss, elevated CO2
and N deposition lead to significant changes in tissue quality; however, the response of
decomposition is modest. Thus, the observed increases in productivity at higher diversity
levels and with elevated CO2 and N fertilization are not matched by an increase in
decomposition rates. This lack of coupled responses between production and
decomposition is likely to result in an accumulation of nutrients in the litter pool which
will dampen the response of NPP to these factors over time.