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Citation. Dijkstra, F.A.; West, J.B.; Hobbie, S.E.; Reich, P.B.; Trost, J. 2007. Plant diversity, CO2, and N influence inorganic and organic n leaching in grasslands. ECOLOGY 88:490-500.
Abstract. In nitrogen (N)-limited systems, the potential to sequester carbon depends on the balance
between N inputs and losses as well as on how efficiently N is used, yet little is known
about responses of these processes to changes in plant species richness, atmospheric CO2
concentration ([CO2]), and N deposition. We examined how plant species richness (1 or
16 species), elevated [CO2] (ambient or 560 ppm), and inorganic N addition (0 or 4
g·m−2·yr−1) affected ecosystem N losses, specifically leaching of dissolved inorganic N
(DIN) and organic N (DON) in a grassland field experiment in Minnesota, USA. We
observed greater DIN leaching below 60 cm soil depth in the monoculture plots (on
average 1.8 and 3.1 g N·m−2·yr−1 for ambient N and N-fertilized plots respectively) than
in the 16-species plots (0.2 g N·m−2·yr−1 for both ambient N and N-fertilized plots),
particularly when inorganic N was added. Most likely, loss of complementary resource
use and reduced biological N demand in the monoculture plots caused the increase in
DIN leaching relative to the high-diversity plots. Elevated [CO2] reduced DIN
concentrations under conditions when DIN concentrations were high (i.e., in N-fertilized
and monoculture plots). Contrary to the results for DIN, DON leaching was greater in the
16-species plots than in the monoculture plots (on average 0.4 g N·m−2·yr−1 in 16-species
plots and 0.2 g N·m−2·yr−1 in monoculture plots). In fact, DON dominated N leaching in
the 16-species plots (64% of total N leaching as DON), suggesting that, even with high
biological demand for N, substantial amounts of N can be lost as DON. We found no
significant main effects of elevated [CO2] on DIN or DON leaching; however, elevated
[CO2] reduced the positive effect of inorganic N addition on DON leaching, especially
during the second year of observation. Our results suggest that plant species richness,
elevated [CO2], and N deposition alter DIN loss primarily through changes in biological
N demand. DON losses can be as large as DIN loss but are more sensitive to organic
matter production and turnover.
Key Words. dissolved inorganic nitrogen, dissolved organic nitrogen, drainage, elevated
CO2, grassland, leaching, lysimeter, nitrogen deposition, nitrogen loss, plant species
richness