生态系统
生物量(生态学)
生物多样性
氮气
沉积(地质)
环境科学
环境化学
草原
陆地生态系统
活性氮
生态学
化学
生物
古生物学
有机化学
沉积物
作者
Peter B. Reich,Jean Knops,David Tilman,Joseph M. Craine,Belinda E. Medlyn,Mark G. Tjoelker,Tali D. Lee,David A. Wedin,Shahid Naeem,Dan Bahauddin,George R. Hendrey,Shibu Jose,Keith Wrage,Jenny Goth,Wendy Bengston
出处
期刊:Nature
[Springer Nature]
日期:2001-04-12
卷期号:410 (6830): 809-810
被引量:576
摘要
Human actions are causing declines in plant biodiversity, increases in atmospheric CO2 concentrations and increases in nitrogen deposition; however, the interactive effects of these factors on ecosystem processes are unknown1,2. Reduced biodiversity has raised numerous concerns, including the possibility that ecosystem functioning may be affected negatively1,2,3,4, which might be particularly important in the face of other global changes5,6. Here we present results of a grassland field experiment in Minnesota, USA, that tests the hypothesis that plant diversity and composition influence the enhancement of biomass and carbon acquisition in ecosystems subjected to elevated atmospheric CO2 concentrations and nitrogen deposition. The study experimentally controlled plant diversity (1, 4, 9 or 16 species), soil nitrogen (unamended versus deposition of 4 g of nitrogen per m2 per yr) and atmospheric CO2 concentrations using free-air CO2 enrichment (ambient, 368 µmol mol-1, versus elevated, 560 µmol mol-1). We found that the enhanced biomass accumulation in response to elevated levels of CO2 or nitrogen, or their combination, is less in species-poor than in species-rich assemblages.
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