作者
Pablo Moreno‐García,Flavia Montaño‐Centellas,Yu Liu,Evelin Y. Reyes-Mendez,Rohit Raj Jha,Robert Guralnick,Ryan A. Folk,Donald M. Waller,Kris Verheyen,Lander Baeten,Antoine Becker‐Scarpitta,Imre Berki,Markus Bernhardt‐Römermann,Jörg Brunet,Hans Van Calster,Markéta Chudomelová,Déborah Closset‐Kopp,Pieter De Frenne,Guillaume Decocq,Frank S. Gilliam,John‐Arvid Grytnes,Radim Hédl,Thilo Heinken,Bogdan Jaroszewicz,Martin Kopecký,Jonathan Lenoir,Martin Macek,Frantíšek Máliš,Tobias Naaf,Anna Orczewska,Petr Petřík,Kamila Reczyńska,Fride Høistad Schei,Wolfgang Schmidt,Alina Stachurska‐Swakoń,Tibor Standovár,Krzysztof Świerkosz,Balázs Teleki,Ondřej Vild,Daijiang Li
摘要
Biological nitrogen fixation is a fundamental part of ecosystem functioning. Anthropogenic nitrogen deposition and climate change may, however, limit the competitive advantage of nitrogen-fixing plants, leading to reduced relative diversity of nitrogen-fixing plants. Yet, assessments of changes of nitrogen-fixing plant long-term community diversity are rare. Here, we examine temporal trends in the diversity of nitrogen-fixing plants and their relationships with anthropogenic nitrogen deposition while accounting for changes in temperature and aridity. We used forest-floor vegetation resurveys of temperate forests in Europe and the United States spanning multiple decades. Nitrogen-fixer richness declined as nitrogen deposition increased over time but did not respond to changes in climate. Phylogenetic diversity also declined, as distinct lineages of N-fixers were lost between surveys, but the “winners” and “losers” among nitrogen-fixing lineages varied among study sites, suggesting that losses are context dependent. Anthropogenic nitrogen deposition reduces nitrogen-fixing plant diversity in ways that may strongly affect natural nitrogen fixation.