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How do soil micro‐organisms respond to N, P and NP additions? Application of the ecological framework of (co‐)limitation by multiple resources
Author(s) -
Ma Beibei,
Zhou Xiaolong,
Zhang Qi,
Qin Mingsen,
Hu Linggang,
Yang Kena,
Xie Zhen,
Ma Wenbin,
Chen Beibei,
Feng Huyuan,
Liu Yongjun,
Du Guozhen,
Ma Xiaojun,
Le Roux Xavier
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
journal of ecology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.452
H-Index - 181
eISSN - 1365-2745
pISSN - 0022-0477
DOI - 10.1111/1365-2745.13179
Subject(s) - biology , taxon , nutrient , ecology , phylogenetic diversity , ecosystem , biomass (ecology) , archaea , phylogenetic tree , phosphorus , abundance (ecology) , grassland , taxonomic rank , biodiversity , bacteria , botany , chemistry , biochemistry , genetics , organic chemistry , gene
Abstract Nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) often limit biological processes in terrestrial ecosystems. Based on previous studies mainly focusing on plants, the concept of resource limitation has evolved towards a theory of (co)limitations by multiple resources. However, this ecological framework has not been applied to analyse how soil micro‐organisms and plants concurrently respond to N and/or P addition, and whether these responses are constrained by phylogenetic relatedness. Here, we applied this framework to analyse microbial and plant responses at community and taxon levels to different fertilization treatments (four N levels without P; four P levels without N and four NP levels) in Tibetan grasslands. Total plant biomass showed serial limitation by N then P, and most plant species were limited by N only. Total archaeal abundance decreased with P addition, but diverse nutrient limitation types were observed for archaeal taxa. Closely related archaeal taxa tended to similarly respond to N, and functional similarity between distant archaeal groups was observed for response to P, possibly due to functional convergence. In contrast, total bacteria slightly increased with P addition only when plants remained N limited, whereas without N limitation, plants rather than bacteria benefited from P addition. Most bacterial taxa were limited by other resources than N and P, and no clear phylogenetic signals were observed regarding bacterial responses to N/P additions. Synthesis. We propose a novel approach for characterizing microbial response types to nutrient addition. It demonstrates that in Tibetan meadows, most dominant plant species, archaea and bacteria, respectively, depend on N, both N and P and other resources.