Data from: Elevated CO2 and water addition enhance nitrogen turnover in grassland plants with implications for temporal stability

  • Feike A. Dijkstra (Creator)
  • Yolima Carrillo Espanol (Creator)
  • Dana M. Blumenthal (Creator)
  • Kevin E. Mueller (Creator)
  • Daniel R. LeCain (Creator)
  • Jack A. Morgan (Creator)
  • Tamara J. Zelikova (Creator)
  • David G. Williams (University of Wyoming) (Creator)
  • Ronald F. Follett (Creator)
  • Elise Pendall (Creator)
  • Dan R. LeCain (Creator)

Dataset

Description

Temporal variation in soil nitrogen (N) availability affects growth of grassland communities that differ in their use and reuse of N. In a seven-year-long climate change experiment in a semiarid grassland, the temporal stability of plant biomass production varied with plant N turnover (reliance on externally acquired N relative to internally recycled N). Species with high N turnover were less stable in time compared to species with low N turnover. In contrast, N turnover at the community level was positively associated with asynchrony in biomass production, which in turn increased community temporal stability. Elevated CO2 and summer irrigation, but not warming, enhanced community N turnover and stability, possibly because treatments promoted greater abundance of species with high N turnover. Our study highlights the importance of plant N turnover for determining the temporal stability of individual species and plant communities affected by climate change.
Date made available12 Feb 2019
PublisherZENODO
Geographical coverageNorth America

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