Nitrogen limitation constrains sustainability of ecosystem response to COâ‚‚

Peter B. Reich, Sarah E. Hobbie, Tali D. Lee, David S. Ellsworth, Jason B. West, David Tilman, Johannes M. Knops, Shahid Naeem, Jared Trost

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticle

    793 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Enhanced plant biomass accumulation in response to elevated atmospheric CO 2 concentration could dampen the future rate of increase in CO 2 levels and associated climate warming. However, it is unknown whether CO 2-induced stimulation of plant growth and biomass accumulation will be sustained or whether limited nitrogen (N) availability constrains greater plant growth in a CO 2-enriched world 1-9. Here we show, after a six-year field study of perennial grassland species grown under ambient and elevated levels of CO 2 and N, that low availability of N progressively suppresses the positive response of plant biomass to elevated CO 2. Initially, the stimulation of total plant biomass by elevated CO 2 was no greater at enriched than at ambient N supply. After four to six years, however, elevated CO 2 stimulated plant biomass much less under ambient than enriched N supply. This response was consistent with the temporally divergent effects of elevated CO 2 on soil and plant N dynamics at differing levels of N supply. Our results indicate that variability in availability of soil N and deposition of atmospheric N are both likely to influence the response of plant biomass accumulation to elevated atmospheric CO 2. Given that limitations to productivity resulting from the insufficient availability of N are widespread in both unmanaged and managed vegetation5, 7-9, soil N supply is probably an important constraint on global terrestrial responses to elevated CO 2.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)922-925
    Number of pages4
    JournalNature
    Volume440
    Issue number7086
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 13 Apr 2006

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