❓Questions❓
1️⃣ Nighttime warming & #NitrogenDeposition ➡️ Temperatures🌡️ of shallow water & deep water & sediment🌊
2️⃣ #Microclimate ➡️ Wetland carbon cycles🔄

Results:
Nighttime warming had an impact on it, while nitrogen deposition had no effect.

#ClimateWarming | #FreshwaterWetlands | #GlobalChange

https://doi.org/10.1093/jpe/rtaf074

🌳 #NitrogenDeposition ➕ phosphorus distribution patterns ➡️ root adaptation

Results:
1️⃣ N deposition restructures root foraging strategies along a “morphological-enzymatic” axis;
2️⃣ P-efficient clones exploit spatial nutrient heterogeneity through root proliferation rather than #RootOrganicAcid investment.

#APaseActivity | #NutrientInteractions | #PhosphorusEfficiency | #RootDynamics

https://doi.org/10.1093/jpe/rtaf062

💭 Long-term #NitrogenDeposition ➡️ leaf traits of #PlantationTree species in #SouthChina

Results:
long-term N addition →
coupling between carbon and water⬆️ →
C allocation shift →
1️⃣ Eucalyptus urophylla: conservative #Defense
2️⃣ Acacia auriculiformis: active defense

#IntrinsicWaterUseEfficiency

https://doi.org/10.1093/jpe/rtaf049

#NitrogenDeposition reduces #arthropod species richness & abundance, threatening #biodiversity. This study shows that natural & semi-natural habitats can buffer against these losses, emphasizing their #conservation value in mitigating N deposition’s adverseeffects @PLOSBiology https://plos.io/4o3RKOO

【💡High Cited 2020-2022 】
Interactive effect of #ClimateWarming and #NitrogenDeposition may shift the dynamics of native and invasive species

Control species:
#SolidagoCanadensis L. & Artemisia argyi Levl. et Van

#BiologicalInvasion | #RelativeChange

https://doi.org/10.1093/jpe/rtaa071

【EDITOR'S CHOICE】
Exploring #PlantAdaptationStrategies to #PhosphorusLimitation induced by #NitrogenAddition: foliar phosphorus allocation and #RootFunctionalTraits analysis in two dominant subalpine tree species

#NitrogenDeposition | #RootMorphology | #RootExudation

https://doi.org/10.1093/jpe/rtae060

The study aimed to thoroughly investigate the effects of #NitrogenDeposition on the growth, #ChlorophyllFluorescence and yield of #ZanthoxylumBungeanumMaxim. in both monoculture and intercropping systems with #CapsicumAnnuum L. and #GlycineMax.
Details: https://doi.org/10.1093/jpe/rtae097
New NIOO publication: #Soil elemental cycles become more coupled in response to increased #nitrogendeposition in a #semiarid #shrubland. #elementalcoupling #nutrientavailability #nutrients
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11104-024-06644-4
Soil elemental cycles become more coupled in response to increased nitrogen deposition in a semiarid shrubland - Plant and Soil

Background and aims Increased N deposition can break the coupled associations among chemical elements in soil, many of which are essential plant nutrients. We evaluated the effects of four years of N deposition (0, 10, 20, 50 kg N ha−1 yr−1) on the temporal dynamics of the spatial co-variation (i.e., coupling) among ten chemical elements in soils from a semiarid shrubland in central Spain. Methods Soil element coupling was calculated as the mean of Spearman rank correlation coefficients of all possible pairwise interactions among elemental cycles, in absolute value. We also investigated the role of atomic properties of elements as regulators of coupling. Results While N deposition impacts on nutrient bioavailability were variable, soil elemental coupling consistently increased in response to N. Coupling responses also varied among elements and N treatments, and four out of ten elemental cycles also responded to N in a season-dependent manner. Atomic properties of elements such as mass, valence orbitals, and electronegativity contributed to explain the spatial coupling of soil elements, most likely due their role on the capacity of elements to interact with one another. Conclusions The cumulative effects of N deposition can alter the spatial associations among chemical elements in soils, while not having evident consequences on the bioavailability of single elments. These results indicate that considering how multiple elements co-vary in topsoils may provide a useful framework to better understand the simultaneous response of multiple elemental cycles to global change.

SpringerLink