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Nitrogen enrichment modifies plant community structure via changes to plant-soil feedback.

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Nitrogen enrichment modifies plant community structure via changes to plant-soil feedback. / Manning, P.; Morrison, S. A.; Bonkowski, M. et al.
In: Oecologia, Vol. 157, No. 4, 10.2008, p. 661-673.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Manning P, Morrison SA, Bonkowski M, Bardgett RD. Nitrogen enrichment modifies plant community structure via changes to plant-soil feedback. Oecologia. 2008 Oct;157(4):661-673. doi: 10.1007/s00442-008-1104-0

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Manning, P. ; Morrison, S. A. ; Bonkowski, M. et al. / Nitrogen enrichment modifies plant community structure via changes to plant-soil feedback. In: Oecologia. 2008 ; Vol. 157, No. 4. pp. 661-673.

Bibtex

@article{af39ecbb382c4e7481ca686bc180191e,
title = "Nitrogen enrichment modifies plant community structure via changes to plant-soil feedback.",
abstract = "We tested the hypothesis that N enrichment modifies plant–soil feedback relationships, resulting in changes to plant community composition. This was done in a two-phase glasshouse experiment. In the first phase, we grew eight annual plant species in monoculture at two levels of N addition. Plants were harvested at senescence and the effect of each species on a range of soil properties was measured. In the second phase, the eight plant species were grown in multi-species mixtures in the eight soils conditioned by the species in the first phase, at both levels of N addition. At senescence, species performance was measured as aboveground biomass. We found that in the first phase, plant species identity strongly influenced several soil properties, including microbial and protist biomass, soil moisture content and the availability of several soil nutrients. Species effects on the soil were mostly independent of N addition and several were strongly correlated with plant biomass. In the second phase, both the performance of individual species and overall community structure were influenced by the interacting effects of the species identity of the previous soil occupant and the rate of N addition. This indicates that N enrichment modified plant–soil feedback. The performance of two species correlated with differences in soil N availability that were generated by the species formerly occupying the soil. However, negative feedback (poorer performance on the soil of conspecifics relative to that of heterospecifics) was only observed for one species. In conclusion, we provide evidence that N enrichment modifies plant–soil feedback relationships and that these modifications may affect plant community composition. Field testing and further investigations into which mechanisms dominate feedback are required before we fully understand how and when feedback processes determine plant community responses to N enrichment. Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (doi:10.1007/s00442-008-1104-0) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.",
keywords = "Nitrogen deposition - Decomposition - Soil community - Nutrient availability - Plant competition",
author = "P. Manning and Morrison, {S. A.} and M. Bonkowski and Bardgett, {Richard D.}",
year = "2008",
month = oct,
doi = "10.1007/s00442-008-1104-0",
language = "English",
volume = "157",
pages = "661--673",
journal = "Oecologia",
issn = "0029-8549",
publisher = "Springer-Verlag",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Nitrogen enrichment modifies plant community structure via changes to plant-soil feedback.

AU - Manning, P.

AU - Morrison, S. A.

AU - Bonkowski, M.

AU - Bardgett, Richard D.

PY - 2008/10

Y1 - 2008/10

N2 - We tested the hypothesis that N enrichment modifies plant–soil feedback relationships, resulting in changes to plant community composition. This was done in a two-phase glasshouse experiment. In the first phase, we grew eight annual plant species in monoculture at two levels of N addition. Plants were harvested at senescence and the effect of each species on a range of soil properties was measured. In the second phase, the eight plant species were grown in multi-species mixtures in the eight soils conditioned by the species in the first phase, at both levels of N addition. At senescence, species performance was measured as aboveground biomass. We found that in the first phase, plant species identity strongly influenced several soil properties, including microbial and protist biomass, soil moisture content and the availability of several soil nutrients. Species effects on the soil were mostly independent of N addition and several were strongly correlated with plant biomass. In the second phase, both the performance of individual species and overall community structure were influenced by the interacting effects of the species identity of the previous soil occupant and the rate of N addition. This indicates that N enrichment modified plant–soil feedback. The performance of two species correlated with differences in soil N availability that were generated by the species formerly occupying the soil. However, negative feedback (poorer performance on the soil of conspecifics relative to that of heterospecifics) was only observed for one species. In conclusion, we provide evidence that N enrichment modifies plant–soil feedback relationships and that these modifications may affect plant community composition. Field testing and further investigations into which mechanisms dominate feedback are required before we fully understand how and when feedback processes determine plant community responses to N enrichment. Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (doi:10.1007/s00442-008-1104-0) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

AB - We tested the hypothesis that N enrichment modifies plant–soil feedback relationships, resulting in changes to plant community composition. This was done in a two-phase glasshouse experiment. In the first phase, we grew eight annual plant species in monoculture at two levels of N addition. Plants were harvested at senescence and the effect of each species on a range of soil properties was measured. In the second phase, the eight plant species were grown in multi-species mixtures in the eight soils conditioned by the species in the first phase, at both levels of N addition. At senescence, species performance was measured as aboveground biomass. We found that in the first phase, plant species identity strongly influenced several soil properties, including microbial and protist biomass, soil moisture content and the availability of several soil nutrients. Species effects on the soil were mostly independent of N addition and several were strongly correlated with plant biomass. In the second phase, both the performance of individual species and overall community structure were influenced by the interacting effects of the species identity of the previous soil occupant and the rate of N addition. This indicates that N enrichment modified plant–soil feedback. The performance of two species correlated with differences in soil N availability that were generated by the species formerly occupying the soil. However, negative feedback (poorer performance on the soil of conspecifics relative to that of heterospecifics) was only observed for one species. In conclusion, we provide evidence that N enrichment modifies plant–soil feedback relationships and that these modifications may affect plant community composition. Field testing and further investigations into which mechanisms dominate feedback are required before we fully understand how and when feedback processes determine plant community responses to N enrichment. Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (doi:10.1007/s00442-008-1104-0) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

KW - Nitrogen deposition - Decomposition - Soil community - Nutrient availability - Plant competition

U2 - 10.1007/s00442-008-1104-0

DO - 10.1007/s00442-008-1104-0

M3 - Journal article

VL - 157

SP - 661

EP - 673

JO - Oecologia

JF - Oecologia

SN - 0029-8549

IS - 4

ER -