Authors
Benjamin Z Houlton, Daniel M Sigman, Edward AG Schuur, Lars O Hedin
Publication date
2007/5/22
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
104
Issue
21
Pages
8902-8906
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Description
The response of tropical forests to climate change will depend on individual plant species' nutritional strategies, which have not been defined in the case of the nitrogen nutrition that is critical to sustaining plant growth and photosynthesis. We used isotope natural abundances to show that a group of tropical plant species with diverse growth strategies (trees and ferns, canopy, and subcanopy) relied on a common pool of inorganic nitrogen, rather than specializing on different nitrogen pools. Moreover, the tropical species we examined changed their dominant nitrogen source abruptly, and in unison, in response to precipitation change. This threshold response indicates a coherent strategy among species to exploit the most available form of nitrogen in soils. The apparent community-wide flexibility in nitrogen uptake suggests that diverse species within tropical forests can physiologically track changes in nitrogen …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
BZ Houlton, DM Sigman, EAG Schuur, LO Hedin - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2007