Ectomycorrhiza (ECM) plays an important role in plant nitrogen (N) nutrition and regulates plant responded to climate warming. We conducted a field experiment in a natural forest and a plantation in the eastern Tibetan Plateau to estimate the warming effects of open-top chambers (OTC) on ECM and N nutrition of Picea asperata seedlings. Four-year warming significantly decreased ECM colonization, ECM fungal biomass, fine root vigor, and the N concentration of leaf, stem and coarse root, but significantly increased fine root N concentration and N content of leaf, stem, fine root and whole plant in natural forest. Contrarily, warming induced no obvious change in most of these parameters in plantation. Moreover, warming decreased rhizospheric soil inorganic N content in both forests. Our results showed that four-year warming was not beneficial for ECM colonization of P. asperata seedlings in the two forests, and the seedlings in natural forest were more sensitive and flexible to experimental warming than in plantation. The changes of ECM colonization and fine root biomass for effective N uptake would be good for plant growth and remit N leaching under future warming in natural forest.
Summary To explain the effects of short‐term N addition on plant biomass allocation and on carbon (C) and nitrogen (N) pools in an alpine scrub ecosystem, we carried out a field experiment in Sibiraea angustata scrubland on the eastern margin of the Qinghai‐Tibetan Plateau of China. After one and a half years of N addition at four rates (N0, control; N20, 20; N50, 50; N100, 100 kg N ha−1 year−1), we investigated the amount and allocation of biomass and the C and N pools in several parts of the ecosystem, including shrubs (leaves, shoots and branches, coarse roots and fine roots), grass (above‐ and below‐ground) and litter (wood and leaf debris) components, and seven depth intervals within the soil (0–5, 5–10, 10–20, 20–30, 30–50, 50–70 and 70–100 cm). The results were as follows: (i) total vegetation biomass showed a linear increase with the increase in N (P < 0.05), mainly from the increased root biomass in both shrubs and grasses, (ii) the ecosystem C and N storage were 36 and 3.26 kg m−2, respectively, of which the shrub, grass, litter and soil components contributed 11.08, 0.47, 0.25 and 88%, respectively, to the C pool and 3.07, 0.16, 0.08 and 97%, respectively, to the N pool, (iii) the ecosystem N pool did not change in response to the addition of N, whereas the ecosystem C pool responded linearly to increasing N (P < 0.05). These results suggest that the alpine scrub ecosystem functions as a net C sink under increasing atmospheric N deposition, mainly by promoting belowground C sequestration. Highlights Effects of short‐term N addition on biomass allocation and C and N pools in alpine scrub. Response to N addition in C pool of components of the ecosystem and soil at depth (0–100 cm). Root:shoot ratio of vegetation and ecosystem C pool increased linearly with increasing N. Alpine scrub ecosystem may function as a net C sink under increasing atmospheric N deposition.
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