Inputs of available nitrogen (N) to ecosystems have grown over the recent past. There is limited general understanding of how increased N inputs affect the cycling and retention of other potentially limiting nutrients. Using a plant-soil nutrient model, and by explicitly coupling N and phosphorus (P) in plant biomass, we examine the impact of increasing N supply on the ecosystem cycling and retention of P, assuming that the main impact of N is to increase plant growth. We find divergent responses in the P cycle depending on the specific pathway by which nutrients are lost from the ecosystem. Retention of P is promoted if the relative propensity for loss of plant available P is greater than that for the loss of less readily available organic P. This is the first theoretical demonstration that the coupled response of ecosystem-scale nutrient cycles critically depends on the form of nutrient loss. P retention might be lessened, or reversed, depending on the kinetics and size of a buffering reactive P pool. These properties determine the reactive pool's ability to supply available P. Parameterization of the model across a range of forest ecosystems spanning various environmental and climatic conditions indicates that enhanced plant growth due to increased N should trigger increased P conservation within ecosystems while leading to more dissolved organic P loss. We discuss how the magnitude and direction of the effect of N may also depend on other processes.nitrogen cycle ͉ nitrogen inputs ͉ phosphorus cycle ͉ phosphorus retention H uman activities have caused increased nitrogen (N) inputs to ecosystems through atmospheric deposition, fertilizers, and spread of N-fixing plants (1-3). The effects of N enrichment have been considered with respect to the N cycle and in relation to carbon (C) storage (4-6), yet there is limited general understanding of how increased N inputs affect the cycling and retention of other important nutrients, such as phosphorus (P) (7). N and P are important for ecosystem functioning because both nutrients commonly limit production of plant biomass (8). The response of plant production to atmospheric deposition, climate change, and other modern human influences will therefore be mediated by changes in the availability of these elements. However, essential elements do not cycle through the ecosystem independently. Through growth and metabolism, plants couple N and P and other required elements in relatively constrained ratios (9, 10), causing nutrient cycles to be linked at the scale of entire ecosystems (11). Although recent studies have focused on the impact of increased N on ecosystem C balances (5, 6), the question of how increased N affects the internal distribution, cycling, and forms of P loss from systems remains largely unexplored, except for a few experimental studies (12, 13). Given the importance of P in regulating ecosystem processes, such as plant production or decomposition, sometimes in combination with N (8, 14, 15), and potentially governing long term ecosystem dynamics (16), ...