Nutrient identity modifies the destabilising effects of eutrophication in grasslands

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Abstract

Nutrient enrichment can simultaneously increase and destabilise plant biomass production, with co-limitation by multiple nutrients potentially intensifying these effects. Here, we test how factorial additions of nitrogen (N), phosphorus (P) and potassium with essential nutrients (K+) affect the stability (mean/standard deviation) of aboveground biomass in 34 grasslands over 7 years. Destabilisation with fertilisation was prevalent but was driven by single nutrients, not synergistic nutrient interactions. On average, N-based treatments increased mean biomass production by 21–51% but increased its standard deviation by 40–68% and so consistently reduced stability. Adding P increased interannual variability and reduced stability without altering mean biomass, while K+ had no general effects. Declines in stability were largest in the most nutrient-limited grasslands, or where nutrients reduced species richness or intensified species synchrony. We show that nutrients can differentially impact the stability of biomass production, with N and P in particular disproportionately increasing its interannual variability.

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Carroll, O., Batzer, E., Bharath, S., Borer, E. T., Campana, S., Esch, E., … MacDougall, A. S. (2022, April 1). Nutrient identity modifies the destabilising effects of eutrophication in grasslands. Ecology Letters. John Wiley and Sons Inc. https://doi.org/10.1111/ele.13946

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