Publication | Closed Access
Plant Species Richness Increased Belowground Plant Biomass and Substrate Nitrogen Removal in a Constructed Wetland
30
Citations
55
References
2013
Year
BiogeochemistryWetland EcologyEngineeringTerrestrial EcologyNutrient CycleNutrient ManagementPlant Species RichnessPlant SpeciesAboveground-belowground InteractionPlant NitrogenConstructed WetlandBelowground Plant Biomass
Abstract The effects of plant species richness on both above‐ and belowground plant biomass, plant nitrogen (N) pool size, and substrate N concentrations were studied in a full‐scale subsurface vertical‐flow constructed wetland (CW). Results showed that (i) plant species richness increased belowground plant biomass and its N pool size but had no effect on aboveground plant biomass and its N pool size; (ii) plant species richness increased substrate N removal, especially ammonium N removal; and (iii) plant species richness had no effect on plant N use efficiency, suggesting that the N pool size increased with increasing plant species richness. More N accumulation could be removed through harvesting plant biomass. We concluded that the N removal performance of the CW improved by plant species richness through increasing belowground biomass and relevant N pool size.
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