Publication | Closed Access
Deepened snow loosens temporal coupling between plant and microbial N utilization and induces ecosystem N losses
27
Citations
65
References
2022
Year
Seasonal differences in plant and microbial nitrogen (N) acquisition are believed to be a major mechanism that maximizes ecosystem N retention. There is also a concern that climate change may interrupt the delicate balance in N allocation between plants and microbes. Yet, convincing experimental evidence is still lacking. Using a <sup>15</sup> N tracer, we assessed how deepened snow affects the temporal coupling between plant and microbial N utilization in a temperate Mongolian grassland. We found that microbial <sup>15</sup> N recovery peaked in winter, accounting for 22% of the total ecosystem <sup>15</sup> N recovery, and then rapidly declined during the spring thaw. By stimulating N loss via N<sub>2</sub> O emission and leaching, deepened snow reduced the total ecosystem <sup>15</sup> N recovery by 42% during the spring thaw. As the growing season progresses, the <sup>15</sup> N released from microbial biomass was taken up by plants, and the competitive advantage for N shifted from microbes to plants. Plant <sup>15</sup> N recovery reached its peak in August, accounting for 17% of the total ecosystem <sup>15</sup> N recovery. The Granger causality test showed that the temporal dynamics of plant <sup>15</sup> N recovery can be predicted by microbial <sup>15</sup> N recovery under ambient snow but not under deepened snow. In addition, plant <sup>15</sup> N recovery in August was positively correlated with and best explained by microbial <sup>15</sup> N recovery in March. The lower microbial <sup>15</sup> N recovery under deepened snow in March reduced plant <sup>15</sup> N recovery by 73% in August. Together, our results provide direct evidence of seasonal differences in plant and microbial N utilization that are conducive to ecosystem N retention; however, deepened snow disrupted the temporal coupling between plant-microbial N use and turnover. These findings suggest that changes in snowfall patterns may significantly alter ecosystem N cycling and N-based greenhouse gas emissions under future climate change. We highlight the importance of better representing winter processes and their response to winter climate change in biogeochemical models when assessing N cycling under global change.
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