Global change progressively increases foliar nitrogen-phosphorus ratios in subtropical forests

  • Yuan Lai (Creator)
  • Songbo Tang (Creator)
  • Hans Lambers (Creator)
  • Peter Hietz (Creator)
  • Wenguang Tang (Creator)
  • Frank S. Gilliam (Creator)
  • Xiankai Lu (Creator)
  • Xianzhen Luo (Creator)
  • Yutong Lin (Creator)
  • Shu Wang (Creator)
  • Feiyan Zeng (Creator)
  • Qi Wang (Creator)
  • Yuanwen Kuang (Creator)

Dataset

Description

Foliar nitrogen (N) to phosphorus (P) ratios (N/P) indicate N versus P limitation in terrestrial ecosystems. Quantifying the long-term dynamics of foliar N/P and their potential drivers is crucial for predicting nutrient status in forest ecosystems under global change. Using 1811 herbarium specimens collected during 1920-2010 in subtropical forests of China, we detected significant increases in foliar N/P (21.2%) and decreases in foliar P concentrations (23.1%). Foliar N/P increased more in evergreen species (22.9%) than in deciduous species (16.9%). Changes in atmospheric CO2 concentrations (Pco2), N deposition and mean annual temperature (MAT) dominantly contributed to the increased foliar N/P of evergreen species, while Pco2, MAT and vapor pressure deficit, to that of deciduous species. Under future Shared Socioeconomic Pathway scenarios, increasing MAT would continuously increase foliar N/P by more 6.5-26.0%. The results suggest that global change progressively and non-uniformly aggravates the N-P imbalance of plant species in subtropical forests.
Date made available26 Feb 2024
PublisherDRYAD

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