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 available | 26 Feb 2024 |
|---|---|
| Publisher | DRYAD |
Datasets
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Global change progressively increases foliar nitrogen-phosphorus ratios in subtropical forests
Lai, Y. (Contributor), Tang, S. (Contributor), Lambers, H. (Contributor), Hietz, P. (Contributor), Tang, W. (Contributor), Gilliam, F. (Contributor), Lu, X. (Contributor), Luo, X. (Contributor), Lin, Y. (Contributor), Wang, S. (Contributor), Zeng, F. (Contributor), Wang, Q. (Contributor) & Kuang, Y. (Contributor), Zenodo, 26 Feb 2024
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