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Chronic Nitrogen Addition Brings Negative Effect to Desert Herb Plant Community: Study

Jan 23, 2018

A recent study by Chinese scientists showed that continuous nitrogen addition in a long run will inhibit the herb plant community in arid regions. 

A three-year study, carried out in the Gurbantunggut desert, a typical temperate desert of central Asia, found that nitrogen addition reduced plant richness. The species richness will cut in half with a chronic high nitrogen application in three generations. 

A research team led by Prof. ZHANG Yuanming from Xinjiang Institute of Ecology and Geography (XIEG) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, along with their collaborator Dr. Matthew Bowker from Northern Arizona University, monitored dynamic responses of community structure, richness, evenness, density and biomass of herbaceous plants to experimental nitrogen addition in three seasons in each of three years. 

"Evenness and density were relatively insensitive to all but the greatest levels of N addition for two generations, but negative effects emerged in the third generation," said ZHANG. 

They found that low and intermediate levels of nitrogen deposition increased biomass, but the stimulatory effects disappeared in the third generation. When nitrogen deposition reaches a high level, it will suppress biomass. 

"The interrelationships between N deposition and the different plant community attributes change not only seasonally, but also progressively change through time," ZHANG added. 

Their study entitled "Chronic nitrogen addition induces a cascade of plant community responses with both seasonal and progressive dynamics" was published in Science of The Total Environment.
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