COS 31-5 - Testing for belowground resource partitioning in experimental grassland communities

Tuesday, August 7, 2007: 9:20 AM
Almaden Blrm I, San Jose Hilton
Stefanie von Felten1, Nina Buchmann2, Andrew Hector3, Pascal Niklaus4, Bernhard Schmid4 and Michael Scherer-Lorenzen5, (1)Institute of Plant Sciences, ETH Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland, (2)Institute of Agricultural Science, ETH Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland, (3)Institute of Evolutionary Biology and Environmental Studies, University of Zürich, Zürich, Switzerland, (4)Department of Evolutionary Biology and Environmental Studies, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland, (5)Faculty of Biology, University of Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany
Resource partitioning due to niche separation between species may explain positive diversity-productivity relationships in terrestrial plant communities. However, there is little experimental evidence for such resource partitioning. In a temperate grassland field with experimental communities of one, three, and six species, we tested (1) whether species differ in soil nitrogen uptake patterns, (2) whether species in mixtures partition soil N due to niche separation, and (3) whether realized niches of N uptake narrow with increasing species richness. Six treatment combinations consisting of three different chemical forms of 15N-labelled nitrogen (nitrate, ammonium, and dual 15N-13C-labelled glycine) injected at 2 depths (3 and 12 cm) were applied to each community in a split plot design. After 48 hours, aboveground plant material was harvested for determination of the 15N/14N (13C/12C) ratio. The experiment was conducted twice, each time with another pool of six species. Although species differed in their N uptake patterns in monocultures, these differences neither led to increased N uptake of mixtures compared to monocultures, nor did niche separation increase with species richness. Rather, our species behaved more similar in the 6-species mixtures than in the monocultures or in the 3-species mixtures. Furthermore, there was no ecologically significant uptake of intact glycine (organic N) by any of the species. Our results suggest that spatial and chemical partitioning of N is of minor importance for the functioning of species mixtures in temperate grasslands.

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