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Experimental nitrogen fertilisation globally accelerates, then slows decomposition of leaf litter

Allison L. GillDepartment of Biology Williams College Williamstown MA 01267 USAJonathan S. SchillingDepartment of Plant & Microbial Biology University of Minnesota Saint Paul MN 55108 USASarah E. HobbieDepartment of Ecology, Evolution, Behavior University of Minnesota Saint Paul MN 55108 USA
2021en
ABI

Аннотация

Plant litter decomposition is a central process in the carbon (C) cycle and sensitive to ongoing anthropogenic nitrogen (N) fertilisation. Previous syntheses evaluating the effect of N fertilisation on litter decomposition relied largely on models that define a constant rate of mass loss throughout decomposition, which may mask hypothesised shifts in the effect of N fertilisation on litter decomposition dynamics. In this meta-analysis, we compared the performance of four empirical decomposition models and showed that N fertilisation consistently accelerates early-stage but slows late-stage decomposition when the model structure allows for flexibility in decomposition rates through time. Within a particular substrate, early-stage N-stimulation of decomposition was associated with reduced rates of late-stage decay. Because the products of early- vs. late-stage decomposition are stabilised in soils through distinct chemical and physical mechanisms, N-induced changes in the litter decomposition process may influence the formation and cycling of soil C, the largest terrestrial C pool.

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