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Drivers of foliar 15 N trends in southern China over the last century.

Songbo TangJianfeng LiuFrank S GilliamPeter HietzZhi-Heng WangXiankai LuFeiyan ZengDazhi WenEnqing HouYuan LaiYunting FangYing TuDan XiZhiqun HuangDian-Xiang ZhangRong WangYuanwen Kuang
Published in: Global change biology (2022)
Foliar stable nitrogen (N) isotopes (δ 15 N) generally reflect N availability to plants and have been used to infer about changes thereof. However, previous studies of temporal trends in foliar δ 15 N have ignored the influence of confounding factors, leading to uncertainties on its indication to N availability. In this study, we measured foliar δ 15 N of 1811 herbarium specimens from 12 plant species collected in southern China forests from 1920 to 2010. We explored how changes in atmospheric CO 2 , N deposition and global warming have affected foliar δ 15 N and N concentrations ([N]) and identified whether N availability decreased in southern China. Across all species, foliar δ 15 N significantly decreased by 0.82‰ over the study period. However, foliar [N] did not decrease significantly, implying N homeostasis in forest trees in the region. The spatiotemporal patterns of foliar δ 15 N were explained by mean annual temperature (MAT), atmospheric CO 2 ( P CO 2 ), atmospheric N deposition, and foliar [N]. The spatiotemporal trends of foliar [N] were explained by MAT, temperature seasonality, P CO 2 , and N deposition. N deposition within the rates from 5.3 to 12.6 kg N ha -1  year -1 substantially contributed to the temporal decline in foliar δ 15 N. The decline in foliar δ 15 N was not accompanied by changes in foliar [N] and therefore does not necessarily reflect a decline in N availability. This is important to understand changes in N availability, which is essential to validate and parameterize biogeochemical cycles of N.
Keyphrases
  • climate change
  • particulate matter
  • genetic diversity