Biogeochemical evidence raises questions on the longevity of warming‐induced growth enhancements in wet boreal forests

Abstract In wet regions, temperature increases can prompt increases in vegetation growth. Vegetation responses are determined in part by N and P availability, yet the relative importance of N‐ versus P‐cycling supporting growth is unclear. Prompted by studies demonstrating that warming‐enhanced N cy...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Susan E. Ziegler, Sharon A. Billings, Frances A. Podrebarac, Kate A. Edwards, Andrea Skinner, Kate M. Buckeridge, Trevor C. VandenBoer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2024-12-01
Series:Ecosphere
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.70109
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1832584155053948928
author Susan E. Ziegler
Sharon A. Billings
Frances A. Podrebarac
Kate A. Edwards
Andrea Skinner
Kate M. Buckeridge
Trevor C. VandenBoer
author_facet Susan E. Ziegler
Sharon A. Billings
Frances A. Podrebarac
Kate A. Edwards
Andrea Skinner
Kate M. Buckeridge
Trevor C. VandenBoer
author_sort Susan E. Ziegler
collection DOAJ
description Abstract In wet regions, temperature increases can prompt increases in vegetation growth. Vegetation responses are determined in part by N and P availability, yet the relative importance of N‐ versus P‐cycling supporting growth is unclear. Prompted by studies demonstrating that warming‐enhanced N cycling supports greater productivity and soil C stocks in warmer forests along a wet boreal forest transect, we tested the hypothesis that enhanced organic matter cycling supports greater P demand in relatively warm forests. We further asked whether evidence from soil and litterfall fluxes indicates increases in P demand are met in these forests or potentially pose a limit on warming‐enhanced productivity. Elevated tree growth and litterfall rates coupled with similar litterfall P concentrations suggest P demand is greater at warmer sites. By assessing multiple soil N and P stocks, inputs, and stoichiometry, we observed three lines of evidence indicating that this greater P demand is met through a combination of plant tissue plasticity and adequate surface soil P supplies. First, warming‐enhanced N‐cycling results in an increase in N:P of surface soils and litterfall inputs indicating a reduction in needle litter P relative to N. Second, organic layer C:P and P stocks were maintained across latitude despite increases in litterfall P inputs in the warmest forests suggesting increased cycling and retention of P by trees. Third, in contrast with soil N, estimates of soil P residence times are not coupled with those of C, and soil C:P does not correlate with tree growth across sites signifying that N, not P, may limit tree growth in these forests. Results here provide evidence that increased productivity with warming and enhanced N cycling in wet boreal forests is not likely to be limited by available P over the decadal timescale represented by the temperature gradient along this climate transect. However, similarities observed between warming‐enhanced N availability in the current study's forests and that in boreal forests receiving high N additions indicate a need to better understand how boreal trees may adapt to shifts away from N limitation. Such new knowledge is needed to improve our understanding of the longevity of this important climate feedback.
format Article
id doaj-art-0e92a0805e0649778b379e8da58087d8
institution Kabale University
issn 2150-8925
language English
publishDate 2024-12-01
publisher Wiley
record_format Article
series Ecosphere
spelling doaj-art-0e92a0805e0649778b379e8da58087d82025-01-27T14:51:34ZengWileyEcosphere2150-89252024-12-011512n/an/a10.1002/ecs2.70109Biogeochemical evidence raises questions on the longevity of warming‐induced growth enhancements in wet boreal forestsSusan E. Ziegler0Sharon A. Billings1Frances A. Podrebarac2Kate A. Edwards3Andrea Skinner4Kate M. Buckeridge5Trevor C. VandenBoer6Department of Earth Sciences Memorial University St. John's Newfoundland and Labrador CanadaDepartment of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Kansas Biological Survey & Center for Ecological Research University of Kansas Lawrence Kansas USADepartment of Earth Sciences Memorial University St. John's Newfoundland and Labrador CanadaNatural Resources Canada, Canadian Forest Service Corner Brook Newfoundland and Labrador CanadaNatural Resources Canada, Canadian Forest Service Corner Brook Newfoundland and Labrador CanadaDepartment of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Kansas Biological Survey & Center for Ecological Research University of Kansas Lawrence Kansas USADepartment of Earth Sciences Memorial University St. John's Newfoundland and Labrador CanadaAbstract In wet regions, temperature increases can prompt increases in vegetation growth. Vegetation responses are determined in part by N and P availability, yet the relative importance of N‐ versus P‐cycling supporting growth is unclear. Prompted by studies demonstrating that warming‐enhanced N cycling supports greater productivity and soil C stocks in warmer forests along a wet boreal forest transect, we tested the hypothesis that enhanced organic matter cycling supports greater P demand in relatively warm forests. We further asked whether evidence from soil and litterfall fluxes indicates increases in P demand are met in these forests or potentially pose a limit on warming‐enhanced productivity. Elevated tree growth and litterfall rates coupled with similar litterfall P concentrations suggest P demand is greater at warmer sites. By assessing multiple soil N and P stocks, inputs, and stoichiometry, we observed three lines of evidence indicating that this greater P demand is met through a combination of plant tissue plasticity and adequate surface soil P supplies. First, warming‐enhanced N‐cycling results in an increase in N:P of surface soils and litterfall inputs indicating a reduction in needle litter P relative to N. Second, organic layer C:P and P stocks were maintained across latitude despite increases in litterfall P inputs in the warmest forests suggesting increased cycling and retention of P by trees. Third, in contrast with soil N, estimates of soil P residence times are not coupled with those of C, and soil C:P does not correlate with tree growth across sites signifying that N, not P, may limit tree growth in these forests. Results here provide evidence that increased productivity with warming and enhanced N cycling in wet boreal forests is not likely to be limited by available P over the decadal timescale represented by the temperature gradient along this climate transect. However, similarities observed between warming‐enhanced N availability in the current study's forests and that in boreal forests receiving high N additions indicate a need to better understand how boreal trees may adapt to shifts away from N limitation. Such new knowledge is needed to improve our understanding of the longevity of this important climate feedback.https://doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.70109boreal forest soil: nutrient limitationcarbon cyclingclimate feedbacknitrogen cyclingphosphorus cycling
spellingShingle Susan E. Ziegler
Sharon A. Billings
Frances A. Podrebarac
Kate A. Edwards
Andrea Skinner
Kate M. Buckeridge
Trevor C. VandenBoer
Biogeochemical evidence raises questions on the longevity of warming‐induced growth enhancements in wet boreal forests
Ecosphere
boreal forest soil: nutrient limitation
carbon cycling
climate feedback
nitrogen cycling
phosphorus cycling
title Biogeochemical evidence raises questions on the longevity of warming‐induced growth enhancements in wet boreal forests
title_full Biogeochemical evidence raises questions on the longevity of warming‐induced growth enhancements in wet boreal forests
title_fullStr Biogeochemical evidence raises questions on the longevity of warming‐induced growth enhancements in wet boreal forests
title_full_unstemmed Biogeochemical evidence raises questions on the longevity of warming‐induced growth enhancements in wet boreal forests
title_short Biogeochemical evidence raises questions on the longevity of warming‐induced growth enhancements in wet boreal forests
title_sort biogeochemical evidence raises questions on the longevity of warming induced growth enhancements in wet boreal forests
topic boreal forest soil: nutrient limitation
carbon cycling
climate feedback
nitrogen cycling
phosphorus cycling
url https://doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.70109
work_keys_str_mv AT susaneziegler biogeochemicalevidenceraisesquestionsonthelongevityofwarminginducedgrowthenhancementsinwetborealforests
AT sharonabillings biogeochemicalevidenceraisesquestionsonthelongevityofwarminginducedgrowthenhancementsinwetborealforests
AT francesapodrebarac biogeochemicalevidenceraisesquestionsonthelongevityofwarminginducedgrowthenhancementsinwetborealforests
AT kateaedwards biogeochemicalevidenceraisesquestionsonthelongevityofwarminginducedgrowthenhancementsinwetborealforests
AT andreaskinner biogeochemicalevidenceraisesquestionsonthelongevityofwarminginducedgrowthenhancementsinwetborealforests
AT katembuckeridge biogeochemicalevidenceraisesquestionsonthelongevityofwarminginducedgrowthenhancementsinwetborealforests
AT trevorcvandenboer biogeochemicalevidenceraisesquestionsonthelongevityofwarminginducedgrowthenhancementsinwetborealforests