Litcius/Paper detail

Grassland responses to elevated CO2 determined by plant–microbe competition for phosphorus

Ben Keane, Iain P. Hartley, Christopher Taylor, Jonathan R. Leake, Marcel R. Hoosbeek, F. Miglietta, Gareth K. Phoenix

2023Nature Geoscience57 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Rising atmospheric CO2 has stimulated plant productivity, with terrestrial ecosystems currently absorbing nearly one-third of anthropogenic CO2 emissions. Increases in photosynthesis can subsequently lead to increased carbon (C) storage in plants and soil. However, there is growing evidence that nitrogen (N) availability constrains elevated CO2 (eCO2) responses, yet we know much less about the role of phosphorus (P) limitation on productivity under eCO2. This is important because P-limited ecosystems are globally widespread, and the biogeochemical cycles of N and P differ fundamentally. In the Peak District National Park of northern England, we conducted a free-air CO2 enrichment (FACE) experiment for three years on two contrasting P-limited grasslands under long-term nutrient manipulation. Here we show that competition between plants and microbes for P can determine plant productivity responses to eCO2. In a limestone grassland, aboveground productivity increased (16%) and microbial biomass P remained unchanged, whereas in an acidic grassland, aboveground productivity and P uptake declined (11% and 20%, respectively), but P immobilization into microbial biomass increased (36%). Our results demonstrate that strong competition with microbes can cause plant P uptake to decline under eCO2, with implications for the future productivity of P-limited ecosystems in response to climate change. The competition between grassland vegetation and microbes for phosphorus controls how plant productivity responds to elevated CO2, according to free-air CO2 enrichment experiments on phosphorus-limited grasslands.

Topics & Concepts

GrasslandProductivityBiomass (ecology)Competition (biology)EcosystemPhosphorusBiogeochemical cycleEnvironmental scienceAgronomyNutrientNutrient cycleVegetation (pathology)Terrestrial ecosystemEcologyTerrestrial plantBiologyChemistryEconomicsMacroeconomicsPathologyOrganic chemistryMedicineSoil Carbon and Nitrogen DynamicsPeatlands and Wetlands EcologyPlant nutrient uptake and metabolism