初级生产
环境科学
沉积(地质)
土壤学
草原
生态系统
碳循环
生产力
大气科学
气候变化
草本植物
生态学
土壤水分
土壤科学
生物
地质学
沉积物
宏观经济学
古生物学
经济
作者
Carly J. Stevens,Eric M. Lind,Yann Hautier,W. Stanley Harpole,Elizabeth T. Borer,Sarah E. Hobbie,Eric W. Seabloom,Laura M. Ladwig,Jonathan D. Bakker,Chengjin Chu,Scott L. Collins,Kendi F. Davies,Jennifer Firn,Helmut Hillebrand,Kimberley J. La Pierre,Andrew MacDougall,Brett A. Melbourne,Rebecca L. McCulley,John W. Morgan,John L. Orrock
出处
期刊:Ecology
[Wiley]
日期:2015-06-01
卷期号:96 (6): 1459-1465
被引量:14
摘要
Humans dominate many important Earth system processes including the nitrogen (N) cycle. Atmospheric N deposition affects fundamental processes such as carbon cycling, climate regulation, and biodiversity, and could result in changes to fundamental Earth system processes such as primary production. Both modelling and experimentation have suggested a role for anthropogenically altered N deposition in increasing productivity, nevertheless, current understanding of the relative strength of N deposition with respect to other controls on production such as edaphic conditions and climate is limited. Here we use an international multiscale data set to show that atmospheric N deposition is positively correlated to aboveground net primary production (ANPP) observed at the 1‐m 2 level across a wide range of herbaceous ecosystems. N deposition was a better predictor than climatic drivers and local soil conditions, explaining 16% of observed variation in ANPP globally with an increase of 1 kg N·ha −1 ·yr −1 increasing ANPP by 3%. Soil pH explained 8% of observed variation in ANPP while climatic drivers showed no significant relationship. Our results illustrate that the incorporation of global N deposition patterns in Earth system models are likely to substantially improve estimates of primary production in herbaceous systems. In herbaceous systems across the world, humans appear to be partially driving local ANPP through impacts on the N cycle.
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