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Article

Trees out‐forage understorey shrubs for nitrogen patches in a subarctic mountain birch forest

Details

Citation

Friggens NL, Hartley IP, Parker TC, Subke J & Wookey PA (2023) Trees out‐forage understorey shrubs for nitrogen patches in a subarctic mountain birch forest. Oikos, 2023 (4). https://doi.org/10.1111/oik.09567

Abstract
Nitrogen (N), acquired by roots and mycorrhizal fungi and supplied to plant foliage, is a growth-limiting nutrient at the subarctic treeline. Due to this limitation, interspecific competition and acquisition of N is an important control on plant community composition and distribution. The ability of trees and shrubs to access N shapes community dynamics at this ecotone undergoing species range shifts and changes in primary productivity driven by climate change. Using 15N soil labelling we investigate the fate of soil inorganic N, and spatial distances over which trees and understorey shrubs access soil N, in a treeline forest. 15N was injected into soil rooting zones in discrete 1 m2 patches and foliar samples were collected from trees between 1 and 50 m away, and understorey shrubs between 0.5 and 11 m away from labelled soil. The 15N label was found in mountain birch trees up to 5 m, and in understorey shrubs up to 2 m, away from labelled soil. We estimate that 1.27% of pulse-derived N was found in foliage of birch trees, compared to 1.16% in the understorey. However, mountain birch trees contributed only 31% of ecosystem leaf area index (LAI), thus there was a disproportionate allocation of added label to the birch canopy compared with its contribution to ecosystem LAI. The difference in root and mycorrhizal exploration distances and community N partitioning between mountain birch trees and understorey shrubs may confer competitive advantage to trees with respect to nitrogen and nutrient patches, which may alter plant community structures within these forests. This is particularly important considering predicted climate-driven tree and tall shrub expansion in subarctic regions, with likely consequences for ecosystem N and carbon (C) cycling, as well as for community composition and biodiversity.

Keywords
Betula pubescens; 15N labelling; nitrogen partitioning; shrubs; treeline forest

Journal
Oikos: Volume 2023, Issue 4

StatusPublished
Funders
Publication date30/04/2023
Publication date online31/12/2022
Date accepted by journal05/11/2022
URL
PublisherWiley
ISSN0030-1299
eISSN1600-0706

People (3)

Dr Tom Parker

Dr Tom Parker

Research Fellow, Biological and Environmental Sciences

Professor Jens-Arne Subke

Professor Jens-Arne Subke

Professor, Biological and Environmental Sciences

Professor Philip Wookey

Professor Philip Wookey

Professor, Biological and Environmental Sciences

Projects (1)

Files (1)