Global distribution and drivers of relative contributions among soil nitrogen sources to terrestrial plants

Abstract

Soil extractable nitrate, ammonium, and organic nitrogen (N) are essential N sources supporting primary productivity and regulating species composition of terrestrial plants. However, it remains unclear how plants utilize these N sources and how surface-earth environments regulate plant N utilization. Here, we establish a framework to analyze observational data of natural N isotopes in plants and soils globally, we quantify fractional contributions of soil nitrate (fNO3-), ammonium (fNH4+), and organic N (fEON) to plant-used N in soils. We find that mean annual temperature (MAT), not mean annual precipitation or atmospheric N deposition, regulates global variations of fNO3-, fNH4+, and fEON. The fNO3- increases with MAT, reaching 46% at 28.5 °C. The fNH4+ also increases with MAT, achieving a maximum of 46% at 14.4 °C, showing a decline as temperatures further increase. Meanwhile, the fEON gradually decreases with MAT, stabilizing at about 20% when the MAT exceeds 15 °C. These results clarify global plant N-use patterns and reveal temperature rather than human N loading as a key regulator, which should be considered in evaluating influences of global changes on terrestrial ecosystems.

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Keywords

terrestrial plants, soil nitrogen, nitrogen isotopes, terrestrial ecosystems

Citation

Hu, CC., Liu, XY., Driscoll, A.W. et al. Global distribution and drivers of relative contributions among soil nitrogen sources to terrestrial plants. Nat Commun 15, 6407 (2024). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-50674-6

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