Abstract

Global nitrogen (N) deposition and climate change have been identified as two of the most important causes of current plant diversity loss. However, temporal patterns of species turnover underlying diversity changes in response to changing precipitation regimes and atmospheric N deposition have received inadequate attention. We carried out a manipulation experiment in a steppe and an old-field in North China from 2005 to 2009, to test the hypothesis that water addition enhances plant species richness through increase in the rate of species gain and decrease in the rate of species loss, while N addition has opposite effects on species changes. Our results showed that water addition increased the rate of species gain in both the steppe and the old field but decreased the rates of species loss and turnover in the old field. In contrast, N addition increased the rates of species loss and turnover in the steppe but decreased the rate of species gain in the old field. The rate of species change was greater in the old field than in the steppe. Water interacted with N to affect species richness and species turnover, indicating that the impacts of N on semi-arid grasslands were largely mediated by water availability. The temporal stability of communities was negatively correlated with rates of species loss and turnover, suggesting that water addition might enhance, but N addition would reduce the compositional stability of grasslands. Experimental results support our initial hypothesis and demonstrate that water and N availabilities differed in the effects on rate of species change in the temperate grasslands, and these effects also depend on grassland types and/or land-use history. Species gain and loss together contribute to the dynamic change of species richness in semi-arid grasslands under future climate change.

Highlights

  • Species turnover directly determines changes in species richness across time, and reflects the dynamic stability of a community [1,2,3,4]

  • The temporal patterns of species turnover leading to changes in species composition and diversity are less understood

  • Species richness was significantly higher in the steppe than in the old field (t-test, P,0.001; Fig. 1, S1A,B)

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Summary

Introduction

Species turnover directly determines changes in species richness across time, and reflects the dynamic stability of a community [1,2,3,4]. Effects of changed precipitation regimes and increased atmospheric nitrogen (N) deposition on species composition and diversity of plant communities are crucially important and have increasingly been studied [5,6,7,8,9,10,11]. Nutrient enrichment tends to delay species replacement during a succession from annual to perennial herbaceous species [18,19]. Most of such findings are based on theoretical models [2,12] or investigations using natural experiments without environmental manipulation [3,15,16,17]. Direct manipulative experimental evidences for effects of water and N availability on species turnover are still lacking

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