Abstract

Many studies have found that future predicted CO2 levels can increase plant mass but dilute N content in leaves, impacting antiherbivore compounds. Nitrogen-fixing plants may balance their leaf C:N ratio under elevated CO2, counteracting this dilution effect. However, we know little of how plants respond to herbivores at the higher CO2 levels that occurred when nitrogen-fixing plants first evolved. We grew Alnus incana ssp. rugosa was grown at 400, 800, or 1600 ppm CO2 in soil collected from the field, inoculated with Frankia and exposed to herbivores (Orgyia leucostigma). Elevated CO2 increased nodulated plant biomass and stimulated the nitrogen fixation rate in the early growth stage. However, nitrogen-fixing plants were not able to balance their C:N ratio under elevated CO2 after growing for 19 weeks. When plants were grown at 400 and 1600 ppm CO2, herbivores preferred to feed on leaves of nodulated plants. At 800 ppm CO2, nodulated plants accumulated more total phenolic compounds in response to herbivore damage than plants in the non-Frankia and non-herbivore treatments. Our results suggest that plant leaf defence, not leaf nutritional content, is the dominant driver of herbivory and nitrogen-fixing plants have limited ability to balance C:N ratios at elevated CO2 in natural soil.

Highlights

  • Many studies have found that future predicted CO2 levels can increase plant mass but dilute N content in leaves, impacting antiherbivore compounds

  • This increase has been shown to allow plants to maintain their leaf C:N ratio, whereas non nitrogen-fixing plants show increases in leaf C:N ratio with increasing CO2 levels [10]. These studies often use experimental protocols that provide plants with additional nutrients, especially P, which can stimulate an increase in nodule number or mass, but may not represent how nitrogen-fixing plants respond under natural soil conditions

  • A non-linear model of ulated plant biomass versus CO2 level predicted that plant biomass would peak at 1137 nodulated plant biomass versus CO2 level predicted that plant biomass would peak at ppm CO2 (F = 39.50, p = 0.003, R2 = 20.63, Figure S1)

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Summary

Introduction

Many studies have found that future predicted CO2 levels can increase plant mass but dilute N content in leaves, impacting antiherbivore compounds. Many studies have found that future predicted CO2 levels (

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