Root growth and N dynamics in response to multi-year experimental warming, summer drought and elevated CO2 in a mixed heathland-grass ecosystem

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Standard

Root growth and N dynamics in response to multi-year experimental warming, summer drought and elevated CO2 in a mixed heathland-grass ecosystem. / Arndal, Marie Frost; Schmidt, Inger Kappel; Nielsen, Jane Kongstad; Beier, Claus; Michelsen, Anders.

I: Functional Plant Biology, Bind 41, Nr. 1, 2014, s. 1-10.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Arndal, MF, Schmidt, IK, Nielsen, JK, Beier, C & Michelsen, A 2014, 'Root growth and N dynamics in response to multi-year experimental warming, summer drought and elevated CO2 in a mixed heathland-grass ecosystem', Functional Plant Biology, bind 41, nr. 1, s. 1-10. https://doi.org/10.1071/FP13117

APA

Arndal, M. F., Schmidt, I. K., Nielsen, J. K., Beier, C., & Michelsen, A. (2014). Root growth and N dynamics in response to multi-year experimental warming, summer drought and elevated CO2 in a mixed heathland-grass ecosystem. Functional Plant Biology, 41(1), 1-10. https://doi.org/10.1071/FP13117

Vancouver

Arndal MF, Schmidt IK, Nielsen JK, Beier C, Michelsen A. Root growth and N dynamics in response to multi-year experimental warming, summer drought and elevated CO2 in a mixed heathland-grass ecosystem. Functional Plant Biology. 2014;41(1):1-10. https://doi.org/10.1071/FP13117

Author

Arndal, Marie Frost ; Schmidt, Inger Kappel ; Nielsen, Jane Kongstad ; Beier, Claus ; Michelsen, Anders. / Root growth and N dynamics in response to multi-year experimental warming, summer drought and elevated CO2 in a mixed heathland-grass ecosystem. I: Functional Plant Biology. 2014 ; Bind 41, Nr. 1. s. 1-10.

Bibtex

@article{38e5d1a769f24c46abe0900b20aefe96,
title = "Root growth and N dynamics in response to multi-year experimental warming, summer drought and elevated CO2 in a mixed heathland-grass ecosystem",
abstract = "Ecosystems exposed to elevated CO2 are often found to sequester more atmospheric carbon due to increased plant growth. We exposed a Danish heath ecosystem to elevated CO2, elevated temperature and extended summer drought alone and in all combinations in order to study whether the expected increased growth would be matched by an increase in root nutrient uptake of NH4+-N and NO3– -N. Root growth was significantly increased by elevated CO2. The roots, however, did not fully compensate for the higher growth with a similar increase in nitrogen uptake per unit of root mass. Hence the nitrogen concentration in roots was decreased in elevated CO2, whereas the biomass N pool was unchanged or even increased. The higher net root production in elevated CO2 might be a strategy for the plants to cope with increased nutrient demand leading to a long-term increase in N uptake on a whole-plant basis. Drought reduced grass root biomass and N uptake, especially when combined with warming, but CO2 was the most pronounced main factor effect. Several significant interactions of the treatments were found, which indicates that the responses were nonadditive and that changes to multiple environmental changes cannot be predicted from single-factor responses alone.",
author = "Arndal, {Marie Frost} and Schmidt, {Inger Kappel} and Nielsen, {Jane Kongstad} and Claus Beier and Anders Michelsen",
year = "2014",
doi = "10.1071/FP13117",
language = "English",
volume = "41",
pages = "1--10",
journal = "Australian Journal of Plant Physiology",
issn = "1445-4408",
publisher = "C S I R O Publishing",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Root growth and N dynamics in response to multi-year experimental warming, summer drought and elevated CO2 in a mixed heathland-grass ecosystem

AU - Arndal, Marie Frost

AU - Schmidt, Inger Kappel

AU - Nielsen, Jane Kongstad

AU - Beier, Claus

AU - Michelsen, Anders

PY - 2014

Y1 - 2014

N2 - Ecosystems exposed to elevated CO2 are often found to sequester more atmospheric carbon due to increased plant growth. We exposed a Danish heath ecosystem to elevated CO2, elevated temperature and extended summer drought alone and in all combinations in order to study whether the expected increased growth would be matched by an increase in root nutrient uptake of NH4+-N and NO3– -N. Root growth was significantly increased by elevated CO2. The roots, however, did not fully compensate for the higher growth with a similar increase in nitrogen uptake per unit of root mass. Hence the nitrogen concentration in roots was decreased in elevated CO2, whereas the biomass N pool was unchanged or even increased. The higher net root production in elevated CO2 might be a strategy for the plants to cope with increased nutrient demand leading to a long-term increase in N uptake on a whole-plant basis. Drought reduced grass root biomass and N uptake, especially when combined with warming, but CO2 was the most pronounced main factor effect. Several significant interactions of the treatments were found, which indicates that the responses were nonadditive and that changes to multiple environmental changes cannot be predicted from single-factor responses alone.

AB - Ecosystems exposed to elevated CO2 are often found to sequester more atmospheric carbon due to increased plant growth. We exposed a Danish heath ecosystem to elevated CO2, elevated temperature and extended summer drought alone and in all combinations in order to study whether the expected increased growth would be matched by an increase in root nutrient uptake of NH4+-N and NO3– -N. Root growth was significantly increased by elevated CO2. The roots, however, did not fully compensate for the higher growth with a similar increase in nitrogen uptake per unit of root mass. Hence the nitrogen concentration in roots was decreased in elevated CO2, whereas the biomass N pool was unchanged or even increased. The higher net root production in elevated CO2 might be a strategy for the plants to cope with increased nutrient demand leading to a long-term increase in N uptake on a whole-plant basis. Drought reduced grass root biomass and N uptake, especially when combined with warming, but CO2 was the most pronounced main factor effect. Several significant interactions of the treatments were found, which indicates that the responses were nonadditive and that changes to multiple environmental changes cannot be predicted from single-factor responses alone.

U2 - 10.1071/FP13117

DO - 10.1071/FP13117

M3 - Journal article

VL - 41

SP - 1

EP - 10

JO - Australian Journal of Plant Physiology

JF - Australian Journal of Plant Physiology

SN - 1445-4408

IS - 1

ER -

ID: 67605400