Functional Groups Dominate Aboveground Net Primary Production under Long-Term Nutrient Additions in a Tibetan Alpine Meadow

Plants (Basel). 2024 Jan 23;13(3):344. doi: 10.3390/plants13030344.

Abstract

Anthropogenic nutrient additions are influencing the structure and function of alpine grassland ecosystems. However, the underlying mechanisms of the direct and indirect effects of nutrient additions on aboveground net primary productivity (ANPP) are not well understood. In this study, we conducted an eight-year field experiment to explore the ecological consequences of nitrogen (N) and/or phosphorous (P) additions on the northern Tibetan Plateau. ANPP, species diversity, functional diversity, and functional groups were used to assess species' responses to increasing nutrients. Our results showed that nutrient additions significantly increased ANPP due to the release in nutrient limitations. Although N addition had a significant effect on species richness and functional richness, and P and N + P additions altered functional diversity, it was functional groups rather than biodiversity that drove changes in ANPP in the indirect pathways. We identified the important roles of N and P additions in begetting the dominance of grasses and forbs, respectively. The study highlights that the shift of functional groups should be taken into consideration to better predict the structure, function, and biodiversity-ANPP relationship in grasslands, particularly under future multifaceted global change.

Keywords: ANPP; Northern Tibetan alpine meadow; functional diversity; functional groups; nutrient additions; species diversity.

Grants and funding

This study was supported by the Central Government Leading Project for Tibetan Science and Technology Development (XZ202202YD0028C), the Science and Technology Program of the Tibet Autonomous Region (XZ202101ZD0007G), and the National Natural Science Foundation of China (31870406, 42071066).