Negative responses of terrestrial nitrogen fixation to nitrogen addition weaken across increased soil organic carbon levels

Sci Total Environ. 2023 Jun 15:877:162965. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.162965. Epub 2023 Mar 21.

Abstract

The traditional view holds that biological nitrogen (N) fixation is energetically expensive and thus, facultative N fixers reduce N fixation rates while obligate N fixers are excluded by non-N fixers as soil N becomes rich. This view, however, contradicts the phenomenon that N fixation does not decline in many terrestrial ecosystems under N enrichment. To address this paradoxical phenomenon, we conducted a meta-analysis of N fixation and diazotroph (N-fixing microorganism) community structure in response to N addition across terrestrial ecosystems. N addition inhibited N fixation, but the inhibitory effect weakened across increased soil organic carbon (SOC) concentrations. The response ratios of N fixation (including free-living, plant-associated, and symbiotic types) to N addition were lower in the ecosystems with low SOC concentrations (<10 mg/g) than in those with medium or high SOC concentrations (10-20 and > 20 mg/g, respectively). The negative N-addition effects on diazotroph abundance and diversity also weakened across increased SOC levels. Among the climatic and soil factors, SOC was the most important predictor regarding the responses of N fixation and diazotroph community structure to N addition. Overall, our study reveals the role of SOC in affecting the responses of N fixation to N addition, which helps understand the relationships of biological N fixation and N enrichment as well as the mechanisms of terrestrial C and N coupling.

Keywords: Biological nitrogen fixation; Diazotroph; Nitrogen addition; Nitrogen-fixing microorganism; Soil organic carbon; Terrestrial ecosystems.

Publication types

  • Meta-Analysis

MeSH terms

  • Carbon*
  • Ecosystem*
  • Nitrogen / analysis
  • Nitrogen Fixation
  • Soil / chemistry

Substances

  • Carbon
  • Soil
  • Nitrogen