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In a 12-year experimental study of nitrogen (N) deposition on Minnesota grasslands, plots dominated by native warm-season grasses shifted to low-diversity mixtures dominated by cool-season grasses at all but the lowest N addition rates. This shift was associated with decreased biomass carbon (C):N ratios, increased N mineralization, increased soil nitrate, high N losses, and low C storage. In addition, plots originally dominated by nonnative cool-season grasses retained little added N and stored little C, even at low N input rates. Thus, grasslands with high N retention and C storage rates were the most vulnerable to species losses and major shifts in C and N cycling.
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David A. Wedin
University of Nebraska–Lincoln
David Tilman
Smithsonian Institution
Science
University of Toronto
University of Minnesota
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Wedin et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69d7629ef182769aa8b8aebe — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1126/science.274.5293.1720