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- Title
Nitrogen and light regulate symbiotic nitrogen fixation by a temperate forest tree.
- Authors
Ottinger, Sarah L.; Miniat, Chelcy Ford; Wurzburger, Nina
- Abstract
Symbiotic nitrogen fixation (SNF) is a critical mechanism of ecosystem recovery, and in forests of the eastern United States, the most common tree species that supports SNF is black locust (Robinia pseudoacacia L.). Despite its prevalence, black locust's fixation strategy—whether it maintains fixation at a constant rate (obligate fixation) or reduces its fixation rate (facultative fixation)—is unknown. Here, we examined how nitrogen and light control SNF by black locust, by growing seedlings under two nitrogen levels and across four levels of light. Seedlings were harvested after 12 weeks to determine biomass changes, nodule activity, and photosynthetic rates. Black locust seedlings increased biomass growth with increasing light, but only in the absence of nitrogen addition, while seedling root:shoot (biomass) modestly declined with increasing light regardless of nitrogen level. We found that black locust behaved like a facultative fixer, and regulated fixation by excising or maintaining nodules, and by controlling nodule biomass and activity. Specifically, nitrogen addition reduced seedling investment in nodule biomass (g g−1) by 63%, and reduced seedling allocation to nitrogen fixation (µmol C2H4 g−1 h−1) by 66%. In contrast, light affected nitrogen fixation through two indirect pathways. First, light increased plant growth, and hence nitrogen demands, which caused an increase in nitrogen fixation proportional to biomass. Second, light increasd photosynthetic activity, which was positively associated with nodule activity, but only in the absence of nitrogen addition. Our findings for how black locust regulates SNF can improve predictions of ecosystem SNF under the changing environmental conditions.
- Subjects
UNITED States; NITROGEN fixation; TEMPERATE forests; BLACK locust; NITROGEN; PHOTOSYNTHETIC rates; MICROBIAL inoculants
- Publication
Oecologia, 2023, Vol 201, Issue 2, p565
- ISSN
0029-8549
- Publication type
Academic Journal
- DOI
10.1007/s00442-023-05313-0