Allometric biomass partitioning under nitrogen enrichment: Evidence from manipulative experiments around the world
Citations Over TimeTop 10% of 2016 papers
Abstract
Allometric and optimal hypotheses have been widely used to explain biomass partitioning in response to resource changes for individual plants; however, little evidence has been reported from measurements at the community level across a broad geographic scale. This study assessed the nitrogen (N) effect on community-level root to shoot (R/S) ratios and biomass partitioning functions by synthesizing global manipulative experiments. Results showed that, in aggregate, N addition decreased the R/S ratios in various biomes. However, the scaling slopes of the allometric equations were not significantly altered by the N enrichment, possibly indicating that N-induced reduction of the R/S ratio is a consequence of allometric allocation as a function of increasing plant size rather than an optimal partitioning model. To further illustrate this point, we developed power function models to explore the relationships between aboveground and belowground biomass for various biomes; then, we generated the predicted root biomass from the observed shoot biomass and predicted R/S ratios. The comparison of predicted and observed N-induced changes of the R/S ratio revealed no significant differences between each other, supporting the allometric allocation hypothesis. These results suggest that allometry, rather than optimal allocation, explains the N-induced reduction in the R/S ratio across global biomes.
Related Papers
- → On the Relationship between Ontogenetic and Static Allometry(2013)147 cited
- → Cloning and Characterization of Rat BAT3 cDNA(1999)20 cited
- → Modes of ontogenetic allometric shifts in crocodylian vertebrae(2015)15 cited
- → Realtionship between ontogenetic and intraspecific allometry of the foot skeleton in Japanese macaques.(1990)1 cited
- → Allometric Scaling Relationships Between Body Size and Physiological Rates(2013)