Nitrogen-induced hysteresis in grassland biodiversity: a theoretical test of litter-mediated mechanisms
Katherine Meyer, James Broda, Andrew Brettin, Mar\'ia S\'anchez, Mu\~niz, Sarah Gorman, Forest Isbell, Sarah E. Hobbie, Mary Lou Zeeman,, Richard McGehee

TL;DR
This paper presents a theoretical model explaining nitrogen-induced hysteresis in grassland biodiversity, highlighting mechanisms like litter accumulation that prevent recovery after nitrogen input ceases.
Contribution
The study introduces a novel ODE model unifying litter-mediated mechanisms causing bistability and hysteresis in grassland biodiversity under nitrogen enrichment.
Findings
Model reproduces observed hysteresis in grasslands.
Litter accumulation inhibits plant recovery.
Management strategies beyond N reduction are needed.
Abstract
The global rise in anthropogenic reactive nitrogen (N) and the negative impacts of N deposition on terrestrial plant diversity are well-documented. The R* theory of resource competition predicts reversible decreases in plant diversity in response to N loading. However, empirical evidence for the reversibility of N-induced biodiversity loss is mixed. In a long-term N-enrichment experiment in Minnesota, a low-diversity state that emerged during N addition has persisted for decades after additions ceased. Hypothesized mechanisms preventing recovery of biodiversity include nutrient recycling, insufficient external seed supply, and litter inhibition of plant growth. Here we present an ODE model that unifies these mechanisms, produces bistability at intermediate N inputs, and qualitatively matches the observed hysteresis at Cedar Creek. Key features of the model, including native species'…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEcology and Vegetation Dynamics Studies · Soil Carbon and Nitrogen Dynamics · Evolution and Genetic Dynamics
Methods7 Fastest Ways to Call American Airlines Reservations Number (USA Guide)
