Total soil nutrients drive the enhancement of ecosystem multifunctionality as the succession progresses of the poplar-birch secondary forest
Dongxu Ma, Jiaying He, Qiang Liu, Zhidong Zhang, Lihua Fu, Yue Pang, Jing Tian, Deshuo Kong

TL;DR
As poplar-birch secondary forests mature, soil nutrients increase, leading to improved ecosystem functions like productivity and nutrient cycling.
Contribution
This study identifies total soil nutrients as the key driver of enhanced ecosystem multifunctionality during forest succession.
Findings
Soil nutrients and enzyme activity significantly increased with forest succession stages.
Ecosystem multifunctionality improved by over 169% in carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorus functions compared to early stages.
Litter biomass and total soil nutrients were central to driving EMF enhancement.
Abstract
Ecosystem multifunctionality(EMF) refers to an integrated measure of an ecosystem's capacity to perform multiple co-occurring functions. However, change the multi-factor driving mechanism of EMF during poplar-birch secondary forest succession are still poorly understood. Using a space-for-time substitution approach, this study examined four succession stages (early, middle, middle-late, and late) of poplar-birch secondary forests in the Northern Hebei Mountains. It investigated soil physicochemical properties, plant productivity, quantified functional indices and explored the multi-factor driving mechanisms for changing EMF. The results showed that stand and litter (stand volume, litter biomass, litter carbon stock), soil nutrients (organic matter, total nitrogen, available nitrogen, available phosphorus) and soil enzymes (cellobiohydrolase, dissolved organic carbon,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSoil Carbon and Nitrogen Dynamics · Land Use and Ecosystem Services · Ecology and Vegetation Dynamics Studies
