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Nitrogen Deposition Effects on Soil Properties, Microbial Abundance, and Litter Decomposition Across Three Shrublands Ecosystems From the Mediterranean Basin

Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2021
Citazione:
Nitrogen Deposition Effects on Soil Properties, Microbial Abundance, and Litter Decomposition Across Three Shrublands Ecosystems From the Mediterranean Basin / Lo Cascio, M.; Morillas, L.; Ochoa-Hueso, R.; Delgado-Baquerizo, M.; Munzi, S.; Roales, J.; Spano, D.; Cruz, C.; Gallardo, A.; Manrique, E.; Perez-Corona, M. E.; Dias, T.; Sirca, C.; Mereu, S.. - In: FRONTIERS IN ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE. - ISSN 2296-665X. - 9:(2021). [10.3389/fenvs.2021.709391]
Abstract:
Atmospheric nitrogen (N) inputs in the Mediterranean Basin are projected to increase due to fossil fuel combustion, fertilizer use, and the exacerbation of agricultural production processes. Although increasing N deposition is recognized as a major threat to ecosystem functioning, little is known about how local environmental conditions modulate ecosystem function response to N addition, particularly in the context of Mediterranean-Basin ecosystems. Here, we assess how N addition affects important ecosystem properties associated with litter decomposition, soil physical-chemical properties, soil extracellular enzymatic activity and microbial abundance across three long-term N addition experimental sites in the Mediterranean Basin. Sites were located in El Regajal (Madrid, Spain), Capo Caccia (Alghero, Italy), and ArrĂ¡bida (Lisbon, Portugal) and are all representative of Mediterranean shrublands. No common pattern for litter decomposition process or other studied variables emerged among the control plots of the studied sites. Nitrogen supply only affected soil pH, a major driver of decomposition, in two out of three experimental sites. Moreover, when we explored the role of N addition and soil pH in controlling litter decay, we found that the effects of these factors were site-dependent. Our results point out to local ecosystem features modulating N addition effects in controlling litter decomposition rates in Mediterranean ecosystems, suggesting that the responses of soil functioning to N deposition are site-dependent. These findings provide further knowledge to understand contrasting ecosystem responses to N additions based on a single field experiments.
Tipologia CRIS:
1.1 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
air pollution; anthropogenic disturbance; coordinated research networks; mediterranean semiarid ecosystems; soil extracellular enzymatic activity; soil organic matter decomposition; spatial and temporal heterogeneity; tea bag index
Elenco autori:
Lo Cascio, M.; Morillas, L.; Ochoa-Hueso, R.; Delgado-Baquerizo, M.; Munzi, S.; Roales, J.; Spano, D.; Cruz, C.; Gallardo, A.; Manrique, E.; Perez-Corona, M. E.; Dias, T.; Sirca, C.; Mereu, S.
Autori di Ateneo:
LO CASCIO Mauro
SIRCA Costantino Battista
SPANO Donatella Emma Ignazia
Link alla scheda completa:
https://iris.uniss.it/handle/11388/274359
Link al Full Text:
https://iris.uniss.it//retrieve/handle/11388/274359/420923/fenvs-09-709391.pdf
Pubblicato in:
FRONTIERS IN ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE
Journal
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