26 results on '"Oram, Natalie J."'
Search Results
2. Design principles for multi‐species productive grasslands: Quantifying effects of diversity beyond richness.
- Author
-
Finn, John A., Suter, Matthias, Vishwakarma, Rishabh, Oram, Natalie J., Lüscher, Andreas, and Brophy, Caroline
- Subjects
PLANT diversity ,SPECIES diversity ,LIVESTOCK productivity ,CROP yields ,PLANT species ,GRASSLANDS - Abstract
Productive grasslands in temperate regions have relied strongly on low plant diversity with high management intensity and fertiliser inputs. Increasing plant diversity can provide high yields of digestible forage for livestock production with lower environmental impacts, and thus represents a diversity‐dependent nature‐based solution that can deliver multiple ecosystem functions.Sharing lessons from the design of managed, productive grassland communities, we address the following questions: how can we identify combinations of plant species that best deliver a selected function or multiple functions? and; when is community composition more important than species richness?We describe approaches that separate plant diversity into its underlying components: species richness, composition and relative abundance. Disentangling these three components facilitates a more nuanced understanding of how diversity can contribute to the design of diversity‐dependent nature‐based solutions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Below-ground complementarity effects in a grassland biodiversity experiment are related to deep-rooting species
- Author
-
Oram, Natalie J., Ravenek, Janneke M., Barry, Kathryn E., Weigelt, Alexandra, Chen, Hongmei, Gessler, Arthur, Gockele, Annette, de Kroon, Hans, van der Paauw, Jan Willem, Scherer-Lorenzen, Michael, Smit-Tiekstra, Annemiek, van Ruijven, Jasper, and Mommer, Liesje
- Published
- 2018
4. Persistence of dissolved organic matter explained by molecular changes during its passage through soil
- Author
-
Roth, Vanessa-Nina, Lange, Markus, Simon, Carsten, Hertkorn, Norbert, Bucher, Sebastian, Goodall, Timothy, Griffiths, Robert I., Mellado-Vázquez, Perla G., Mommer, Liesje, Oram, Natalie J., Weigelt, Alexandra, Dittmar, Thorsten, and Gleixner, Gerd
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Root chemistry and soil fauna, but not soil abiotic conditions explain the effects of plant diversity on root decomposition
- Author
-
Chen, Hongmei, Oram, Natalie J., Barry, Kathryn E., Mommer, Liesje, van Ruijven, Jasper, de Kroon, Hans, Ebeling, Anne, Eisenhauer, Nico, Fischer, Christine, Gleixner, Gerd, Gessler, Arthur, Macé, Odette González, Hacker, Nina, Hildebrandt, Anke, Lange, Markus, Scherer-Lorenzen, Michael, Scheu, Stefan, Oelmann, Yvonne, Wagg, Cameron, Wilcke, Wolfgang, Wirth, Christian, and Weigelt, Alexandra
- Published
- 2017
6. Drought intensity alters productivity, carbon allocation and plant nitrogen uptake in fast versus slow grassland communities
- Author
-
Oram, Natalie J., primary, Ingrisch, Johannes, additional, Bardgett, Richard D., additional, Brennan, Fiona, additional, Dittmann, Georg, additional, Gleixner, Gerd, additional, Illmer, Paul, additional, Praeg, Nadine, additional, and Bahn, Michael, additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Above- and belowground overyielding are related at the community and species level in a grassland biodiversity experiment
- Author
-
Barry, Kathryn E., primary, Weigelt, Alexandra, additional, van Ruijven, Jasper, additional, de Kroon, Hans, additional, Ebeling, Anne, additional, Eisenhauer, Nico, additional, Gessler, Arthur, additional, Ravenek, Janneke M., additional, Scherer-Lorenzen, Michael, additional, Oram, Natalie J., additional, Vogel, Anja, additional, Wagg, Cameron, additional, and Mommer, Liesje, additional
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Chapter 2 Above- and belowground overyielding are related at the community and species level in a grassland biodiversity experiment
- Author
-
Barry, Kathryn E., Weigelt, A., van Ruijven, Jasper, de Kroon, H., Ebeling, Anne, Eisenhauer, Nico, Gessler, Arthur, Ravenek, J.M., Scherer-Lorenzen, Michael, Oram, Natalie J., Vogel, Anja, Wagg, Cameron, and Mommer, Liesje
- Subjects
Plant Ecology - Abstract
Item does not contain fulltext
- Published
- 2019
9. Plant traits of grass and legume species for flood resilience and N 2 O mitigation
- Author
-
Oram, Natalie J., primary, Sun, Yan, additional, Abalos, Diego, additional, Groenigen, Jan Willem, additional, Hartley, Sue, additional, and De Deyn, Gerlinde B., additional
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Plant traits of grass and legume species for flood resilience and N2O mitigation
- Author
-
Oram, Natalie J., Sun, Yan, Abalos, Diego, Groenigen, Jan Willem, van, Hartley, Sue, Deyn, Gerlinde B., De, Oram, Natalie J., Sun, Yan, Abalos, Diego, Groenigen, Jan Willem, van, Hartley, Sue, and Deyn, Gerlinde B., De
- Abstract
Flooding threatens the functioning of managed grasslands by decreasing primary productivity and increasing nitrogen losses, notably as the potent greenhouse gas nitrous oxide (N2O). Sowing species with traits that promote flood resilience and mitigate flood-induced N2O emissions within these grasslands could safeguard their productivity while mitigating nitrogen losses. We tested how plant traits and resource acquisition strategies could predict flood resilience and N2O emissions of 12 common grassland species (eight grasses and four legumes) grown in field soil in monocultures in a 14-week greenhouse experiment. We found that grasses were more resistant to flooding while legumes recovered better. Resource-conservative grass species had higher resistance while resource-acquisitive grasses species recovered better. Resilient grass and legume species lowered cumulative N2O emissions. Grasses with lower inherent leaf and root δ13C (and legumes with lower root δ13C) lowered cumulative N2O emissions during and after the flood. Our results highlight the differing responses of grasses with contrasting resource acquisition strategies, and of legumes to flooding. Combining grasses and legumes based on their traits and resource acquisition strategies could increase the flood resilience of managed grasslands, and their capability to mitigate flood-induced N2O emissions. A free Plain Language Summary can be found within the Supporting Information of this article.
- Published
- 2021
11. Plant diversity enhances production and downward transport of biodegradable dissolved organic matter
- Author
-
Lange, Markus, Roth, Vanessa Nina, Eisenhauer, Nico, Roscher, Christiane, Dittmar, Thorsten, Fischer-Bedtke, Christine, González Macé, Odette, Hildebrandt, Anke, Milcu, Alexandru, Mommer, Liesje, Oram, Natalie J., Ravenek, Janneke, Scheu, Stefan, Schmid, Bernhard, Strecker, Tanja, Wagg, Cameron, Weigelt, Alexandra, Gleixner, Gerd, Lange, Markus, Roth, Vanessa Nina, Eisenhauer, Nico, Roscher, Christiane, Dittmar, Thorsten, Fischer-Bedtke, Christine, González Macé, Odette, Hildebrandt, Anke, Milcu, Alexandru, Mommer, Liesje, Oram, Natalie J., Ravenek, Janneke, Scheu, Stefan, Schmid, Bernhard, Strecker, Tanja, Wagg, Cameron, Weigelt, Alexandra, and Gleixner, Gerd
- Abstract
Plant diversity is an important driver of below-ground ecosystem functions, such as root growth, soil organic matter (SOM) storage and microbial metabolism, mainly by influencing the interactions between plant roots and soil. Dissolved organic matter (DOM), as the most mobile form of SOM, plays a crucial role for a multitude of soil processes that are central for ecosystem functioning. Thus, DOM is likely to be an important mediator of plant diversity effects on soil processes. However, the relationships between plant diversity and DOM have not been studied so far. We investigated the mechanisms underlying plant diversity effects on concentrations of DOM using continuous soil water sampling across 6 years and 62 plant communities in a long-term grassland biodiversity experiment in Jena, Germany. Furthermore, we investigated plant diversity effects on the molecular properties of DOM in a subset of the samples. Although DOM concentrations were highly variable over the course of the year with highest concentrations in summer and autumn, we found that DOM concentrations consistently increased with plant diversity across seasons. The positive plant diversity effect on DOM concentrations was mainly mediated by increased microbial activity and newly sequestered carbon in topsoil. However, the effect of soil microbial activity on DOM concentrations differed between seasons, indicating DOM consumption in winter and spring, and DOM production in summer and autumn. Furthermore, we found increased contents of small and easily decomposable DOM molecules reaching deeper soil layers with high plant diversity. Synthesis. Our findings suggest that plant diversity enhances the continuous downward transport of DOM in multiple ways. On the one hand, higher plant diversity results in higher DOM concentrations, on the other hand, this DOM is less degraded. This study indicates, for the first time, that higher plant diversity enhances the downward transport of dissolved molecules that lik
- Published
- 2021
12. Manipulating plant community composition to steer efficient N-cycling in intensively managed grasslands
- Author
-
Abalos, Diego, De Deyn, Gerlinde B., Philippot, Laurent, Oram, Natalie J., Oudová, Barbora, Pantelis, Ioannis, Clark, Callum, Fiorini, Andrea, Bru, David, Mariscal-Sancho, Ignacio, van Groenigen, Jan Willem, Abalos, Diego, De Deyn, Gerlinde B., Philippot, Laurent, Oram, Natalie J., Oudová, Barbora, Pantelis, Ioannis, Clark, Callum, Fiorini, Andrea, Bru, David, Mariscal-Sancho, Ignacio, and van Groenigen, Jan Willem
- Abstract
Minimizing nitrogen (N) losses and increasing plant N uptake in agroecosystems is a major global challenge. Ecological concepts from (semi)natural grasslands suggest that manipulating plant community composition using plant species with different traits may represent a promising opportunity to face this challenge. Here, we translate these trait-based concepts to agricultural systems in a field experiment, aiming to reveal the main determinants of how plant community composition regulates N-cycling in intensively managed grasslands. We focused on key N pools (plant N from soil and from biological N-fixation, soil mineral N and N2O emissions) as well as on biological drivers of N-cycling in soil (abundance of N-cycling microbial communities, earthworm populations and arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi), using three common grass and one legume species in monoculture, two- and four-species mixtures. We hypothesized that: (a) plant species mixtures increase plant N uptake, reduce soil mineral N concentrations and N2O emissions and promote the abundance of biological N-cyclers; (b) legume presence stimulates N pools, fluxes and biological N-cycling activity, (c) but in combination with a grass with acquisitive traits, more N is retained in the plant community, while N2O emissions are reduced. We found that mixtures increased plant N and lowered the soil mineral N pool compared to monocultures. However, plant species identity played an overarching role: Legume presence increased N2O emissions, plant N pools, soil mineral N and the abundance of N-cycling microbes and earthworms. Combining the legume with a grass with low leaf dry matter content and high root length density (and with high root biomass) reduced the higher soil mineral N and N2O emissions induced by the legume, while harnessing positive effects on plant N pools and biological N-fixation. Synthesis and applications. Our results show the potential of plant community composition to steer N-cycling in fertilized agroeco
- Published
- 2021
13. Plant diversity enhances production and downward transport of biodegradable dissolved organic matter
- Author
-
Vries, Franciska, Vries, F ( Franciska ), Lange, Markus; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2802-9177, Roth, Vanessa‐Nina, Eisenhauer, Nico; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0371-6720, Roscher, Christiane; https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9301-7909, Dittmar, Thorsten; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3462-0107, Fischer‐Bedtke, Christine; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3855-8627, González Macé, Odette, Hildebrandt, Anke; https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8643-1634, Milcu, Alexandru; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2889-1234, Mommer, Liesje; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3775-0716, Oram, Natalie J; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3529-5166, Ravenek, Janneke, Scheu, Stefan; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4350-9520, Schmid, Bernhard; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8430-3214, Strecker, Tanja, Wagg, Cameron; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9738-6901, Weigelt, Alexandra, Gleixner, Gerd; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4616-0953, Vries, Franciska, Vries, F ( Franciska ), Lange, Markus; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2802-9177, Roth, Vanessa‐Nina, Eisenhauer, Nico; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0371-6720, Roscher, Christiane; https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9301-7909, Dittmar, Thorsten; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3462-0107, Fischer‐Bedtke, Christine; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3855-8627, González Macé, Odette, Hildebrandt, Anke; https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8643-1634, Milcu, Alexandru; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2889-1234, Mommer, Liesje; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3775-0716, Oram, Natalie J; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3529-5166, Ravenek, Janneke, Scheu, Stefan; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4350-9520, Schmid, Bernhard; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8430-3214, Strecker, Tanja, Wagg, Cameron; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9738-6901, Weigelt, Alexandra, and Gleixner, Gerd; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4616-0953
- Abstract
Plant diversity is an important driver of below-ground ecosystem functions, such as root growth, soil organic matter (SOM) storage and microbial metabolism, mainly by influencing the interactions between plant roots and soil. Dissolved organic matter (DOM), as the most mobile form of SOM, plays a crucial role for a multitude of soil processes that are central for ecosystem functioning. Thus, DOM is likely to be an important mediator of plant diversity effects on soil processes. However, the relationships between plant diversity and DOM have not been studied so far. We investigated the mechanisms underlying plant diversity effects on concentrations of DOM using continuous soil water sampling across 6 years and 62 plant communities in a long-term grassland biodiversity experiment in Jena, Germany. Furthermore, we investigated plant diversity effects on the molecular properties of DOM in a subset of the samples. Although DOM concentrations were highly variable over the course of the year with highest concentrations in summer and autumn, we found that DOM concentrations consistently increased with plant diversity across seasons. The positive plant diversity effect on DOM concentrations was mainly mediated by increased microbial activity and newly sequestered carbon in topsoil. However, the effect of soil microbial activity on DOM concentrations differed between seasons, indicating DOM consumption in winter and spring, and DOM production in summer and autumn. Furthermore, we found increased contents of small and easily decomposable DOM molecules reaching deeper soil layers with high plant diversity. Synthesis. Our findings suggest that plant diversity enhances the continuous downward transport of DOM in multiple ways. On the one hand, higher plant diversity results in higher DOM concentrations, on the other hand, this DOM is less degraded. This study indicates, for the first time, that higher plant diversity enhances the downward transport of dissolved molecules that lik
- Published
- 2021
14. Plant community flood resilience in intensively managed grasslands and the role of the plant economic spectrum
- Author
-
Oram, Natalie J., De Deyn, Gerlinde, Bodelier, Paul, Cornelissen, Johannes H.C., van Groenigen, Jan Willem, Abalos, Diego, Oram, Natalie J., De Deyn, Gerlinde, Bodelier, Paul, Cornelissen, Johannes H.C., van Groenigen, Jan Willem, and Abalos, Diego
- Abstract
The increasing frequency of extreme weather events, such as floods, requires management strategies that promote resilience of grassland productivity. Mixtures of plant species may better resist and recover from flooding than monocultures, as they could combine species with stress‐coping and resource acquisition traits. This has not yet been tested in intensively managed grasslands despite its relevance for enhancing agroecosystem resilience. Using intact soil cores from an 18‐month‐old field experiment, we tested how 11 plant communities (Festuca arundinacea, Lolium perenne, Poa trivialis and Trifolium repens in monoculture, two‐ and four‐species mixtures) resist and recover from repeated flooding in a 4‐month greenhouse experiment. We found that plant community composition, not whether the community was a mixture or monoculture, influenced the community's resistance to flooding, although most communities were able to resist and recover from both floods. The plant community's position on the leaf economic spectrum in flooded conditions was related to its resistance to and recovery from flooding. Resistance to and recovery from a severe flood were related to flood‐induced intraspecific trait variation, causing a shift in the community's position on the leaf resource economic spectrum. In flooded conditions, resource‐conservative communities (characterized by low specific leaf area, low leaf nitrogen content and high leaf dry matter content) better resisted and recovered from flooding. The community's position on the root resource economic spectrum was less connected to the community's resistance and recovery. Synthesis and applications. Our study shows that in flooded conditions, resource‐conservative plant communities are more resilient to flooding than resource‐acquisitive communities in an intensively managed grassland. This suggests that plant community position on the leaf economic spectrum, as well as species’ flood‐induced intraspecific var
- Published
- 2020
15. Plant diversity enhances production and downward transport of biodegradable dissolved organic matter
- Author
-
Lange, Markus, Roth, Vanessa‐Nina, Eisenhauer, Nico, Roscher, Christiane, Dittmar, Thorsten, Fischer, Christine, Macé, Odette González, Hildebrandt, Anke, Milcu, Alexandru, Mommer, Liesje, Oram, Natalie J., Ravenek, Janneke, Scheu, Stefan, Schmid, Bernhard, Strecker, Tanja, Wagg, Cameron, Weigelt, Alex, Gleixner, Gerd, Lange, Markus, Roth, Vanessa‐Nina, Eisenhauer, Nico, Roscher, Christiane, Dittmar, Thorsten, Fischer, Christine, Macé, Odette González, Hildebrandt, Anke, Milcu, Alexandru, Mommer, Liesje, Oram, Natalie J., Ravenek, Janneke, Scheu, Stefan, Schmid, Bernhard, Strecker, Tanja, Wagg, Cameron, Weigelt, Alex, and Gleixner, Gerd
- Abstract
1. Plant diversity is an important driver of belowground ecosystem functions, such as root growth, soil organic matter (SOM) storage, and microbial metabolism, mainly by influencing the interactions between plant roots and soil. Dissolved organic matter (DOM), as the most mobile form of SOM, plays a crucial role for a multitude of soil processes that are central for ecosystem functioning. Thus, DOM is likely to be an important mediator of plant diversity effects on soil processes. However, the relationships between plant diversity and DOM have not been studied so far. 2. We investigated the mechanisms underlying plant diversity effects on concentrations of DOM using continuous soil water sampling across 6 years and 62 plant communities in a long‐term grassland biodiversity experiment in Jena, Germany. Furthermore, we investigated plant diversity effects on the molecular properties of DOM in a subset of the samples. 3. Although DOM concentrations were highly variable over the course of the year with highest concentrations in summer and autumn, we found that DOM concentrations consistently increased with plant diversity across seasons. The positive plant diversity effect on DOM concentrations was mainly mediated by increased microbial activity and newly sequestered carbon in topsoil. However, the effect of soil microbial activity on DOM concentrations differed between seasons, indicating DOM consumption in winter and spring, and DOM production in summer and autumn. Furthermore, we found increased contents of small and easily decomposable DOM molecules reaching deeper soil layers with high plant diversity. 4. Synthesis. Our findings suggest that plant diversity enhances the continuous downward transport of DOM in multiple ways. On the one hand, higher plant diversity results in higher DOM concentrations, on the other hand, this DOM is less degraded. The present study indicates, for the first time, that higher plant diversity enhances the downward transport of dissolved
- Published
- 2020
16. Can flooding-induced greenhouse gas emissions be mitigated by trait-based plant species choice?
- Author
-
Oram, Natalie J., van Groenigen, Jan Willem, Bodelier, Paul L.E., Brenzinger, Kristof, Cornelissen, Johannes H.C., De Deyn, Gerlinde B., Abalos, Diego, Oram, Natalie J., van Groenigen, Jan Willem, Bodelier, Paul L.E., Brenzinger, Kristof, Cornelissen, Johannes H.C., De Deyn, Gerlinde B., and Abalos, Diego
- Abstract
Intensively managed grasslands are large sources of the potent greenhouse gas nitrous oxide (N2O) and important regulators of methane (CH4) consumption and production. The predicted increase in flooding frequency and severity due to climate change could increase N2O emissions and shift grasslands from a net CH4 sink to a source. Therefore, effective management strategies are critical for mitigating greenhouse gas emissions from flood-prone grasslands. We tested how repeated flooding affected the N2O and CH4 emissions from 11 different plant communities (Festuca arundinacea, Lolium perenne, Poa trivialis, and Trifolium repens in monoculture, 2- and 4-species mixtures), using intact soil cores from an 18-month old grassland field experiment in a 4-month greenhouse experiment. To elucidate potential underlying mechanisms, we related plant functional traits to cumulative N2O and CH4 emissions. We hypothesized that traits related with fast nitrogen uptake and growth would lower N2O and CH4 emissions in ambient (non-flooded) conditions, and that traits related to tissue toughness would lower N2O and CH4 emissions in flooded conditions. We found that flooding increased cumulative N2O emissions by 97 fold and cumulative CH4 emissions by 1.6 fold on average. Plant community composition mediated the flood-induced increase in N2O emissions. In flooded conditions, increasing abundance of the grass F. arundinacea was related with lower N2O emissions; whereas increases in abundance of the legume T. repens resulted in higher N2O emissions. In non-flooded conditions, N2O emissions were not clearly mediated by plant traits related with nitrogen uptake or biomass production. In flooded conditions, plant communities with high root carbon to nitrogen ratio were related with lower cumulative N2O emissions, and a lower global warming potential (CO2 equivalent of N2O and CH4). We conclude that plant functional traits related to slower decomposition and nitrogen mineralization could play a
- Published
- 2020
17. Plant diversity enhances production and downward transport of biodegradable dissolved organic matter
- Author
-
Lange, Markus, primary, Roth, Vanessa‐Nina, additional, Eisenhauer, Nico, additional, Roscher, Christiane, additional, Dittmar, Thorsten, additional, Fischer‐Bedtke, Christine, additional, González Macé, Odette, additional, Hildebrandt, Anke, additional, Milcu, Alexandru, additional, Mommer, Liesje, additional, Oram, Natalie J., additional, Ravenek, Janneke, additional, Scheu, Stefan, additional, Schmid, Bernhard, additional, Strecker, Tanja, additional, Wagg, Cameron, additional, Weigelt, Alexandra, additional, and Gleixner, Gerd, additional
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Manipulating plant community composition to steer efficient N‐cycling in intensively managed grasslands
- Author
-
Abalos, Diego, primary, De Deyn, Gerlinde B., additional, Philippot, Laurent, additional, Oram, Natalie J., additional, Oudová, Barbora, additional, Pantelis, Ioannis, additional, Clark, Callum, additional, Fiorini, Andrea, additional, Bru, David, additional, Mariscal‐Sancho, Ignacio, additional, and van Groenigen, Jan Willem, additional
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Can flooding-induced greenhouse gas emissions be mitigated by trait-based plant species choice?
- Author
-
Oram, Natalie J., primary, van Groenigen, Jan Willem, additional, Bodelier, Paul L.E., additional, Brenzinger, Kristof, additional, Cornelissen, Johannes H.C., additional, De Deyn, Gerlinde B., additional, and Abalos, Diego, additional
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Plant community flood resilience in intensively managed grasslands and the role of the plant economic spectrum
- Author
-
Oram, Natalie J., primary, De Deyn, Gerlinde B., additional, Bodelier, Paul L. E., additional, Cornelissen, Johannes H. C., additional, Groenigen, Jan Willem, additional, and Abalos, Diego, additional
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Plant traits of grass and legume species for flood resilience and N2O mitigation.
- Author
-
Oram, Natalie J., Sun, Yan, Abalos, Diego, van Groenigen, Jan Willem, Hartley, Sue, and De Deyn, Gerlinde B.
- Subjects
- *
LEGUMES , *SPECIES , *GRASSES , *FLOODS , *GRASSLANDS - Abstract
Flooding threatens the functioning of managed grasslands by decreasing primary productivity and increasing nitrogen losses, notably as the potent greenhouse gas nitrous oxide (N2O). Sowing species with traits that promote flood resilience and mitigate flood‐induced N2O emissions within these grasslands could safeguard their productivity while mitigating nitrogen losses.We tested how plant traits and resource acquisition strategies could predict flood resilience and N2O emissions of 12 common grassland species (eight grasses and four legumes) grown in field soil in monocultures in a 14‐week greenhouse experiment.We found that grasses were more resistant to flooding while legumes recovered better. Resource‐conservative grass species had higher resistance while resource‐acquisitive grasses species recovered better. Resilient grass and legume species lowered cumulative N2O emissions. Grasses with lower inherent leaf and root δ13C (and legumes with lower root δ13C) lowered cumulative N2O emissions during and after the flood.Our results highlight the differing responses of grasses with contrasting resource acquisition strategies, and of legumes to flooding. Combining grasses and legumes based on their traits and resource acquisition strategies could increase the flood resilience of managed grasslands, and their capability to mitigate flood‐induced N2O emissions. A free Plain Language Summary can be found within the Supporting Information of this article. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Root interactions in a diverse grassland : the role of root traits in belowground productivity and decomposition
- Author
-
Oram, Natalie J., Wageningen University, D. Kleijn, and J. van Ruijven
- Subjects
Life Science ,Plantenecologie en Natuurbeheer ,Plant Ecology and Nature Conservation ,Soil Biology ,PE&RC ,Bodembiologie - Abstract
Background Plant diversity influences ecosystem functioning. A positive relation between plant diversity and productivity above- and belowground has been established. Aboveground, this effect has been shown to be due to complementarity effects, interactions between species in a mixture that lead species to, on average, produce more biomass than expected based on their productivity in monoculture. The mechanisms underlying complementarity effects and the positive diversity-productivity relation are predicted to lie belowground, e.g. resource partitioning and/or facilitation. The relation between plant diversity and decomposition is less clear, and research on the diversity-decomposition relation belowground is limited. This is an important gap in biodiversity knowledge, as the decomposition of plant litter is the major source of nutrients and carbon in terrestrial ecosystems, and most plant litter in grasslands is belowground. Methods This thesis explored the effect of plant diversity on belowground productivity and decomposition. Belowground complementarity effects were quantified in the Jena Trait Based Experiment, and the diversity of or plasticity in species-specific vertical root distribution as underlying mechanism was tested. The plant diversity- root decomposition relation was quantified in the Jena Experiment and the Jena Trait Based Experiment. The role of root traits and the soil environment as mediating factors were tested. Major findings Plant diversity had a positive effect on root biomass production, and this relation was attributed to complementarity effects. The diversity in species-specific vertical root distribution did not explain complementarity effects, and thus, is not likely a major mechanism underlying the diversity-productivity relation. Species altered their vertical root distribution in response to inter-specific neighbours. The direction of this change differed between functional groups: grasses became shallower in mixture, forbs became deeper. This change did not explain species-specific belowground relative productivity (relative to monoculture productivity). Therefore, plasticity in vertical root distribution was not a major factor underlying belowground complementarity effects or the diversity-productivity relation. Functional group composition, not plant diversity, had a consistent effect on root decomposition. The presence or abundance of grasses consistently reduced root litter quality and decomposition. In the Jena Experiment, plant diversity had a negative effect on root decomposition, mainly due to shifts in functional group composition over a diversity gradient. In the Jena Trait Based Experiment, root decomposition was unaffected by plant diversity, but decreased as the abundance of grass roots increased. Root traits were found to be important in explaining variation in root decomposition. Conclusions Plant diversity had a positive effect on belowground productivity, which could be attributed to complementarity effects. Functional group composition, not plant diversity, had consistent effects on root decomposition. Root traits were important in explaining root decomposition throughout this thesis. Root traits may also be important in explaining complementarity effects, however, the diversity of or plasticity in vertical root distribution did not. This thesis highlights the role of belowground interactions in facilitating the positive diversity-productivity relation, and the role of plant functional groups and root traits in explaining how plant diversity alters root decomposition.
- Published
- 2018
23. Root interactions in a diverse grassland : the role of root traits in belowground productivity and decomposition
- Author
-
Kleijn, D., van Ruijven, J., Oram, Natalie J., Kleijn, D., van Ruijven, J., and Oram, Natalie J.
- Abstract
Background Plant diversity influences ecosystem functioning. A positive relation between plant diversity and productivity above- and belowground has been established. Aboveground, this effect has been shown to be due to complementarity effects, interactions between species in a mixture that lead species to, on average, produce more biomass than expected based on their productivity in monoculture. The mechanisms underlying complementarity effects and the positive diversity-productivity relation are predicted to lie belowground, e.g. resource partitioning and/or facilitation. The relation between plant diversity and decomposition is less clear, and research on the diversity-decomposition relation belowground is limited. This is an important gap in biodiversity knowledge, as the decomposition of plant litter is the major source of nutrients and carbon in terrestrial ecosystems, and most plant litter in grasslands is belowground. Methods This thesis explored the effect of plant diversity on belowground productivity and decomposition. Belowground complementarity effects were quantified in the Jena Trait Based Experiment, and the diversity of or plasticity in species-specific vertical root distribution as underlying mechanism was tested. The plant diversity- root decomposition relation was quantified in the Jena Experiment and the Jena Trait Based Experiment. The role of root traits and the soil environment as mediating factors were tested. Major findings Plant diversity had a positive effect on root biomass production, and this relation was attributed to complementarity effects. The diversity in species-specific vertical root distribution did not explain complementarity effects, and thus, is not likely a major mechanism underlying the diversity-productivity relation. Species altered their vertical root distribution in response to inter-specific neighbours. The direction of this change differed between functional groups: grasses became shallower in mixture, forbs became d
- Published
- 2018
24. Below-ground complementarity effects in a grassland biodiversity experiment are related to deep-rooting species
- Author
-
Oram, Natalie J., primary, Ravenek, Janneke M., additional, Barry, Kathryn E., additional, Weigelt, Alexandra, additional, Chen, Hongmei, additional, Gessler, Arthur, additional, Gockele, Annette, additional, de Kroon, Hans, additional, van der Paauw, Jan Willem, additional, Scherer-Lorenzen, Michael, additional, Smit-Tiekstra, Annemiek, additional, van Ruijven, Jasper, additional, and Mommer, Liesje, additional
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Soil amendment with biochar increases the competitive ability of legumes via increased potassium availability
- Author
-
Oram, Natalie J., primary, van de Voorde, Tess F.J., additional, Ouwehand, Gert-Jan, additional, Bezemer, T. Martijn, additional, Mommer, Liesje, additional, Jeffery, Simon, additional, and Groenigen, Jan Willem Van, additional
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Root interactions in a diverse grassland : the role of root traits in belowground productivity and decomposition
- Author
-
Oram, Natalie J., primary
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.