Nitrogen Acquisition by Invasive Plants: Species Preferential N Uptake Matching with Soil N Dynamics Contribute to Its Fitness and Domination.

IF 4 2区 生物学 Q1 PLANT SCIENCES
Xingang Chang, Wenying Wang, Huakun Zhou
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Abstract

Plant invasions play a significant role in global environmental change. Traditionally, it was believed that invasive plants absorb and utilize nitrogen (N) more efficiently than native plants by adjusting their preferred N forms in accordance with the dominant N forms present in the soil. More recently, invasive plants are now understood to optimize their N acquisition by directly mediating soil N transformations. This review highlights how exotic species optimize their nitrogen acquisition by influencing soil nitrogen dynamics based on their preferred nitrogen forms, and the various mechanisms, including biological nitrification inhibitor (BNI) release, pH alterations, and changes in nutrient stoichiometry (carbon to nitrogen ratio), that regulate the soil nitrogen dynamics of exotic plants. Generally, invasive plants accelerate soil gross nitrogen transformations to maintain a high supply of NH4+ and NO3- in nitrogen-rich ecosystems irrespective of their preference. However, they tend to minimize nitrogen losses to enhance nitrogen availability in nitrogen-poor ecosystems, where, in such situations, plants with different nitrogen preferences usually affect different nitrogen transformation processes. Therefore, a comprehensive understanding requires more situ data on the interactions between invasive plant species' preferential N form uptake and the characteristics of soil N transformations. Understanding the combination of these processes is essential to elucidate how exotic plants optimize nitrogen use efficiency (NUE) and minimize nitrogen losses through denitrification, leaching, or runoff, which are considered critical for the success of invasive plant species. This review also highlights some of the most recent discoveries in the responses of invasive plants to the different forms and amounts of N and how plants affect soil N transformations to optimize their N acquisition, emphasizing the significance of how plant-soil interactions potentially influence soil N dynamics.

植物入侵在全球环境变化中扮演着重要角色。传统上,人们认为入侵植物比本地植物更有效地吸收和利用氮(N),因为它们会根据土壤中存在的主要氮形式调整其偏好的氮形式。最近,人们认识到入侵植物通过直接介导土壤氮的转化来优化氮的获取。本综述将重点介绍外来物种如何根据其偏好的氮形态,通过影响土壤氮动态来优化氮获取,以及调节外来植物土壤氮动态的各种机制,包括生物硝化抑制剂(BNI)释放、pH 值变化和养分化学计量(碳氮比)变化。一般来说,入侵植物会加速土壤总氮的转化,以维持富氮生态系统中 NH4+ 和 NO3- 的高供应量,而不管其偏好如何。在这种情况下,对氮的偏好不同的植物通常会影响不同的氮转化过程。因此,要全面了解入侵植物物种的优先氮吸收形式与土壤氮转化特征之间的相互作用,需要更多的实地数据。了解这些过程的组合对于阐明外来植物如何优化氮利用效率(NUE)并最大限度地减少通过反硝化、淋溶或径流造成的氮损失至关重要,而这些被认为是入侵植物物种成功的关键。本综述还重点介绍了入侵植物对不同形式和数量氮的反应,以及植物如何影响土壤氮转化以优化氮获取的一些最新发现,强调了植物-土壤相互作用如何潜在影响土壤氮动态的重要意义。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Plants-Basel
Plants-Basel Agricultural and Biological Sciences-Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
CiteScore
6.50
自引率
11.10%
发文量
2923
审稿时长
15.4 days
期刊介绍: Plants (ISSN 2223-7747), is an international and multidisciplinary scientific open access journal that covers all key areas of plant science. It publishes review articles, regular research articles, communications, and short notes in the fields of structural, functional and experimental botany. In addition to fundamental disciplines such as morphology, systematics, physiology and ecology of plants, the journal welcomes all types of articles in the field of applied plant science.
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