Cross-site comparison of herbivore impact on nitrogen availability in grasslands: the role of plant nitrogen concentration

E.S. Bakker, J.M.H. Knops, D.G. Milchunas, M.E. Ritchie, H. Olff

Research output: Contribution to journal/periodicalArticleScientificpeer-review

38 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Herbivores may influence the nitrogen (N) recycling rates and consequently increase or decrease the productivity of grasslands. Plant N concentration emerged as a critical parameter to explain herbivore effects from several conceptual models, which predict that herbivores decrease soil N availability when plant N concentration is low whereas they increase it when plant N concentration is high (Hobbs 1996, Ritchie et al. 1998, Pastor et al. 2006). However, a broader cross-site comparison among published studies to test these predictions is hampered by the different methodologies used to measure soil N availability or a proxy thereof, and a lack of measurements of plant N concentration. Therefore it remains unclear whether these model predictions are generally valid across a range of grasslands. We tested whether there is a relationship between plant N concentration and herbivore impact on soil N availability (measured with resin bags) with a study of replicate 6–8 year old exclosures (with an unfenced control) of vertebrate herbivores (>1 kg) established at each of seven grassland sites in North America and Europe. Contrary to model predictions, we found a negative relationship between the effect of herbivores on resin bag soil N availability and plant N concentration. Our study confir
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1613-1622
JournalOikos
Volume118
Issue number11
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2009

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