Publication Details

Category Data Publication
DOI 10.25829/idiv.3576-hskx59
Licence creative commons licence
Title (Primary) NUTRITION nutrient (soil, leachate, aboveground plant biomass) and biomass data from harvests 1 and 2 (Version 1.0) [Dataset]
Author Bönisch, E.; Eisenhauer, N.; Guerrero-Ramírez, N.; Reitz, T. ORCID logo ; Gleixner, G.; Auge, H. ORCID logo ; Richter, R.; Bassi, L.; Schädler, M. ORCID logo ; Hines, J.
Source Titel iDiv Data Repository
Year 2025
Department BZF; BOOEK; iDiv
Language englisch
Topic T5 Future Landscapes
Abstract A system's functioning is influenced not only by resource availability but also, likely, by resource inequality. In ecological systems most experimental manipulations of resource availability typically focused on homogeneous resource addition, or spatial heterogeneity of resources in a qualitative sense. Here, we test whether resource inequality per se influences the diversity and functioning of model grassland communities in an Ecotron experiment. Specifically, we experimentally manipulated resource area and concentration (two quantitative components of heterogeneity) to create an inequality gradient quantified by the Gini coefficient. Moreover, we examine whether the association with mycorrhizal fungi can mediate the influence of resource inequality on nutrient dynamics between soils, plants and leachate. We show that resource inequality significantly increased phosphorus leaching and reduced plant phosphorus pools aboveground. Some plant species were more sensitive to inequality than others, as there were shifts in the relative dominance of the two species that produced the most biomass (Plantago lanceolata and Holcus lanatus). Taken together, shifts in plant community composition may provide cues that indicate changes in nutrient dynamics; even though overall plant biomass was not affected, and plant diversity showed a significant decline only during the first phase of the experiment. The enrichment with mycorrhiza did not significantly influence plant biomass and diversity or nutrient concentrations above- and belowground. These results demonstrate that inequality is an essential component in ecological systems determining nutrient availability for plants as well as nutrient use efficiency of plants. An important implication is that spatial inequality of resources in natural landscapes may alter community compositions and predictions of phosphorus uptake that are based on resource input alone.
linked UFZ text publications
Persistent UFZ Identifier https://www.ufz.de/index.php?en=20939&ufzPublicationIdentifier=31072
Bönisch, E., Eisenhauer, N., Guerrero-Ramírez, N., Reitz, T., Gleixner, G., Auge, H., Richter, R., Bassi, L., Schädler, M., Hines, J. (2025):
NUTRITION nutrient (soil, leachate, aboveground plant biomass) and biomass data from harvests 1 and 2 (Version 1.0) [Dataset]
iDiv Data Repository 10.25829/idiv.3576-hskx59