Decoupling of nutrient cycles in a Eucalyptus woodland under elevated CO2
Ochoa%u2010Hueso, R., J. Piñeiro and S.A. Power. 2019.
Abstract
1. Elevated atmospheric [CO2] (eCO2 ) is currently altering nutrient cycling and availability in ecosystems worldwide. If the availabilities and turnover rates of macro and micronutrients are differentially affected, then nutrient cycles may become
out of sync (i.e., decoupled).
2. We evaluated the impacts of 3 years of eCO2 (550 μmol CO2 /mol) on the availability, stability and coupling of eleven essential macro and micronutrients in a
mature, P-limited Eucalyptus woodland from Eastern Australia (EucFACE).
3. Despite increases in N and P availability in the first 18 months of study, nutrient
availabilities and their stoichiometric ratios were unaffected by eCO2 across the
study period (26-57 months of experimental duration). In contrast, the stability of
nutrient availability increased under eCO2 , which was concomitant with a reduction in the degree of biogeochemical coupling.
4. Synthesis. We demonstrate that macro and micro-nutrient cycles can quickly become out of sync (i.e., decoupled) under eCO2 in a low-nutrient Australian eucalypt woodland, despite the lack of consistent effects on nutrient availability; such
decoupling of nutrient cycles may have unpredicted consequences in terms of
ecosystem functioning under the widely assumed positive relationship between
biogeochemical coupling and ecosystem functioning.
Key Words
biogeochemical coupling, climate change, elevated CO2 , eucalypt woodland, EucFACE, nutrient cycling, nutrient stability, stoichiometry