Abstract
Ammonia oxidizers are the primary agents for nitrification. The most
significant change in an ecosystem’s nitrogen (N) cycle is the
stimulation of ammonia oxidizer activity caused by N enrichment and the
subsequent development of a highly nitrifying soil environment. However,
few studies have examined the duration of N-induced impacts on
nitrification after the cessation of N inputs. We conducted a 15 years
nutrient addition experiment in a Tibetan alpine meadow, and then
nutrient addition was ceased for 7 years, and the ammonia-oxidizer
communities were examined. Ammonia oxidizers, especially
ammonia-oxidizing bacteria (AOB), exhibited a continuous hysteretic
response to N enrichment and subsequent cessation. Soil ammonia
availability has been proposed as a primary driver controlling AOB
abundances under nutrient addition. Although plant N and soil inorganic
N concentrations showed rapid recovery in plots where nutrient additions
were discontinued, soil microbial N mainly controlled changes in N
mineralization and availability of soil N to ammonia oxidizers.
Pyrosequencing data revealed that nutrient cessation significantly
impacts AOB, and AOB composition established connections than AOA and
comammox Nitrospira, indicating the greater ecological importance of AOB
in the overall network. Our findings suggest that a high nitrification
environment induced by N enrichment is not possible simply by reducing N
input, and it requires a long recuperation time.