Drought stress affects asymbiotic nitrogen fixation in Pacific Northwest
prairies
Abstract
Background/Question/Methods This project attempts to quantify the
resilience of prairie ecosystems to climate change in the Pacific
Northwest (PNW). In this region, prairie ecosystems currently sustain
~1.3 million beef cows and calf production costs are
expected to increase to offset drought-induced plant productivity loss.
Here, we investigate patterns of asymbiotic nitrogen fixation (ANF) and
biogeochemical controls, that also influence plant community composition
and prairie productivity, under experimental drought to address a major
challenge for sustainable agriculture in the region. We hypothesize that
the effect of drought on prairie vegetation cover increases soil
asymbiotic N inputs by diminishing the dominance of symbiotic
root-fungal networks. To test this hypothesis, we quantified the impacts
of decadal drought stress on soil ANF using 15N-labeled dinitrogen
(15N2) incubations of soils from high- and low-diversity prairies across
a 520-km latitudinal gradient (i.e., southern Oregon-SOR, central
Oregon-COR, and central Washington-CWA) representing increasingly severe
Mediterranean conditions. We also quantified total soil organic
carbon-C, total, and available N, and available phosphorus-P and iron-Fe
pools to better understand underlying mechanisms governing
drought-induced changes in ANF. At each site, composite soil samples (n
= 3) were collected from five co-located high- and low-diversity prairie
plots under control (ambient) and drought (-40% precipitation)
conditions. Results/Conclusions We found that soil ANF response to
drought increased with the PNW Mediterranean drought intensity gradient;
while ANF rates increased nearly two-fold in the southernmost site
(SOR), a significant decrease in ANF was verified in the northernmost
site (CWA). ANF response to drought also varied depending on plant
diversity, where low-diversity prairies had a more predictable response
to drought than high-diversity prairies. For instance, ANF in SOR
high-diversity prairies was suppressed but no change was verified in COR
high diversity prairies. Soil C and N contents were generally higher in
high-diversity prairies whereas treatment had no significant effect
across sites. Soil P availability, also affected by drought, and pH were
the most important variables explaining ANF variability across
vegetation types and sites. Based on our findings, low-diversity
prairies in central WA may be those most severely impacted by increased
climate change-induced drought stress. Our study highlights the
importance of using soil-plant-atmosphere interactions to assess prairie
ecosystem resilience to drought in the PNW.