Ecology | 2021

How and why plant ionomes vary across North American grasslands and its implications for herbivore abundance.

 
 
 

Abstract


Plant elemental content can vary up to 1000-fold across grasslands, with implications for the herbivores the plants feed. We contrast the regulation, in grasses and forbs, of 12 elements essential to plants and animals (henceforth Plant-Essential), 7 essential to animals but not plants (Animal-Essential) and 6 with no known metabolic function (Non-Essential). Four hypotheses accounted for up to two thirds of the variation in grass and forb ionomes across 54 North American grasslands. Consistent with the Supply Side hypothesis, the Plant-Essential ionome of both forbs and grasses tracked soil availability. Grass ionomes were more likely to harvest even Non-Essential elements like Cd and Sr. Consistent with the Grazing hypothesis, cattle grazed grasslands also accumulated a handful of metals like Cu and Cr. Consistent with the NP Catalysis hypothesis-increases in the macronutrients N and P in grasses were associated with higher densities of cofactors like Zn and Cu. The Plant-Essential elements of forbs, in contrast, consistently varied as per the Nutrient Dilution hypothesis-the decrease in elemental ppm with increasing local carbohydrate production. Combined, these data fit a working hypothesis that grasses maintain lower elemental densities and survive on nutrient poor patches by opportunistically harvesting soil nutrients. In contrast, nutrient rich forbs use episodes of high precipitation and temperature to build new carbohydrate biomass, raising leaves higher to compete for light, but diluting the nutrient content in every bite of tissue. Herbivores of forbs may thus be particularly prone to increases in pCO2 .via Nutrient Dilution. .

Volume None
Pages \n e03459\n
DOI 10.1002/ecy.3459
Language English
Journal Ecology

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