| Nitrogen Pollution Boosts Plant Growth In 
    Tropics By 20 Percent 2/12/2008
 Irvine, CA-A study by UC Irvine ecologists finds that excess nitrogen in 
    tropical forests boosts plant growth by an average of 20 percent, countering 
    the belief that such forests would not respond to nitrogen pollution.
 Faster plant growth means the tropics will take in more carbon dioxide than 
    previously thought, though long-term climate effects are unclear. Over the 
    next century, nitrogen pollution is expected to steadily rise, with the most 
    dramatic increases in rapidly developing tropical regions such as India, 
    South America, Africa and Southeast Asia.
 
 Nitrogen fertilizer, applied to farmland to improve crop yield, also affects 
    ecosystems downwind by seeping into runoff water and evaporating into the 
    atmosphere. Industrial burning and forest clearing also pumps nitrogen into 
    the air.
 
 “We hope our results will improve global change forecasts,” said David 
    LeBauer, graduate student researcher of Earth system science at UCI and lead 
    author of the study.
 
 The research results appear in the February issue of the journal Ecology.
 
 Using data from more than 100 previously published studies, LeBauer and 
    Kathleen Treseder, associate professor of ecology and evolutionary biology 
    at UCI, analyzed global trends in nitrogen’s effect on growth rates in 
    ecosystems ranging from tropical forests and grasslands to wetlands and 
    tundra. Nitrogen, they found, increased plant growth in all ecosystems 
    except for deserts.
 
 Surprisingly, tropical forests that were seasonally dry, located in 
    mountainous regions or had regrown from slash-and-burn agriculture also 
    responded to added nitrogen. Although these are not the tropical forests 
    that typically come to mind, they collectively account for more than half of 
    the world’s tropical forests.
 
 Scientists believed added nitrogen would have little effect in the tropics 
    because plants there typically have ample nitrogen and are constrained by 
    low levels of phosphorus. If one necessary plant nutrient is in short supply 
    – in this case phosphorus – plant growth will be poor, even if other 
    nutrients such as nitrogen are abundant. Experiments in the study added 
    nitrogen at the high end of ambient nitrogen pollution to test the maximum 
    potential response.
 
 It is difficult to predict the long-term effects of nitrogen on global 
    climate change. One factor will be the degree to which humans change natural 
    ecosystems, for example by cutting down or burning the tropical forests. 
    Further, climate change may determine whether these areas grow back as 
    forests or if they are replaced by grasslands or deserts. It also is unknown 
    how nitrogen will affect the fate of carbon once plants die and begin to 
    decompose.
 
 “What is clear is that we need to consider how nitrogen pollution interacts 
    with carbon dioxide pollution,” LeBauer said. “Our study is a step toward 
    understanding the far-reaching effects of nitrogen pollution and how it may 
    change our climate.”
 
 This work was supported by the National Science Foundation, the Department 
    of Energy and a fellowship from the Kearney Foundation for Soil Science.
 
 SOURCE: University of California, Irvine
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