Electrolytes on the prairie: How urine-like additions of Na and K shape the dynamics of a grassland food web.

Autor: Kaspari M; Geographical Ecology Group, Department of Biology, University of Oklahoma, Norman, Oklahoma, USA., Welti EAR; Geographical Ecology Group, Department of Biology, University of Oklahoma, Norman, Oklahoma, USA.; Senckenberg Research Institute and Natural History Museum Frankfurt, Gelnhausen, Germany.
Jazyk: angličtina
Zdroj: Ecology [Ecology] 2023 Jan; Vol. 104 (1), pp. e3856. Date of Electronic Publication: 2022 Nov 15.
DOI: 10.1002/ecy.3856
Abstrakt: The electrolytes Na and K both function to maintain water balance and membrane potential. However, these elements work differently in plants-where K is the primary electrolyte-than in animals-where ATPases require a balanced supply of Na and K. Here, we use monthly factorial additions of Na and K to simulate bovine urine inputs and explore how these electrolytes ramify through a prairie food web. Against a seasonal trend of increasing grass biomass and decreasing water and elemental tissue concentrations, +K and +Na plots boosted water content and, when added together, plant biomass. Compared to control plots, +Na and +K plots increased element concentrations in above-ground plant tissue early in summer and decreased them in September. Simultaneously, invertebrate abundance on Na and K additions were sequentially higher and lower than control plots from June to September and were most suppressed when grass was most nutrient rich. K was the more effective plant electrolyte, but Na frequently promoted similar changes in grass ionomes. The soluble/leachable ions of Na and K showed significant ability to shape plant growth, water content, and the 15-element ionome, with consequences for higher trophic levels. Grasslands with high inputs of Na and K-via large mammal grazers or coastal aerosol deposition-likely enhance the ability of plants to adjust their above-ground ionomes, with dramatic consequences for the distribution of invertebrate consumers.
(© 2022 The Ecological Society of America.)
Databáze: MEDLINE