IF: 4.5
CiteScore: 6.3
Editors-in-Chief
Yuanhe Yang
Bernhard Schmid
CN 10-1172/Q
ISSN 1752-9921(print)
ISSN 1752-993X(online)
  • Volume 19,Issue 3
    01 June 2026
      Research Article
      Hua Qing, Shangwen Zhi, Fujin Zhang, Pujin Zhang, Wenzhi Bao, Guolong Zhang, Liqing Zhao, Jianhui Huang
      2026, 19 (3): rtaf178.
      Abstract ( 120 )   PDF(pc) (1304KB) ( 87 )   Save
      Leaf and root litter profoundly impact soil carbon sequestration and nutrient cycling in terrestrial ecosystems. Recent evidence indicates that within single-species contexts resource traits are coordinated between leaves and roots driving parallel decomposition dynamics of leaf and root litters, yet it remains unclear whether this coordination also underlies parallel mixing effects in leaf and root litter mixture decomposition. In a 501-day field experiment in a temperate steppe, we incubated leaf and fine root litters from six species alone and in all pairwise mixtures. We assessed the relationship between leaf and fine root litter decomposition responses to litter mixing, and examined how trait dissimilarity between component species and decomposition responses of four carbon fractions (soluble compounds, hemicellulose, cellulose and lignin) shape this relationship. We found litter trait dissimilarities drove contrasting fraction-level responses to litter mixing. Most leaf and fine root litter mixtures exhibited non-additive effects in soluble-compound and cellulose decomposition, with soluble compounds contributing most to the overall non-additive effects of mixed leaf and fine root litters. Coordinated dissimilarity in leaf and root traits led to parallel decomposition responses of leaf and root soluble compounds to litter mixing, but to negative correlations for hemicellulose and cellulose and no correlation for lignin. These divergent fraction-level relationships blurred overall coordination of decomposition response between leaf and fine root litters to litter mixing, causing uncoordinated bulk-litter mixing effects. Our results demonstrate that resolving fraction-level processes is critical for understanding mixed-litter decomposition and for predicting ecosystem carbon and nutrient fluxes under changing plant communities.
      Han Chen, Hua He, Jinge Zhou, Xiaolin Huang, Yingwen Li, Yongxin Li, Yicheng Bai, Jingfan Zhang, Guoming Qin, Zhian Li, Hai Ren, Faming Wang
      2026, 19 (3): rtaf191.
      Abstract ( 122 )   PDF(pc) (1348KB) ( 27 )   Save
      Nitrogen (N) availability critically limits plant productivity in nutrient-depleted coral island ecosystems, necessitating substantial inputs of exogenous N fertilizer. However, excessive or unbalanced fertilization poses risks to environmental sustainability. In this study, we assessed how three N fertilizer forms, ammonium (NH4+-N), nitrate (NO3-N) and amide nitrogen (NH2-N), affect soil properties and plant performance in coral sand environments. A 15N-labeled greenhouse experiment was conducted using two island-adapted species, Ficus microcarpa and Terminalia catappa. Results showed that NO3-N markedly enhanced nitrogen retention, microbial biomass nitrogen and overall plant growth, while NH4+-N promoted microbial biomass carbon. Ficus microcarpa and T. catappa both exhibited superior growth under NO3-N, although T. catappa achieved higher leaf nutrient concentrations with NH2-N, reflecting differences in nutrient uptake preferences. Isotopic tracing revealed greater nitrogen retention in soils than in plant tissues, with NO3-N fertilization yielding the highest nitrogen recovery efficiency. These findings highlight the importance of nitrogen form in shaping soil–plant interactions in sandy, alkaline soils and offer mechanistic insights for designing targeted, sustainable fertilization strategies for coral island ecosystems.
      Hanliang Gui, Xuewen Zhou, Zixuan Li, Qinchuan Xin
      2026, 19 (3): rtaf193.
      Abstract ( 92 )   PDF(pc) (2742KB) ( 21 )   Save
      Ecosystem temporal stability (TS) determines its ability to maintain structure, function and services under external disturbances, playing a critical role in the global carbon cycle and climate regulation. However, the capability of numerical models to simulate the TS of ecosystem carbon uptake remains insufficiently assessed. This study evaluated the performance of nine terrestrial ecosystem models in simulating gross primary productivity (GPP) and its TS and employed Random Forest (RF) models with Shapley Additive Explanations (SHAP) to identify key factors contributing to model biases. Site-scale analysis based on flux tower observations indicated that most models underestimated GPP while overestimating its TS, with the most pronounced biases occurring at the interannual scale. These discrepancies primarily stemmed from errors in simulating vegetation phenology, specifically the carbon uptake period and physiological traits, particularly peak GPP within a year. At the global scale, regions with higher carbon uptake tended to exhibit greater TS, yet significant discrepancies existed among models. Notably, RF and SHAP analyses indicated that leaf area index was more important than climate and geographical factors in explaining model divergence for simulating GPP and its TS. The study revealed systematic biases in the current models’ representation of TS, highlighting the potential vulnerability of ecosystems. These uncertainties among models may lead to an overestimation of ecosystem resilience, introducing uncertainties in global carbon budget estimates and potentially misguiding scientific assessments and policy decisions regarding future climate change responses. Therefore, improving carbon cycle simulation mechanisms is essential for enhancing model predictive capabilities.
      Research Articles
      Shenggui Xue, Cai Cheng, Qianru Zhou, Wei Song, Xue Chen, Zekang Liu, Shumeng He, Jingru Zhang, Ming Nie, Jihua Wu
      2026, 19 (3): rtaf202.
      Abstract ( 151 )   PDF(pc) (1587KB) ( 26 )   Save
      The expansion of toxic weeds represents a key symptom of grassland degradation and exerts profound effects on ecosystem structure and function. These species often facilitate their establishment by forming a fertile island effect, yet how this process varies across large geographic scales and its underlying mechanisms remain poorly understood. Here we conducted large-scale field sampling at 20 grassland sites spanning over 3000 km to investigate the soil fertile island effect of a dominant toxic weed (Stellera chamaejasme L.) in China. We found that the presence of S. chamaejasme coincided with increased contents of soil organic carbon, dissolved organic carbon, total nitrogen, nitrate and ammonium, with the most pronounced fertile island effects observed for soil organic carbon, dissolved organic carbon and ammonium. Furthermore, these fertile island effects declined with increasing aridity, either directly or indirectly through microbial processes. These findings suggest that S. chamaejasme is more effective at forming the fertile island effect and promoting its expansion in wetter regions, highlighting the importance of regionally adapted strategies for toxic weed control.
      Fei Diao, Tian Qian, Wenjuan Qiu, Ailifeire Anwaier, Baohua Guan, Xiaolong Huang, Peng Xing, Qinglong Wu, Yaling Su, Kuanyi Li
      2026, 19 (3): rtaf201.
      Abstract ( 118 )   PDF(pc) (1725KB) ( 26 )   Save
      Submerged macrophytes play a vital role in the carbon cycling of lake ecosystems. However, the extent to which contrasting macrophyte growth forms—bottom-dwelling versus canopy-forming—control annual CO2 and CH4 emissions is unresolved, limiting evidence-based guidance for lake restoration aimed at carbon mitigation. We conducted a fully replicated, year-long outdoor mesocosm experiment under natural temperature and light regimes to quantify greenhouse gas fluxes from monospecific stands of four widespread macrophytes: bottom-dwelling Vallisneria denseserrulata and canopy-forming Ceratophyllum demersum, Myriophyllum spicatum and Hydrilla verticillata. Monthly diffusive flux measurements were integrated with high-resolution data on water chemistry, macrophyte biomass, zooplankton, phytoplankton and the functional genes mcrA and pmoA for methanogenic and methanotrophic communities. Canopy-forming macrophytes reduced annual CO2 fluxes by 5–13 mol m−2 yr−1 relative to bottom-dwelling treatments, with Hydrilla and Myriophyllum systems functioning as net carbon sinks (negative CO2-equivalent balance), whereas Vallisneria and Ceratophyllum remained sources. Canopy-forming macrophytes exhibited higher biomass than bottom-dwelling forms, enabling greater nutrient uptake and correspondingly higher CO2 fixation via photosynthesis. CH4 release was strongly modulated by plant biomass and associated redox conditions. These results demonstrate that canopy-forming macrophytes offer superior potential for CO2 mitigation and CO2-equivalent balance, providing essential tradeoff information for managers selecting plant assemblages for climate-smart lake restoration
      Research Article
      Yao Fang , Defu Wang , Dafeng Hui , Qi Deng , Shengnan Ouyang , Liehua Tie , Jie Wang , Honglang Duan
      2026, 19 (3): rtaf213.
      Abstract ( 131 )   PDF(pc) (1534KB) ( 19 )   Save
      Elevated ground-level ozone (O3) is known to inhibit plant growth and development, but its interactive effects with other climate factors, such as elevated carbon dioxide, warming, drought, and nitrogen deposition, remain poorly understood. Here, a comprehensive meta-analysis was conducted to investigate the main and interactive effects of O3 and multiple climate factors on plant photosynthetic rate, stomatal conductance, biomass production, and allocation. Our findings revealed a consistent pattern of O3-induced overall reduction in plant photosynthesis, stomatal conductance, and biomass production across different CO2, temperature, drought, and nitrogen deposition conditions. Elevated O3 exposure caused significant declines in biomass production, with crops experiencing the largest reduction, followed by trees and grasses. The greater biomass loss in crops and trees might be due to their physiological traits, longer exposure durations, or agronomic management practices. Elevated CO2 alleviated the negative effects of O3 on plants, but it was reflected in the photosynthetic rate. Although the O3-induced decrease in stomatal conductance and root biomass was reduced by increasing temperatures, warming had a limited effect on improving plant resistance to O3. Interestingly, O3 damage was reduced by drought through decreased stomatal conductance, whereas nitrogen addition did not affect the harm caused by O3. Our findings provide insights into plant gas exchange, biomass, and allocation responses to the interaction of O3 and climate factors, improving the understanding of plant adaptive mechanisms in the context of global change.
      Qichang Li , Zixuan Chen , Keqing Liu , Zhili Liu , Guangze Jin
      2026, 19 (3): rtaf219.
      Abstract ( 111 )   PDF(pc) (1712KB) ( 20 )   Save
      Despite increasing evidence regarding the positive effect of structural diversity on forest functioning, the underlying biotic and abiotic mechanisms remain poorly understood. Critically, how structural diversity in different forest strata affects productivity components, such as growth of surviving trees, recruitment of new individuals and biomass net change incorporating mortality, is largely unknown. Here, we used lidar and repeated census data to examine the relationship between structural diversity and forest productivity in a 9-ha temperate forest plot in Northeast China. We quantified the contributions of species diversity, functional diversity, functional composition, structural diversity, and environmental factors to productivity using hierarchical partitioning and structural equation modeling. We found that structural diversity was strongly associated with forest productivity, accounting for 65% of the influence of all variables on net productivity change. We found that structural diversity mediated the effects of other biodiversity attributes (species diversity and functional diversity) and environmental factors on productivity. However, overstorey and understorey structural diversity exerted contrasting effects on productivity. Overstorey structural diversity elevates productivity by enhancing canopy space filling and light capture. Conversely, a structurally diverse understorey signaled intense competition for water and soil nutrients, thereby suppressing the growth of large trees. Our study suggests that distinct mechanisms of overstorey and understorey structural diversity on productivity exist, and neglecting this contrast may partly account for the inconsistent observations in structural diversity-productivity relationships. These findings underscore the critical role of structural diversity in shaping forest productivity, providing essential insight for advancing biodiversity–ecosystem functioning (BEF) relationships.
      Guoming Qin, Zhe Lu, Shuchai Gan, Lulu Zhang, Jingfan Zhang, Jinge Zhou, Ruyi Ding, Xingyun Huang, Hua He, Senhao Wang, Hui Li, Jingtao Wu, Faming Wang
      2026, 19 (3): rtaf188.
      Abstract ( 205 )   PDF(pc) (2779KB) ( 44 )   Save
      The invasion of Spartina alterniflora poses a significant threat to coastal wetlands in China. The large biomass and organic substrates introduced by this species are likely to alter soil microbial communities and drive methane (CH4) and other greenhouse gas emissions; however, the underlying mechanisms remain poorly understood. To address this, we conducted a one-year in situ monitoring of CH4 emission rates, soil properties, dissolved organic matter (DOM) fractions, and CH4-cycling microbial communities in invaded wetlands and adjacent native mangroves. Our results showed that S. alterniflora invasion increased soil CH4 emissions by 8.7-fold relative to mangrove soils. Redundancy analysis and structural equation modeling revealed that this increase was closely linked to invasion-induced shifts in soil conditions, including elevated water content and pH, enrichment of labile DOM fractions (lipids and protein/aliphatic compounds), and decreases in sulfate, soil organic carbon, and total nitrogen. These changes reduced DOM molecular stability and collectively facilitated CH4 production. Moreover, quantitative PCR showed an increase in the absolute abundance of methanogens and a decrease in both the abundance and diversity of methanotrophs in invaded soils. Amplicon sequencing further indicated a higher relative abundance of Methanococcoides and a reduction in type II methanotrophs, weakening methane oxidation capacity. Overall, S. alterniflora invasion enhances wetland CH4 emissions by altering soil physicochemical properties, providing more labile substrates, and restructuring CH4-related microbial communities, thereby weakening the carbon-sink function of coastal wetlands. Integrated management approaches are needed to mitigate invasion-driven methane production while sustaining wetland ecosystem resilience.
      Mingli Ding, Yao Wei, Yuzhang Li, Jianyu Ma, Jingya Zhang, Jiangqin Song, Huiying Liu, Hao Wang, Zhenhua Zhang
      2026, 19 (3): rtaf189.
      Abstract ( 133 )   PDF(pc) (1587KB) ( 23 )   Save
      Climate change intensifies seasonal droughts in alpine meadows on the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau, impacting the adaptability of key plant functional groups. However, how plant functional groups with different flowering phenologies adjust their reproductive allocation through trait-based strategies remains poorly understood. This study examined the effects of spring, summer, and whole growing season drought on reproductive strategies of early-spring flowering (ESF) and mid-summer flowering (MSF) plant functional groups. Results revealed that spring drought significantly reduced the reproductive efficiency of MSF plants, whereas summer drought resulted in higher reproductive efficiency compared to spring drought. ESF plants exhibited greater resilience than MSF plants across all seasonal drought treatments, highlighting the advantage of their drought-avoidance strategy. Under whole growing season drought, ESF plants adopted conservative resource-use strategies, including decreased specific leaf area (SLA) and increased leaf carbon to nitrogen ratio (C/N), carbon to phosphorus ratio (C/P), and leaf dry matter content (LDMC). In contrast, MSF plants experienced phosphorus (P) limitation and height reductions. Notably, whole growing season drought induced interannual cumulative effects in MSF plants, such as increased LDMC and decreased SLA, indicating higher morphological plasticity. Furthermore, ESF plants enhanced flower allocation through both increased P availability and C/N (nutrient-sensitive strategy). For MSF plants, flower allocation was directly regulated by leaf nitrogen content (LNC), indirectly enhanced through resource reallocation from decreased plant height (morphology-integrated strategy). This study elucidates the covariation patterns between functional trait and reproductive allocation in ESF and MSF plants under seasonal drought, providing a mechanistic framework for predicting alpine ecosystems responses to future droughts.
      Yan Chang, Qian Gu, Abdel-Raouf A Moustafa, Haiyan Ren
      2026, 19 (3): rtaf190.
      Abstract ( 108 )   PDF(pc) (2155KB) ( 12 )   Save
      Although the crucial role of plant-soil feedback (PSF) associated with species composition in determining diversity‐productivity relationships has been increasingly recognized, its legacy effects on subsequent diversity‐productivity relationships remain unclear. We conducted a classic PSF experiment to assess how conditioning diversity and species composition shape subsequent diversity‐productivity relationships. Plant communities at four diversity levels (1, 2, 4 and 8 species) were grown in soils previously conditioned at matching diversity levels and one of five species compositions. Additionally, to test whether soil microbial diversity mediates composition effects, the same communities were grown under low, moderate and high soil biodiversity generated via inoculum dilution. Productivity was higher on legume-conditioned soils than on non-legume soils. Legumes also steepened the diversity‐productivity relationship, with the strongest responses following monoculture conditioning. In addition to plant diversity, species composition also shaped soil legacy effects, especially for specific plant functional groups such as legumes. Under the same plant diversity, the extent of soil legacy effects on succeeding plants depended on species composition, particularly under low diversity, and likely promoted subsequent community growth by enhancing nutrient availability and microbial diversity. Our findings highlight that manipulating species composition, particularly the inclusion of legumes, can harness soil legacy effects to enhance ecosystem productivity in ecological agriculture.
      Li Chen, Amparo Lázaro, Haidong Li, Zhibin Tao, Jun Yin, Mingchuan Zhong, Guangtao Meng, Pinrong Li, Sheng Qiu, Dezhu Li, Hong Wang, Yanhui Zhao
      2026, 19 (3): rtaf194.
      Abstract ( 136 )   PDF(pc) (2099KB) ( 26 )   Save
      Human disturbances can drive the expansion of aggressive native plant species, which can significantly impact ecological communities. Investigating the effects of these species on ecological networks is crucial for biodiversity conservation and management. While previous research has shown that aggressive native plant can negatively affect aboveground pollination networks, their impacts on belowground ecological networks remain unexplored. To address this gap, we conduct field experiments to investigate the ecological impacts of an aggressive native plant, Euphorbia jolkinii Boissier (hereafter Euphorbia), on plant and arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) communities, plant–AMF interactions, and mycorrhizal network structures in ten overgrazed subalpine meadows. Our findings indicate that Euphorbia exhibits a high level of generalization in its interactions with AMF. While Euphorbia did not significantly reduce the species richness of neighboring plants or AMF, it notably altered species composition and reduced plant biomass. Furthermore, Euphorbia also affected the interactions among species by altering plant composition and rewiring interactions. These changes led to plant–AMF networks influenced by Euphorbia exhibiting reduced connectance and nestedness but increased modularity. These discoveries underscore the considerable negative impacts of aggressive native plant species on belowground mycorrhizal networks and plant biomass. Our results highlight the necessity to develop effective management and restoration strategies for areas impacted by the expansion of aggressive native species.
      Yuzhu Chen, Peng Li, Yunpeng Luo, Longjun Wang, Ying Peng, Tong Li, Xiaolu Zhou, Changhui Peng
      2026, 19 (3): rtaf195.
      Abstract ( 162 )   PDF(pc) (1955KB) ( 10 )   Save
      Nitrogen deposition substantially alters nutrient absorption by plant root systems, which has far-reaching consequences for leaf growth and development. However, its effects on plant phenology and climatic sensitivity remain unclear. This study investigated the effects of nitrogen deposition on vegetation phenology and its sensitivity to moisture and temperature from 1982 to 2022 by combining data from field experiments, remote-sensing observations, and land surface models. The results revealed that the start of the growing season (SOS) has become more sensitive to vapor pressure deficit (VPD), whereas its sensitivity to temperature and soil moisture (SM) has decreased in recent decades. Conversely, there was no notable trend in climatic sensitivity at the end of the growing season (EOS). The model results show that SOS’s sensitivity to VPD (SVPD) and temperature (STem) increased with higher nitrogen deposition levels (SVPD, a = 1.07 d unit−1, P < 0.01; STem, a = 0.10 d unit−1, P < 0.01). The sensitivity of EOS to soil moisture (SSM) decreased significantly with increasing nitrogen deposition (a = −1.82 d unit−1, P < 0.05), whereas SVPD decreased (a = −0.38 d unit−1, P < 0.01). Attribution analysis indicated that nitrogen deposition was the primary driver of changes in the climatic sensitivity of SOS, whereas atmospheric CO2 predominantly influenced changes in the SSM of EOS. These results emphasize the critical role of nitrogen deposition in determining the climatic sensitivity of vegetation phenology and provide a novel perspective for understanding and predicting vegetation phenology dynamics under ongoing global change.
      Research Articles
      Mengdie Wang, Chuan Jin, Yao Gao, Weirong Zhang, Kai Di, Yue Jiao, Liucui Wu, Zehao Fan, Cheng Yi, Nana Cai, Siyuan Zhou, Zhongmin Hu
      2026, 19 (3): rtaf200.
      Abstract ( 98 )   PDF(pc) (2214KB) ( 13 )   Save
      Understanding vegetation sensitivity to water deficit is essential for assessing ecosystem vulnerability and adaptive capacity. Based on flux and meteorological data from 77 global sites, we developed a new approach that combines percentile and standard deviation methods to characterize precipitation (PPT) and soil water content (SWC) deficit conditions. Simultaneously, we applied the SWH model to simulate evapotranspiration (ET) processes, separating transpiration (T) from evaporation (E). Spatially explicit analysis revealed significant variations in vegetation sensitivity to PPT and SWC deficits (SPPT and SSWC) across ecosystem types, generally intensifying with increasing deficit severity. Notably, nearly half of the sites exhibited contrasting responses, with positive SSWC but negative SPPT. This divergence was particularly pronounced in forest ecosystems, likely due to precipitation legacy effects. Moreover, the study revealed the unexpected increase in gross primary productivity (GPP) under SWC deficit conditions at certain sites, which was mechanistically linked to increased T, T/ET, and water use efficiency. We proposed that vegetation exhibits growth inertia, whereby plants that thrive under favorable prior conditions can sustain higher soil water utilization rates and GPP, which in turn leads to soil moisture depletion. Specifically, vegetation actively regulates water use to maintain productivity through transpiration-mediated adjustments, challenging conventional views of passive drought responses. To sum up, these results collectively highlighted that SWC surpasses PPT in determining vegetation sensitivity to water deficit, and that comprehensive vegetation drought sensitivity assessments must explicitly consider the differential impacts of E and T on SWC dynamics.
      Research Article
      Zong-Song Wang, Li-Li Jiang, Kui Wang, Wen-Jing Liu, Mei-Rong Chen, Kai Xue, Yan-Bin Hao, Shi-Ping Wang, Yan-Fen Wang, Xiao-Yong Cui
      2026, 19 (3): rtaf204.
      Abstract ( 105 )   PDF(pc) (1271KB) ( 15 )   Save
      Ecosystem stability is a fundamental attribute that underpins the delivery of essential ecosystem services. However, most research has primarily focused on the temporal stability of biomass, overlooking the multidimensional nature of stability that cannot be captured by a single metric. In this study, we investigated the effects of nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) additions on the stability of plant and microbial communities in alpine meadows of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau. Our results demonstrated that N and P additions significantly increased plant community biomass but reduced the diversity of plants, prokaryotes, and fungi. Although N and P additions did not significantly reduce biomass stability, a decreasing trend was observed. More importantly, compositional stability was significantly reduced by nutrient additions, with differing underlying mechanisms. Nitrogen addition primarily reduced community compositional stability by decreasing prokaryotic diversity, affecting plant diversity and the stability of subdominant species. In contrast, P addition mainly reduced the compositional stability of dominant species, thereby decreasing overall community stability. Furthermore, N addition significantly decreased the network stability of both prokaryotic and fungal communities. Importantly, microbial diversity and network properties were significantly correlated with plant community stability, highlighting the interconnectedness of above- and belowground communities. Our findings emphasize the need for future research to adopt a multidimensional approach to ecosystem stability, integrating both compositional and functional aspects of plant communities, and incorporating microbial diversity and network characteristics.
      Zhenzhen Shao, Donghao Wu, Xianhui Zhu, Chengjin Chu, Youshi Wang
      2026, 19 (3): rtaf197.
      Abstract ( 79 )   PDF(pc) (1261KB) ( 14 )   Save
      Increasing tree species diversity is an effective practice for forest restoration. It enhances multitrophic diversity and multifunctionality. Soil nematodes play a vital role in enhancing soil health, yet it has not been fully addressed about how tree species diversity affects the multitrophic diversity and interspecific interactions of soil nematodes. We investigated soil nematode communities in a planted forest ecosystem converted from agricultural lands. Soil nematodes were sampled across four tree species richness levels and classified into four trophic groups (i.e. herbivores, bacterivores, fungivores and predators-omnivores) based on feeding guilds. We analyzed the effects of tree species richness, tree productivity, soil properties and trophic interactions on soil nematode communities. Results showed that total nematode diversity was not affected by tree species richness. The Shannon index of predators-omnivores decreased with tree species richness, while the abundance and genus richness of herbivores declined with tree productivity. Structural equation models revealed that soil pH reduced the abundance and genus richness of herbivores and bacterivores through abiotic stress. Conversely, predators-omnivores increased the abundance and genus richness of herbivores and bacterivores via top-down trophic regulation. Notably, tree species richness intensified the complexity of nematode co-occurrence networks. These findings demonstrate that tree species richness, productivity, soil pH and trophic interactions collectively shape soil nematode communities, and that network complexity, rather than taxonomic diversity, is strongly affected by the plant–soil biota interactions. Our study provides an empirical basis for designing forest restoration schemes that prioritize belowground ecosystem functions.
      Zixuan Zhou, Jie Li, Xuezheng Han, Weifeng Gao, Nianpeng He
      2026, 19 (3): rtaf206.
      Abstract ( 104 )   PDF(pc) (1385KB) ( 7 )   Save
      Carbon sequestration rates (CSRs) in forest ecosystems can be accurately predicted at different spatial and temporal scales. However, the variation of CSRs among different ecosystem components and the correlation with socioeconomic development remain unclear, although they are important to know to ensure that high CSRs are achieved on schedule in the long run. We aimed to develop a novel four-dimensional forest carbon sink (4-D carbon sink) framework considering spatial, temporal, component and socioeconomic factors. The Forest Carbon Sequestration Model was applied under three climate scenarios (SSP119, SSP245 and SSP585) to assess the 4-D carbon sinks in the forest ecosystems of Heilongjiang Province from 2020 to 2060, across two periods (2020–2030 and 2030–2060). The average CSR in Heilongjiang’s forests was 23.25 ± 1.14 Tg C yr−1, with Daxing’anling, Heihe, Yichun and Mudanjiang accounting 75% of the provincial total. Temporally, CSRs should reach a maximum in 2035–2040. Vegetation and soil consistently accounted for most CSRs, whereas litter exerted minimal influence across spatial and temporal contexts. Notably, northern Heilongjiang displayed markedly higher CSR per unit GDP (>80% of the provincial total) than eastern areas. Overall, carbon sinks in Heilongjiang varied greatly across spatial, temporal, component and socioeconomic scales, and the strong heterogeneity and clear imbalances among different regions, time periods, forest components, and socioeconomic conditions should be emphasized in the future. Our results offer new insights and guidance for strengthening carbon sequestration and regional economic development under China’s 2060 carbon neutrality goal.
      Ge Hou, Peili Shi, Ning Zong, Jian Sun, Tiancai Zhou, Jialuo Yu, Yangjian Zhang, Lin Jiang, Juntao Zhu
      2026, 19 (3): rtaf205.
      Abstract ( 75 )   PDF(pc) (1592KB) ( 4 )   Save
      Anthropogenic nitrogen enrichment significantly alters plant community structure and productivity, often undermining long-term stability. However, the role of initial community structure, particularly species evenness, in mediating these stability responses remains inadequately understood. In this study, we conducted an 8-year nitrogen-addition experiment across four alpine grasslands on the Tibetan Plateau, which represent a natural gradient in initial evenness. Our results indicated that initial species evenness was crucial in mediating community stability under nitrogen enrichment. In low-evenness communities, stability exhibited a linear decline with increasing nitrogen, primarily driven by the instability of dominant species, specifically Carex parvula O. Yano in alpine meadows and Stipa purpurea Griseb. in alpine desert steppes. At lower nitrogen levels, dominant species biomass increased; however, as nitrogen levels rose, biomass variability increased, resulting in diminished overall stability. Conversely, high-evenness communities displayed nonlinear stability responses, buffered by species asynchrony. In the alpine meadow steppe, stability initially increased at low nitrogen levels but subsequently declined at higher nitrogen due to reductions in species evenness and functional redundancy. In the alpine steppe, stability first decreased at low nitrogen due to community imbalance, but compensatory dynamics among nitrogen-tolerant species, such as S. purpurea, restored stability at elevated nitrogen levels. These findings emphasize the diverse responses of alpine grasslands to nitrogen enrichment and underscore the significance of initial species evenness for ecosystem resilience. This study offers critical insights for forecasting ecosystem responses and formulating targeted management strategies in the context of global change.
      Wen Zhao, Reyila Mumin, Junning Li, Jiamao Huang, Shun Liu, Yifei Sun, Baokai Cui
      2026, 19 (3): rtaf207.
      Abstract ( 111 )   PDF(pc) (1578KB) ( 20 )   Save
      As a vital component of the boreal forest, Larix gmelinii forests face severe threats from frequent wildfires. Soil microorganisms play a key role in forest ecosystems by participating in biogeochemical cycles and maintaining a close association with plants. To elucidate the effects of wildfires on soil microorganisms in L. gmelinii forests, we collected soil samples from burned and unburned forests in Northeast China during both summer and winter for amplicon sequencing. The results showed that wildfires significantly increased soil microbial diversity and markedly altered soil microbial community structure. Soil pH was the most important factor influencing microbial community diversity and composition. Compared with unburned networks, the burned networks were much less complex and stable, with a significantly higher proportion of fungus-related correlations. Additionally, the relative importance of deterministic processes in forming both bacterial and fungal communities was lower in the burned forest than in the unburned forest within the same season. Our study illustrated the effects of wildfire on soil microorganisms from the perspectives of community structure, networks and assembly process, and demonstrated the crucial role of soil fungi in post-fire restoration of ecological functions.
      Minyan He, Zhibin Tao, Wei Huang, Juan Yan
      2026, 19 (3): rtaf209.
      Abstract ( 120 )   PDF(pc) (1282KB) ( 36 )   Save
      Classical biocontrol of invasive plants often fails due to their high tolerance to herbivore damage. While it directly affects plants, herbivory can also indirectly influence soil microbes. However, whether herbivory-induced shifts in the soil microbiome further modulate invasive plant tolerance and how these interactions differ from native plants remain unclear. We performed a plant-soil feedback experiment with invasive Alternanthera philoxeroides, its native congener Alternanthera sessilis, and the biocontrol beetle Agasicles hygrophila. In Phase I, plants of each species were exposed to herbivory or control, and soils were collected for fungal community analysis at the end of this phase. In Phase II, A. philoxeroides was grown in these conditioned soils under herbivory or control. Compared with the no-herbivory control, herbivory significantly increased the relative abundance of soil pathogens in A. sessilis-conditioned soils but had no effect on A. philoxeroides-conditioned soils. Consequently, A. philoxeroides exhibited significantly lower tolerance when grown in herbivory-conditioned A. sessilis soil than in soils conditioned by unexposed A. sessilis or herbivory-exposed/unexposed A. philoxeroides. Further analysis revealed that tolerance decreased significantly with increasing relative abundance of soil pathogens. Our findings demonstrate that herbivory on the native congener creates a pathogen-enriched soil legacy that is strongly associated with impaired invader tolerance. In contrast, herbivory on the invader itself leaves soil pathogens unchanged, a scenario which coincides with sustained compensatory growth. This highlights the critical role of plant-specific soil microbial legacies in mediating biocontrol outcomes and suggests that disrupting the stable soil microbiome of invaders could improve their management efficacy.
      Xiaoying Zhang, Zhe Feng, Kai Fang, Wenqiang Zhao, Xiaohu Wang, Jia Liu, Dandan Li, Qing Liu, Yongping Kou
      2026, 19 (3): rtaf211.
      Abstract ( 74 )   PDF(pc) (2617KB) ( 1 )   Save
      Soil pathogenic fungi play a critical role in forest succession and biodiversity maintenance. However, how litter decomposition regulates soil pathogenic fungal community structure, and subsequently influences seed germination and survival, remains poorly understood. In this study, we conducted a 360-day laboratory-based litterbag experiment using single-species and mixed-species litter collected from representative plant species across different successional stages in the subalpine forests of western Sichuan, China. The effects of litter decomposition on the community structure of soil total fungi and pathogenic fungi, as well as the mechanisms by which fungal community dynamics affect seed germination and survival, were systematically investigated. Results showed that remaining litter mass was significantly correlated with key physicochemical properties, including total carbon, nitrogen, phosphorus and lignin content. Litter decomposition significantly altered the community structures of both soil total fungi and pathogenic fungi, and further affected the germination and survival of plant seeds. Specifically, the decomposition of herb litter significantly altered the pathogenic fungal community structure, leading to a widespread inhibition of seed germination in plant species across all successional stages, whereas shrub and arbor litters influenced germination mainly during mid- to late-successional stages. These findings reveal an ecological pathway of ‘litter decomposition–pathogenic fungi–seed germination’, providing a novel perspective for understanding the mechanisms of plant community assembly during forest succession.
      Xiaohan Yang, Lin Wu, Xianlin Guo, Huai Chen, Dan Xue
      2026, 19 (3): rtaf208.
      Abstract ( 101 )   PDF(pc) (2197KB) ( 7 )   Save
      Sphagnum palustre, a dominant peat-forming moss, plays a pivotal role in maintaining peatland carbon and nitrogen balance. However, increasing atmospheric nitrogen (N) deposition threatens its ecological stability. To elucidate the adaptive responses of S. palustre to nitrogen-enriched conditions, especially under moderate N input, we applied physiological, microbial, metabolomic and transcriptomic analyses to peatland across a nitrogen gradient (0, 3, 6 and 12 g N m−2 a−1). Sphagnum palustre displayed the greatest growth stability under moderate nitrogen addition (6 g N m−2 a−1), contrasting with the observed continuous increase in vascular plant biomass. Mechanistically, nitrogen enrichment markedly suppressed microbial nitrogen fixation, consistent with host-mediated downregulation of external N inputs. Simultaneously, S. palustre exhibited substantial metabolic reprogramming; the activity and expression levels of nitrogen assimilation enzymes (nitrate reductase, nitrite reductase, glutamine synthetase and glutamate synthase) declined, while amino acid synthesis and nitrogen-rich metabolite accumulation were both enhanced. This dual regulatory strategy—reducing external N acquisition and reallocating internal N metabolism—represents a key adaptive mechanism that both maintains nitrogen homeostasis and mitigates toxicity under enrichment. Our findings highlight the mechanisms by which S. palustre achieves nitrogen resilience through coordinated microbial and metabolic regulation, providing new insight into the ecological stability of moss-dominated peatlands under the expected future nitrogen deposition conditions.
      Clonal Plants as Agents of Change
      Qing Wei, Chang-Fan Chen, Cheng-Gang Qiu, Ning-Fei Lei, Jin-Song Chen, Yong-Mei Liao
      2026, 19 (3): rtaf203.
      Abstract ( 108 )   PDF(pc) (1571KB) ( 11 )   Save
      Alien plant invasions threaten native biodiversity, disrupt ecosystem functions and can cause large economic damage. Phenotypic plasticity is considered a key mechanism facilitating plant invasions. Plastic responses can occur not only within a generation but also be transmitted to subsequent generations. However, little is known about how combined plasticity within and between generations affects the growth performance of clonal invaders and their native congeners under drought conditions and whether clonal invaders benefit more from such plasticity. The parental generation of the clonal invader Wedelia trilobata and its native congener Wedelia chinensis were exposed to drought or control conditions. After 10 weeks, rooted offspring ramets from the parental generation were obtained and subsequently exposed to either drought or control conditions. Parental drought significantly enhanced offspring drought resistance in both species. However, the expression of combined plasticity in morphological traits differed significantly between the clonal invader and its native congener. The clonal invader exhibited greater plasticity in specific leaf area and root surface area, while the native congener showed stronger plasticity in root to shoot ratio. Furthermore, combined plasticity significantly increased the total and shoot biomass in the clonal invader’s offspring, a pattern not observed in the native congener. These results indicate that when offspring environments are predictable, combined plasticity can improve offspring drought adaptation in both species, but the clonal invader benefits more. Given the projected increase in drought frequency under climate change, combined plasticity may enhance the competitive advantage of invasive plants, facilitating their establishment and spread in introduced ranges.
      Research Article
      Mingyang Liu, Weiren Wang, Qing Ye, Hui Liu, Ronghua Li, Shidan Zhu, Osazee O Oyanoghafo, Pengcheng He
      2026, 19 (3): rtaf186.
      Abstract ( 139 )   PDF(pc) (1185KB) ( 19 )   Save
      Water use efficiency and hydraulic conductivity are critical determinants of plant growth and adaptive ability. In principle, high hydraulic conductivity could result in low water use efficiency because of the selection between resource acquisition and resource conservation in species. However, there is insufficient evidence on whether a trade-off exists between these two plant hydraulic traits across species. Here, we quantified eight leaf and branch functional traits associated with water use efficiency and hydraulic conductivity across 52 dominant woody species from three forests (i.e. dry forest, DF; semi-wet forest, SWF; wet forest, WF) along a precipitation gradient in China. We found that plant water use efficiency and hydraulic conductivity were significantly and negatively correlated. Principal component analysis revealed that DF, SWF, and WF species were significantly isolated along axis 1. In contrast to species distributed in WF and SWF, DF species had the lowest hydraulic conductivity, stomatal conductance, and leaf/sapwood area ratio but showed the highest intrinsic water-use efficiency, leaf carbon isotope ratio, and wood density. Stomatal conductance to water explained the differences in plant water use efficiency among different sites, whereas leaf maximum carbon assimilation rate did not. Our results suggest a trade-off between hydraulic conductivity and water use efficiency, which influences the vegetation features in different sites.
  • Please wait a minute...
    Canopy nitrogen deposition drives phyllosphere bacterial diversity loss via foliar traits
    Yongtao Huang, Handan Dai, Shenglei Fu, Yuhua Tan, Die Li, Chenlu Zhang, Xiaowei Li, Biao Dong, Xiao Zhang
    doi: 10.1093/jpe/rtag134
    Abstract ( 4 )    PDF    Save
    Elucidating the effects of atmospheric nitrogen deposition on forest phyllosphere bacteria α and β diversity is crucial for predicting microbial and ecosystem responses to future environmental change. However, such impacts remain poorly understood, largely because most previous studies have overlooked canopy interception and processing of deposited N. To address this knowledge gap, we performed a decade-long field study comparing canopy addition of N (CN) with understory addition of N (UN) in a temperate forest in China and conducted a comprehensive meta-analysis compiling data on phyllosphere bacterial diversity from 11 studies (most of which focused on UN). Integrating our UN study with the meta-analysis indicated that UN had minimal effects on phyllosphere bacterial α and β diversity. In contrast, CN significantly reduced α diversity by 22%-30% and β diversity by 8%-24%, highlighting the previously unrecognized role of canopy N deposition. This discrepancy likely reflects the direct foliar contact and uptake involved in CN, which are not captured by conventional UN methodologies. Mechanistically, CN reduces α diversity by causing the loss of rare species through diminished specific leaf area, and diminishes β diversity via homogenizing microhabitats and reducing species turnover among communities. These findings provide robust empirical evidence that the plant canopy is not a passive barrier but an active processor of N deposition, fundamentally shaping associated microbial communities. Neglecting this plant-mediated pathway may substantially underestimate the impacts of N deposition on forest microbiota.
    Above- and below-ground mechanisms enhance competitiveness of invasive Phytolacca americana in heavy metal-rich soils
    Zhisen Yan, Yuxin Lai, Xinping Wang, Jingru Zhang, Shaoyu Zhang, Yunshan Liu, Bo Li, Evan Siemann, Jihua Wu, Yi Wang
    doi: 10.1093/jpe/rtag138
    Abstract ( 3 )    PDF    Save
    Increasing evidence suggests that some invasive species can sustain high growth rates in heavy metal-enriched environments, while native species often lack such adaptive traits, which may facilitate the invasion success of alien species. However, the underlying mechanisms are poorly understood. This study examined the invasive plant Phytolacca americana and native Phytolacca acinosa in cadmium (Cd)-contaminated soils in China. The results showed that, while native plant biomass decreased at higher soil Cd concentrations, invasive plant biomass remained unaffected. Despite decreasing overall with increasing Cd concentration, soil enzyme activities remained higher in soils where invasive plants grew compared to native plants. Phytolacca americana accumulated more Cd, particularly in the leaves and under higher soil Cd concentrations. Native seed germination was inhibited with increasing litter-Cd concentration, whereas invasive seed germination was unaffected. These findings suggest that the ability of the invasive species to mitigate the negative effects of Cd pollution on soil enzyme activities contributed to their higher Cd-tolerance by sustaining soil nutrient availability. Additionally, higher leaf-Cd levels in invasive plants may constitute an elemental defense. Overall, heavy metal pollution not only favored invasive plants by suppressing native plant growth but may have also promoted invasion through the effects of Cd accumulation in invasive litter on native seed germination.
    Drivers of asymbiotic nitrogen fixation across alpine grasslands
    Wenyin Wang, Wenyan Li, A. Allan Degen, Lingyan Qi, Mei Huang, Chunyan Wang, Tianyun Qi, Yaling Lu, Zhixiang Gao, Zhanhuan Shang
    doi: 10.1093/jpe/rtag131
    Abstract ( 10 )    PDF    Save
    Alpine grasslands are cold and hypoxic, typically lacking symbiotic nitrogen fixation. Nonetheless, they often maintain high nitrogen stocks, which suggests an important role for asymbiotic nitrogen fixation (ANF). However, the ANF rates of soil or plant leaves and their driving factors in alpine grasslands remain unclear. We quantified the ANF rates in soil and plant leaves, the soil stoichiometry and the nifH based community composition and abundance across alpine grasslands (swamp meadow, alpine meadow, and alpine steppe) along an altitudinal gradient between 3100 and 4300 m above sea level (a. s. l). The ANF rates in swamp and alpine meadows were faster than in alpine steppe. Diazotroph communities were dominated by Proteobacteria (85%) and Actinobacteria (12%), and 72 nifH OTUs assigned to Cluster II (anfH/vnfH-like) suggested the potential presence of alternative nitrogenase-related homologs. Specialist taxa in soil ANF bacteria were influenced mainly by stochastic processes and exhibited faster transition rates than generalists. Random forest analyses identified soil pH, nifH diversity and composition, soil stoichiometry, and molybdenum as key predictors of soil ANF. Estimated annual nitrogen inputs were 4.0, 3.1, and 0.5 kg N ha-1 yr-1 in alpine meadow, swamp meadow, and alpine steppe, respectively. Our results indicate that ANF represents a significant nitrogen input pathway in alpine grasslands and should be incorporated into nitrogen cycling and regional nitrogen budgets.
    Impact of Climate Extremes on Seasonal Dynamics of Grassland Gross Primary Productivity in Central Asia Considering Lagged and Cumulative Effects
    Yapeng Xu, Jianghua Zheng, Liang Liu
    doi: 10.1093/jpe/rtag137
    Abstract ( 8 )    PDF    Save
    Central Asian grasslands are crucial for regional ecological security and the carbon cycle, yet intensifying climate extremes threaten the stability of their productivity. Seasonal-scale studies that simultaneously incorporate temporal effects and nonlinear relationships remain limited. Using monthly gross primary productivity (GPP) and climate data from 2001 to 2022, we quantified the temporal effects of indices of climate extremes on grassland GPP, including cumulative effects (CE) and lagged effects (LE), and combined correlation analysis with random forest to identify seasonally dominant climatic drivers and their spatial heterogeneity. Results show a slight overall decline in grassland GPP with pronounced spatial variability, alongside an overall warming and drying tendency in climate extremes. Temporal effects were widespread, and for most indices CE exceeded LE; CE for precipitation and temperature extremes was mainly 2.23-2.46 and 1.81-2.80 months, respectively. Temporal effects differed among drought indices, with CE dominating for the Standardized Precipitation Evapotranspiration Index (SPEI) and consecutive dry days (CDD) (2.39 and 2.14 months), whereas LE dominated for vapor pressure deficit (VPD) (1.26 months). At the seasonal scale, precipitation extremes generally promoted GPP, whereas drought generally suppressed GPP. Precipitation extremes and drought played dominant roles in seasonal GPP variability, while the impacts of temperature extremes exhibited pronounced seasonality and spatial heterogeneity. These findings provide a scientific basis for adaptive management of arid grassland ecosystems and offer insights for addressing climate change and promoting long-term regional ecosystem sustainability.
    Common mycorrhizal networks are associated with enhanced glyphosate-induced responses in adjacent plants
    Yao Xiang, Yu Song, Jie Lin, Rahul Jain, Xiuling Wang, Aiguo Yin, Maofeng Yue, Guorong Xin
    doi: 10.1093/jpe/rtag140
    Abstract ( 9 )    PDF    Save
    Glyphosate is the most widely used herbicide in global agriculture and can affect adjacent non-target plants by altering rhizosphere microbial communities. Root-mediated transport may occur more rapidly than spray drift or soil diffusion, highlighting a potentially important exposure pathway. However, the mechanisms by which glyphosate exuded from weed roots influences non-target plants remain poorly understood. In this study, we examined the effects of glyphosate exuded from the roots of the weed Eleusine indica on the growth of non-target plant Stylosanthes guianensis under different weed densities. Three rhizosphere segregation models were employed to investigate glyphosate transfer through soil-root-hyphae pathways and to elucidate the ecological processes underlying belowground risk transmission. Glyphosate herbicide weeding significantly inhibited the growth of S. guianensis in a density-dependent manner, resulting in a negative net effect. Under high weed density, glyphosate herbicide weeding significantly increased shikimic acid accumulation in S. guianensis by 45.03–96.63% compared with mechanical weeding. At 20 days, glyphosate herbicide weeding significantly reduced microbial biomass carbon and acid phosphatase activity in the rhizosphere of S. guianensis, while decreasing the relative abundance of beneficial microbial taxa. Null model analysis indicated that deterministic processes dominated rhizosphere community assembly. Furthermore, treatments permitting common mycorrhizal networks (CMNs) consistently exhibited stronger glyphosate-induced physiological responses in non-target plants than CMNs-blocking treatments, indicating that CMN connectivity is associated with enhanced belowground glyphosate exposure. Our results demonstrate that CMN connectivity is linked to intensified glyphosate-induced responses within plant communities. These findings provide novel insights into how belowground connectivity modulates herbicide-associated responses in agroecosystems.
  • 2026, Vol. 19 No.2 No.1
    2025, Vol. 18 No.6 No.5 No.4 No.3 No.2 No.1
    2024, Vol. 17 No.6 No.5 No.4 No.3 No.2 No.1
    2023, Vol. 16 No.6 No.5 No.4 No.3 No.2 No.1
    2022, Vol. 15 No.6 No.5 No.4 No.3 No.2 No.1
    2021, Vol. 14 No.6 No.5 No.4 No.3 No.2 No.1
    2020, Vol. 13 No.6 No.5 No.4 No.3 No.2 No.1
    2019, Vol. 12 No.6 No.5 No.4 No.3 No.2 No.1
    2018, Vol. 11 No.6 No.5 No.4 No.3 No.2 No.1
    2017, Vol. 10 No.6 No.5 No.4 No.3 No.2 No.1
    2016, Vol. 9 No.6 No.5 No.4 No.3 No.2 No.1
    2015, Vol. 8 No.6 No.5 No.4 No.3 No.2 No.1
    2014, Vol. 7 No.6 No.5 No.4 No.3 No.2 No.1
    2013, Vol. 6 No.6 No.5 No.4 No.3 No.2 No.1
    2012, Vol. 5 No.4 No.3 No.2 No.1
    2011, Vol. 4 No.4 No.3 No.1-2
    2010, Vol. 3 No.4 No.3 No.2 No.1
    2009, Vol. 2 No.4 No.3 No.2 No.1
    2008, Vol. 1 No.4 No.3 No.2 No.1
Highly Cited Articles
    Effects of tree mycorrhizal type on soil respiration and carbon stock via fine root biomass and litter dynamic in tropical plantations
    Guodong Zhang, Guiyao Zhou, Xuhui Zhou, Lingyan Zhou, Junjiong Shao, Ruiqiang Liu, Jing Gao, Yanghui He, Zhenggang Du, Jianwei Tang and Manuel Delgado-Baquerizo
    J Plant Ecol 2023, 16 (1): rtac056 .   doi: 10.1093/jpe/rtac056
    Plant diversity and ecological intensification in crop production systems
    Rob W. Brooker, Cathy Hawes, Pietro P. M. Iannetta, Alison J. Karley, Delphine Renard
    J Plant Ecol 2023, 16 (6): rtad015 .   doi: 10.1093/jpe/rtad015
    Dominant species play a leading role in shaping community stability in the northern Tibetan grasslands
    Ge Hou, Peili Shi, Tiancai Zhou, Jian Sun, Ning Zong, Minghua Song, Xianzhou Zhang
    J Plant Ecol 2023, 16 (3): rtac110 .   doi: 10.1093/jpe/rtac110
    Effects of land use on soil microbial community structure and diversity in the Yellow River floodplain
    Xiongde Dong, Leyun Yang, Laura Sofie Harbo, Xinyu Yan, Ji Chen, Cancan Zhao, Yutong Xiao, Hao Liu, Shilin Wang, Yuan Miao, Dong Wang and Shijie Han
    J Plant Ecol 2023, 16 (1): rtac075 .   doi: 10.1093/jpe/rtac075
Special Issue

Editor’s Choice

The global range of the invasive weed Plantago virginiana is predicted to expand under climate change
Shengtianzi Dong, Radosław Puchałka, Chenglin Li, Heng Yang, Yufeng Wu, Hanyue Wang, Hegan Dong, Jieshi Tang
Root exudates increase microbial biomass but decrease diversity and richness: a meta-analysis
Xiao-Chong Zhang, Si-Tong Zhang, Yolima Carrillo, Hui-Liang Zhai, Yi-Zhu Zeng, Min Liu, Xiao-Feng Dong, Wei Sun, Jian-Ying Ma
Tracking forest overstory and understory phenology using a near-surface remote sensing system
Huanfa Sun, Liming Yan, Xingli Xia, Yihang Fan, Huizhu Li, Kun Huang, Xuhui Zhou, Jianyang Xia