IF: 3.9
CiteScore: 5.7
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 ( 32 )   PDF(pc) (1304KB) ( 24 )   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.
      Hanliang Gui, Xuewen Zhou, Zixuan Li, Qinchuan Xin
      2026, 19 (3): rtaf193.
      Abstract ( 64 )   PDF(pc) (2742KB) ( 6 )   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.
      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 ( 68 )   PDF(pc) (1348KB) ( 9 )   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.
  • Please wait a minute...
    Mycorrhizal types and leaf habits co-regulate soil organic carbon in subtropical forests
    Wanting Jiang, Rui Zhang, Wenhua Xiang, Xi Fang, Xiangwen Deng, Liang Chen, Pifeng Lei, Yeilin Zeng, Yanting Hu, Huili Wu, Baoan Hu, Shuai Ouyang
    doi: 10.1093/jpe/rtag073
    Abstract ( 7 )    PDF    Save
    Forest soil organic carbon (SOC) constitutes a critical component of the terrestrial carbon pool. While the two tree characteristics [arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) and ectomycorrhizal (ECM)] and the leaf habits (e.g. evergreen vs. deciduous) are known to significantly influence soil carbon cycling. The combined effects of mycorrhizal types and leaf habits on SOC accumulation in subtropical forests are poorly understood. To elucidate the relative importance of mycorrhizal types and leaf habits on SOC accumulation and its drivers, we sampled soil at four subtropical forests, representing distinct mycorrhizal-leaf habits combinations: evergreen ECM-associated, evergreen AM-associated, deciduous ECM-associated and deciduous AM-associated forests. Our results showed that both mycorrhizal types and leaf habits significantly influenced SOC accumulation. ECM-evergreen forests exhibited the highest SOC stocks, primarily driven by enhanced particulate organic carbon (POC) accumulation, together with elevated extracellular enzyme activities and a higher ratio of fungi to bacteria (F/B), consistent with a slow- decomposition strategy. In contrast, AM-associated and deciduous forests promoted a greater proportion of mineral-associated organic carbon (MAOC), reflecting faster microbial turnover and more efficient microbial-mineral stabilization. Leaf habits modulated mycorrhizal effects, attenuating differences between AM and ECM forests. Our work elucidated how mycorrhizal types and leaf habits co-shape SOC accumulation in subtropical forests, offering valuable scientific insights for species selection in forest management strategies focused on carbon accumulation.
    Flooding clonal parent plants influence the response of offspring to flooding through parental effects
    Yi-Luan Shen, Li-Juan Yang, Jing-Jing Xue, Jing-Fang Cai, Xuan-Shao Liu, Pei Cao, Qiu-Mei Zheng, Hong-Li Li
    doi: 10.1093/jpe/rtag074
    Abstract ( 7 )    PDF    Save
    Phenotypic plasticity, a crucial plant evolutionary strategy, enables rapid adaptation to environmental changes, and can even affect subsequent generations via transgenerational plasticity. Thus, parental effects can profoundly influence offspring phenotypes, and the environment can mediate such parental effects. Global climate change has increased the frequency of flooding, but research on the impact of flooding on parental effects remains limited. Therefore, this study examined how flooding affects the phenotypic and physiological characteristics of parents and, subsequently, the offspring through parental effects. This study modeled the effects of two natural habitats (flooding vs. no flooding) on four generations of the clonal plant Hydrocotyle vulgaris. Flooding was observed to have a positive impact on the biomass of roots, stems, and leaves, as well as the specific leaf areas of H. vulgaris parents and offspring. The offspring environment affected the manifestation of flooding-induced parental effects. Growth was favored when both parents and offspring experienced flooding, facilitating faster adaptive responses to similar environments, especially in stems and leaves. These parental effects can persist for at least three generations and may accumulate in consistently flooded offspring. These findings provide a scientific basis for studying phenotypic plasticity and parental effects in clonal plants.
    High-resolution mapping of Populus euphratica structure and aboveground biomass in the main stream of the Tarim River using multi-source remote sensing data
    Ayihulan Ashan, Qiuli Yang, Xiaoqiang Liu, Yingjie Luo, Yelu Zeng, Lichun Gong, Ling Li, Jianxin Wei, Qingdong Shi, Qinghua Guo, Xinchang Zhang
    doi: 10.1093/jpe/rtag093
    Abstract ( 7 )    PDF    Save
    Populus euphratica, the only native tree species along the Tarim River, is ecologically crucial for stabilizing landscapes and conserving biodiversity in arid region. However, its irregular canopy structure and sparse distribution complicate large-scale forest assessments. To overcome this, we developed a two-stage random forest model integrating backpack and unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) Light Detection and Ranging (LiDAR) data covering 10,143 plots of (30 m × 30 m), satellite imagery, and environmental variables. First, we derived structural attributes: leaf area index (R2 = 0.83, RMSE = 0.21), canopy cover (R2 = 0.80, RMSE = 0.07), foliage height diversity (R2 = 0.76, RMSE = 0.28), and canopy height (R2 = 0.67, RMSE = 2.04 m). Spatially, these attributes exhibited a general decreasing trend from the upper to the lower reaches, with reductions in their mean values ranging from 17.8% (canopy height) to 30.7% (foliage height diversity). These were then used to estimate aboveground biomass (R2 = 0.78, RMSE = 32.91 Mg ha-1). Our approach generated the first 30m-resolution continuous maps of Populus euphratica structure and biomass across the 1,321 km Tarim River basin. Total aboveground carbon stock was 73.50 Tg C, with a mean density of 65.93 ± 21.80 Mg C ha-1. Validation against forest inventory data confirmed superior performance over global biomass products (rRMSE = 36.26%). This study can provide fundamental data and theoretical support for the monitoring, management, and conservation of riparian forests in arid regions.
    Cuscuta parasitism and simulated herbivory reduce allelopathic effects of the invasive plant Solidago canadensis
    Ling Yuan, Yana Wang, Hanyang Lin, Mark van Kleunen, Junmin Li
    doi: 10.1093/jpe/rtag095
    Abstract ( 8 )    PDF    Save
    The dominance of alien invasive plants may be restricted by enemies, such as insect herbivores and parasitic plants. A fundamental assumption is that plants exposed to such antagonists produce less biomass and have weakened competitive ability. Here we tested experimentally whether the growth, metabolome and allelopathic effects of the invasive plant Solidago canadensis are affected by simulated herbivory (using jasmonic acid, JA) and Cuscuta australis parasitism. We found that biomass production of Solidago was decreased by JA application and by Cuscuta parasitism, but less so when both were applied simultaneously. In line with the latter, metabolome analysis indicated that growth-related pathways were upregulated under simultaneous JA application and Cuscuta parasitism. Solidago had negative allelopathic effects on germination of one native species and seedling root growth of two other native species, and these effects tended to become weaker when Solidago was either subjected to JA or Cuscuta parasitism, but not when both were applied simultaneously. Metabolome analysis indicated that Solidago down-regulated its accumulation of secondary metabolites when there was only a single stress (i.e. simulated herbivory or Cuscuta parasitism). Correlation analysis between allelopathic effects and differently accumulated metabolites indicated that coumarins (Esculin, Daphnin and Esculetin-7-O-glucoside) and phenolic acid (2-O-p-Cumaroylglycerol) may play an important role in Solidago allelopathy. Overall, our results suggest that Solidago regulates its metabolic pathways related to growth and defence chemistry differently in response to single and dual stresses.
    15N tracer chemical form underlies divergent estimates of symbiotic N2 fixation and nitrogen transfer
    Runfu Li, Wenli Ding, Shikui Dong, Wen-Feng Cong, Fusuo Zhang, Hans Lambers
    doi: 10.1093/jpe/rtag076
    Abstract ( 15 )    PDF    Save
    The 15N tracer technique is pivotal for quantifying nitrogen (N) dynamics in intercropping, but the assumption that results are independent of the tracer’s chemical form remains untested. We demonstrated that the choice of tracer form (NO3- vs. NH4+) systematically affected quantitative estimates of both symbiotic N2 fixation (SNF) and interspecific N transfer. In a pot experiment with maize and three leguminous green manures, the 15N-dilution technique revealed that the use of 15NH4+ as a tracer resulted in higher estimates of the proportion of N derived from the atmosphere (%Ndfa) by an average of 18.0% compared to 15NO3-. Concurrently, a 15N foliar labeling experiment showed that the tracer form assimilated by the donor plant strongly altered the observed interspecific transfer pattern: legumes transferred 2.2 times more N derived from 15NO3- than from 15NH4+ to maize, while maize transferred 1.6 times more N derived from 15NH4+ than from 15NO3- to legumes. This bidirectional transfer pattern can be best explained by the distinct biogeochemical behaviors of the two N forms and their divergent metabolic assimilation pathways within plants. Our findings exposed a critical, yet previously unquantified, methodological effect. We contend that the chemical identity of the tracer should be reported as a mandatory methodological parameter, as estimates are not absolute but represent methodology-dependent perspectives. This necessitates a critical reevaluation of data across studies, cautioning against direct comparisons of results obtained with different tracer forms.
  • 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

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
Ecological theory matters when linking plant functional traits and ecosystem carbon cycles
Erqian Cui