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 18,Issue 6
    01 December 2025
      Commentary
      Research Article
      Jianyong Wang, Yingxia Liu, Ayub M.O. Oduor, Mark van Kleunen, Yanjie Liu
      2025, 18 (6): rtaf112.
      Abstract ( 111 )   PDF(pc) (1149KB) ( 58 )   Save
      Grasslands are highly diverse ecosystems providing important ecosystem services, but they currently face a variety of anthropogenic stressors simultaneously. Quantifying grassland responses to global change factors (GCFs) is crucial for developing effective strategies to mitigate the negative impacts of global change on grassland communities and to promote their resilience in the face of future environmental challenges. We conducted a field experiment in the Songnen grassland, northeastern China, to test the combined effects of 0, 1, 2, 4, 6, and 8 GCFs, including fungicide, herbicide, insecticide, antibiotic stress, heavy metal pollution, light pollution, microplastic pollution, nitrogen deposition, tillage disturbance, and increased precipitation. We found that within one year, the increasing number of GCFs negatively impacts both the productivity and diversity of grassland communities. In comparison to exposure to a single GCF, exposure to 8 GCFs led to a reduction in productivity and species richness by 42.8% and 42.9%, respectively. Furthermore, these negative effects seem to be linked to the reduction of dominant species and the concurrent increase in neonative species (i.e., species that have expanded their geographic range into a new area without direct human assistance, but as an indirect consequence of human-induced environmental changes). The results of hierarchical diversity-interaction modeling suggested that the adverse impacts of an increasing number of GCFs on community productivity and diversity are attributable to both the specific identities of GCFs involved and their unique pairwise interactions. The results suggest that grasslands may quickly lose stability and degrade more rapidly in response to multiple co-occurring GCFs. Greater efforts should be made to conserve the functions and services of grassland ecosystems by reducing the impacts of human activities.
      Chunyue Yao, Jinchao Feng, Yeming Zhang, Zhenhua Dang, Linna Ma
      2025, 18 (6): rtaf093.
      Abstract ( 77 )   PDF(pc) (2596KB) ( 44 )   Save
      Plant and soil microbial communities jointly sustain ecosystem multifunctionality (EMF) in temperate grasslands, yet their relative contributions to EMF under grazing management remain poorly understood. We simultaneously investigated three temperate grasslands to assess the effects of grazing management, climate, edaphic properties, and plant and microbial communities (diversity and community composition) on EMF (quantified by potential soil nitrogen (N) mineralization, arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal infection rate, phospholipid fatty acid, soil total carbon (C) and N, inorganic N, and plant biomass). Using random forest modeling, we identified important predictors, followed by structural equation modeling (SEM) to disentangle their relative roles. The results showed consistent declines in plant diversity and EMF with increasing grazing intensity, while soil bacterial and fungal diversity exhibited minimal responses. Heavy grazing management significantly reduced the abundance of perennial forbs and rhizome grasses, but increased that of annuals and legumes. Concurrently, we observed a significant decrease in copiotrophic Proteobacteria abundance accompanied by an increase in oligotrophic Gemmatimonadetes abundance. Random forest modeling identified grazing intensity, climate, soil properties, plant diversity and community composition, and bacterial community composition as important predictors of EMF. SEM revealed that plant diversity was the dominant biotic predictor of EMF, exceeding the influence of microbial communities across all grasslands. Notably, aridity indirectly influenced EMF through plant diversity rather than direct regulation. These findings demonstrate that plant diversity primarily maintains EMF under grazing pressure, highlighting the importance of biodiversity-focused management strategies in temperate grassland conservation.
      Zengzeng Yang, Chunping Zhang, Quan Cao, Yang Yu, Zhengshe Zhang, Yongshang Tong, Xiaofang Zhang, Xue Zhang, Lian Huo, Kongtao Wei, Yulong He, Quanmin Dong
      2025, 18 (6): rtaf096.
      Abstract ( 67 )   PDF(pc) (3764KB) ( 21 )   Save
      In grassland ecosystem management, mowing influences the tolerance mechanism of plants by modifying their growth and reproductive traits; however, the specific processes involved remain unclear. This study focused on the Elymus species (Elymus nutans ‘Aba’, Elymus sibiricus ‘Qingmu No.1’, Elymus submuticus ‘Tongde’, Elymus breviaristatus ‘Tongde’ and E. sibiricus ‘Tongde’) and systematically evaluated the effects of different mowing intensities (no mowing, light, moderate and heavy mowing) at three growth stages (jointing, booting and flowering) on plant tolerance and the role of growth and reproductive traits in this mechanism. The results revealed that mowing generally reduced plant height and the reproductive branch quantity, while significantly increasing the tiller number, seedling number and relative growth rate. However, the responses of rhizome length and vegetative branch height varied across the growth stages. Mowing during the jointing stage had the most significant effect on morphological traits, with vegetative reproduction contributing the most to tolerance and increasing with mowing intensity. Overall, the plant response to mowing timing was more pronounced than its response to changes in individual traits. Moderate mowing at the jointing stage significantly increased growth rate, tiller number and seedling number, thereby enhancing mowing tolerance. In contrast, heavy mowing at the booting and flowering stages markedly reduced reproductive branch quantity and rhizome length, resulting in diminished mowing tolerance. The study indicated that differences in the mowing stage and forage species regulated adaptive changes in growth and reproductive traits, thereby influencing tolerance mechanisms. Grassland management should fully consider the effects of mowing at different growth stages to optimize the utilization and management of the Elymus grasslands.
      Yang Li, Jiangchao Guo, Yaoxin Guo, Yongfu Chai, Ming Yue
      2025, 18 (6): rtaf097.
      Abstract ( 50 )   PDF(pc) (1727KB) ( 12 )   Save
      Shrubland functions as an important carbon sink. However, uncertainties have still persisted regarding shrubland C storage and its underlying drivers. In this study, we conducted a field survey encompassing 45 sites to investigate all sectors of C stocks in shrublands distributed in northern China, in order to accurately estimate the regional C storage and to explore the potential drivers. Our results showed that the total C density of shrubland was 78.78 Mg C ha–1, with soil C density, vegetation C density and litter C density contributing 75.16, 2.99 and 0.64 Mg C ha–1, respectively. Distinct C density sectors were driven by different factors: vegetation C density was primarily driven by plant community richness, litter C density by shrub diversity and soil C density by total annual sunshine and soil total phosphorus in our study. Climate factors, plant community traits and soil properties independently explained 5.15%, 6.79% and 23.73% variation of the shrubland ecosystem C density, respectively. Furthermore, the interactions between community structural traits and climate factors, as well as between community structural traits and soil properties, can explain 10.44% and 18.50% of the variation, respectively. Our findings, based on direct field measurements, refined estimates of C storage in shrubland ecosystems in northern China, and these findings provided crucial data for the validation and parameterization of C models both within China and globally.
      Huiyuan Cheng, Kaling Huang, Mengdi Luan, Zifan Zhang, Xuebin Yan, Hui Guo
      2025, 18 (6): rtaf098.
      Abstract ( 67 )   PDF(pc) (2026KB) ( 21 )   Save
      Alien plants exhibit varied performance and distribution patterns across latitudinal gradients depending on species invasiveness and target community invasibility. Although numerous researches have studied the latitudinal patterns of plant invasiveness, few have focused on community-level invasibility. We hypothesize that community invasibility increases with latitude due to a reduction in native species richness (diversity-resistance hypothesis) and stronger environmental filtering (pre-adaptation hypothesis) at higher latitude. We conducted a field survey at 18 sites across 6 latitudes in southeast China to explore how the community invasibility changes with latitude and identify the key drivers underlying these patterns. We found that the community invasibility positively correlated with latitude, primarily due to a decrease of native species diversity at higher latitude. Climate factors exerted indirect effects on community invasibility by shaping native species diversity. The mean pairwise phylogenetic distance between species did not change with latitude indicating minor effects of pre-adaptation. Our study emphasizes the importance of native species diversity in shaping latitudinal patterns of community invasibility. These findings highlight biodiversity conservation as an effective strategy to mitigate biological invasions, particularly in regions vulnerable to climate change.
      Meiqi Yin, Hong Zhu, Xiya Zhang, Chenyu Jiang, Hongjin Shao, Borbála Codogno, Xiaowei Cui, Wenyi Sheng, Zhaojie Cui, Ning Du, Lele Liu, Weihua Guo
      2025, 18 (6): rtaf095.
      Abstract ( 37 )   PDF(pc) (2880KB) ( 13 )   Save
      Straw and coal gangue, primary wastes from agriculture and industry, respectively, have the potential to improve soil nutrients. The impact of plant species and microbial nutrient activation on this improvement warrants further investigation. A greenhouse experiment was conducted to examine how phosphorus-solubilizing bacteria (PSB) and mulch made from coal gangue and straw affect soil available phosphorus (AP), available silicon (ASi) and plant growth. These species include two economic crops, Gossypium hirsutum and Glycine max, and two plants used for mining remediation, Solanum nigrum and Medicago sativa. We found that the effects of mulching with coal gangue and straw on soil AP, ASi and plant growth were influenced by plant species. The soil AP and ASi contents were significantly positively correlated in G. max and S. nigrum and the mixed mulch significantly increased the soil AP and ASi contents for G. max and S. nigrum. The mixed mulch significantly increased the total biomass of G. max, with no significant effect on the biomass of other plants, reflecting that planting G. max could be an optimal strategy for improving soil with straw and coal gangue. The enhancement effects of the mixed mulch on soil AP and ASi of S. nigrum and the total biomass of G. max were negated by PSB, while PSB increased the soil AP and ASi contents of M. sativa with the mixed mulch. Overall, these results demonstrated the necessity of planting suitable species and judiciously using microbial inoculants during the use of waste.
      Yongning Li, Zhengjiao Liu, Yi Zheng, Yuxin Chen, Minxia Liang, Xubing Liu, Shixiao Yu
      2025, 18 (6): rtaf101.
      Abstract ( 21 )   PDF(pc) (1330KB) ( 5 )   Save
      The trait-based approach has long been crucial for understanding and predicting seedling dynamics in forest ecosystems. However, the complex architecture of trait networks governing these dynamics has been scarcely explored. The relationships among plant traits, reflecting plants’ overall life strategies, can offer deeper insights into plant performance than traditional trait-based analyses. Focusing on trait network architecture and traits themselves helps better understand the seedling-to-sapling transition. During a 12-year period, we carried out a field census in a subtropical forest. Using a demographic progress model, we evaluated two key population-level metrics for 26 species: the time for seedlings to reach the 2-m sapling stage and their early-growth survival period. We constructed plant trait networks with 16 leaf, stem and root traits and explored their connections with population vital rates. Our results showed that newly recruited seedlings took 17–81 years to become saplings, with a survival span of 1–4 years over a 5-year observation period. Network centralization was negatively correlated with the transition time but did not explain early-stage survival variation. Species with acquisitive strategies exhibited shorter transition time and a shorter survival period. Hub traits with high connectivity, such as root tissue density and leaf dry matter content, were more influential in determining the transition time. Overall, our study highlights the importance of trait network centralization and hub traits. By linking population characteristics derived from long-term individual-based observations with plant traits, this study advances our understanding of trait-population relationships and provides theoretical implications for forest management and conservation.
      Yingcheng Wang, Junbang Wang, Chu Wu, Huakun Zhou, Miao Zhang, Bo Zhao, Xi Peng, Xingsheng Yang, Xin Jin, Zhuohang Zhang, Guangxin Lu, Ye Deng
      2025, 18 (6): rtaf108.
      Abstract ( 64 )   PDF(pc) (3037KB) ( 7 )   Save
      The intricate relationships between plants and their rhizobacteria are crucial for plant success, yet our understanding of these associations, particularly in diverse alpine natural grasslands, remains limited. Here, we investigated two widespread grass genera (Stipa Linn and Poa Linn) and their core rhizobacteria across a vast 2161 km transects on the Qinghai–Tibetan Plateau. Compared to Stipa L., which has a broader niche breadth, Poa L. displays higher above- and below-ground biomass. This characteristic reflects a more resource-conservative and stable growth strategy, consistent with traits commonly observed in K-strategists. However, Poa’s core rhizobacteria (5458 species, 9.51% of total amplicon sequence variants (ASVs)) were enriched with here r-strategists, while Stipa’s (5193 species, 9.05% of total ASVs) were dominated by K-strategists. These findings highlight contrasting life-history strategies between grasses and their associated core rhizobacteria. Notably, only 633 core rhizobacteria overlapped between these two grasses. Functionally, Poa’s r-strategist microbiota likely prioritizes rapid resource acquisition for high biomass production, while Stipa’s K-strategist-dominated community might enhance stress tolerance in their resource-limited habitat. The observed pattern of life-history differences between grasses and rhizosphere microbes supports plant survival in alpine ecosystems. Our study advances understanding of rhizosphere ecology and its importance for ecosystem health in natural environments.
      Qiong Chen, Chunyan Long, Xiuxian Men, Kaikui Chang, Yong Bao, Xiaoli Cheng
      2025, 18 (6): rtaf109.
      Abstract ( 38 )   PDF(pc) (1917KB) ( 13 )   Save
      Microorganism-mediated nitrogen (N) denitrification and dynamics are crucial ecosystem functions that influence N losses. However, the drivers and microbial mechanisms underlying seasonal variations in denitrification across elevations in alpine forest mountain ecosystems remain poorly understood. Here, we assessed the variations in potential denitrification rates and denitrifier communities using 15N-labeling techniques and high-throughput sequencing and examined soil properties across an elevational gradient in alpine forest mountains. Our findings demonstrated that soil potential denitrification rates decreased with increasing elevations, exhibiting lower levels during the wet season (0.095 ± 0.005 mg kg−1 d−1) compared to the dry season (0.12 ± 0.007 mg kg−1 d−1) (P < 0.05). Soil substrates, including NH4+-N, dissolved organic nitrogen, and total nitrogen, were identified as pivotal regulators of soil denitrification during the dry season, indicating substrate-driven control. Conversely, microbial attributes (nirS and nosZ genes abundance), were the primary factors governing soil denitrification during the wet season, reflecting microbial regulation. Additionally, Bradyrhizobium emerged as the dominant genus contributing to denitrification rates in our study. Overall, our study underscores the diverse factors driving the seasonal dynamics of soil denitrification and provided critical insights to improve ecosystem models to better predict N losses under increasingly pronounced wet-dry precipitation patterns.
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    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
    doi: 10.1093/jpe/rtaf187
    Abstract ( 9 )    PDF    Save
    While plant root exudates play a crucial role in regulating soil microbial communities, their complex composition, low concentration and degradability make it difficult to determine their effects on microbial biomass, diversity and structure. In this study, we integrated 3,174 observations from 121 publications to systematically assess the effects of root exudate addition on soil microbial communities and their differential response mechanisms. The results indicated that exudates significantly increased microbial biomass (total microbial biomass: + 18.65%; bacteria biomass: + 31.35%; fungi biomass: + 37.73%) but decreased α-diversity (− 6.17%), richness (− 9.16%) and evenness (− 10.09%), while also altered the community structure. Natural exudates, with their complex composition and higher nutrient content, had a stronger effect on promoting microbial biomass, whereas synthetic exudates led to the overgrowth of certain bacterial taxa, suppressing microbial community diversity. The responses of soil available nitrogen content were identified as key predictors of microbial biomass, while soil pH was an important predictor of microbial richness and evenness. Meanwhile, the carbon input rate from root exudates significantly suppressed α-diversity and altered microbial community structure. Additionally, the C:N ratio of exudates played a critical role in regulating β-diversity and community structure. This study highlights the importance of exudate chemical properties, experimental conditions and soil physicochemical characteristics, offering a new perspective on the mechanisms regulating microbial communities by root exudates.
    Climate-LUCC Synergy Drives Soil Respiration Dynamics in China: A Biome-Specific Machine Learning Approach
    Ru Ming, Yan Zhou, Yaoping Cui, Ni Huang, Junbang Wang
    doi: 10.1093/jpe/rtaf153
    Abstract ( 7 )    PDF    Save
    Soil respiration (RS) releases CO₂ through autotrophic and heterotrophic respiration, representing the second largest carbon flux in terrestrial ecosystems after photosynthesis. It plays a pivotal role in global carbon cycling and climate feedback. China’s climate shifted from a warming hiatus (2001–2010) to accelerated warming (2010–2019), coupled with ongoing land use/cover change (LUCC), jointly drives the spatiotemporal dynamics of RS. However, the relative contributions and underlying mechanisms of these factors remain underexplored. In this study, biome-specific machine learning models (R² = 0.69–0.82) were developed to estimate RS at a 1 km spatial resolution across China from 2001 to 2019. Results indicate that the long-term average annual RS across China’s vegetated areas is 4.24 ± 0.02 Pg C year⁻¹. Interannual variability shifted from relative stability during 2001–2010 (-5.58 Tg C year⁻¹; -0.08 g C m⁻² year⁻¹, P = 0.77) to a significant increase (36.29 Tg C year⁻¹; 0.52 g C m⁻² year⁻¹, P < 0.05) during 2010–2019. Climate and LUCC together explained 61.7% of the interannual variability in RS, with moisture as the primary driver (29.6% of variance). Large-scale ecological engineering projects, while effective in enhancing carbon sequestration, also promote RS, potentially offsetting some carbon storage gains. The long-term time-series dataset obtained in this study not only supports research on the mechanisms influencing RS but also provides benchmark data for improving terrestrial ecosystem carbon cycle models. These findings highlight RS’ critical role in China’s carbon budget and its sensitivity to climatic and anthropogenic drivers.
    Planting density modulates soil organic carbon sources by regulating plant lignin and microbial necromass C in temperate forests
    Yarong Sun, Jian Li, Guowei Liang, Yunming Chen
    doi: 10.1093/jpe/rtaf184
    Abstract ( 7 )    PDF    Save
    Although planting density is known to affect plant‒soil interactions, its specific influence on the sources of soil organic carbon (SOC) in forest ecosystems remains unclear. To address this issue, we examined plant- and microbe-derived carbon (C) pools, using soil lignin phenols and amino sugars, across a planting density gradient (570‒3,000 trees hm–2) comprising 28 levels in temperate Robinia pseudoacacia forests. The results demonstrated that both the lignin phenols and microbial necromass C contents decreased significantly with increasing stand density (P < 0.05). Between them, lignin phenols (755.6‒2,539.3 mg kg–1 SOC) contributed more substantially to SOC accumulation than microbial necromass C (767.5‒1742.5 mg kg–1 SOC). In particular, fungal-derived C ranged from 338.0 to 1260.1 mg kg–1 SOC, while bacteria-derived C ranged from 329.8 to 570.3 mg kg–1 SOC. These findings imply that increasing stand density limits the accumulation of SOC by decreasing the lignin phenol and microbial necromass C content. Notably, lignin phenols were primarily influenced by plant composition, while microbial necromass C was mainly determined by microbial properties and soil C content. These results highlight the significance of plant–soil trait interactions in shaping SOC composition and emphasise their relevance for predicting C-climate feedback in forest ecosystems. Overall, our findings provide new insights into the effects of planting density on SOC dynamics, highlighting important implications for sustainable forest management and climate feedback.
    Leaf non-structural carbohydrates dominantly drive background insect herbivory of temperate tree species in Northeastern China
    Yuyao Nan, Chuanshan Zou, Xingchang Wang, Qi Wang
    doi: 10.1093/jpe/rtaf164
    Abstract ( 5 )    PDF    Save
    Herbivorous insects shape plant growth and community assembly, while conversely, plant traits, especially leaf traits, profoundly affect herbivore behaviors. However, which leaf traits and how they dominantly drive insect herbivory in a natural forest habitat remain undefined. In this study, we evaluated the background insect herbivory of 45 individual trees from five broadleaved tree species in the northeast of China. Based on that, 17 leaf traits representing four groups—leaf structural traits, photosynthetic pigments, nutrient traits, and secondary metabolites—were measured. Finally, the correlation between 17 leaf traits and background insect herbivory was investigated. The results indicated that the damaged leaf area (DLA) exhibited positive correlations with leaf structural traits (leaf mass per area (LMA) and leaf size) and nutrient traits (soluble sugar (SS), non-structural carbohydrates (NSC), SS/NSC), and a negative correlation with photosynthetic pigments, nitrogen/phosphorus ratio, and anthocyanins. Meanwhile, SS/NSC, SS, leaf size, total phenol, and phosphorus were identified as the five relatively important leaf traits contributing to DLA by the quantitative estimation based on SHAP (SHapley Additive exPlanations) values. Furthermore, nutrient traits accounted for 52.9% of DLA explanation, showing the most important group of leaf traits. In addition, structural traits and secondary metabolites were found to interactively influence herbivory. These findings provide valuable insights into the complex interactions between host plants and herbivorous insects in forest ecosystems.
    Divergent scaling relationship between nitrogen and phosphorus of different shrub plant functional groups under different light and soil nutrient conditions
    Mide Rao, Jiayu Cao, Quan Yuan, Haidong Fan, Duo Ye, Libin Liu, Jian Ni
    doi: 10.1093/jpe/rtaf182
    Abstract ( 9 )    PDF    Save
    The nitrogen (N) vs. phosphorus (P) scaling exponent, indicating the allocation strategies of the two nutrients, plays an important role in predicting plant and ecosystem functioning. Besides the constant scaling relationship of N vs. P, plasticity of scaling exponents has been demonstrated, with proposed potential causes including plant functional groups (PFGs) or environmental factors. However, relatively little is known about whether the N vs. P scaling exponent of different PFGs response similarly to different environmental conditions. We measured N and P concentrations in leaves and twigs of 964 shrub individuals in a secondary subtropical forest in Eastern China, and explored how the N vs. P scaling exponent vary with different light or soil nutrient conditions for deciduous and evergreen shrubs. The leaf N vs. P scaling exponent of evergreen but not deciduous shrubs was affected by light condition, with higher scaling exponent of understory shrubs than that of typical shrubs. The twig scaling exponent of understory shrubs was lower than that of typical shrubs for both PFGs. With increasing soil N availability, responses of scaling exponents in both organs for both PFGs consistent with compliant type first and resistant type later. The scaling exponents of deciduous and evergreen shrubs in both organs showed opposite trends at relatively high soil P availability level. Our results reveal that environmental factors may alter the N vs. P scaling exponent differently across PFGs. These findings have important implications for improving predictions of stoichiometric models and broadening our understanding of plant responses to varying environments.
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Special Issue

Editor’s Choice

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