Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Nitrogen fixation and fertilization have similar effects on biomass allocation in nitrogen-fixing plants

September 17, 2024

Plants adjust their allocation to different organs based on nutrient supply. In some plant species, symbioses with nitrogen-fixing bacteria that live in root nodules provide an alternate pathway for nitrogen acquisition. Does access to nitrogen-fixing bacteria modify plants' biomass allocation? We hypothesized that access to nitrogen-fixing bacteria would have the same effect on allocation to aboveground versus belowground tissues as access to plentiful soil nitrogen. To test this hypothesis and related hypotheses about allocation to stems versus leaves and roots versus nodules, we conducted experiments with 15 species of nitrogen-fixing plants in two separate greenhouses. In each, we grew seedlings with and without access to symbiotic bacteria across a wide gradient of soil nitrogen supply. As is common, uninoculated plants allocated relatively less biomass belowground when they had more soil nitrogen. As we hypothesized, nitrogen fixation had a similar effect as the highest level of fertilization on allocation aboveground versus belowground. Both nitrogen fixation and high fertilization led to ~10% less biomass allocated belowground (~10% more aboveground) than the uninoculated, lowest fertilization treatment. Fertilization reduced allocation to nodules relative to roots. The responses for allocation of aboveground tissues to leaves versus stems were not as consistent across greenhouses or species as the other allocation trends, though more nitrogen fixation consistently led to relatively more allocation to leaves when soil nitrogen supply was low. Synthesis: Our results suggest that symbiotic nitrogen fixation causes seedlings to allocate relatively less biomass belowground, with potential implications for competition and carbon storage in early forest development.

Publication Year 2024
Title Nitrogen fixation and fertilization have similar effects on biomass allocation in nitrogen-fixing plants
DOI 10.1002/ece3.70309
Authors DNL Menge, A. P. Wolfe, J. Funk, Steven Perakis, K.A. Carreras Pereira
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Ecology and Evolution
Index ID 70258699
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Forest and Rangeland Ecosystem Science Center
Was this page helpful?