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Dryad

Data for: Leaf N-S of wetland plants in western China

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Oct 25, 2022 version files 223.46 KB

Abstract

Salinization alters the elemental balance of wetlands and induces variations in plant survival strategies. Sulfur (S) plays vital roles in serving regulatory and catalytic functions in stress resistance of plants. Yet, how plant S and its relationships with nitrogen (N) vary across natural environmental gradients are not well documented. We collected 1366 plant samples and 230 water and sediment samples from 230 wetlands in Tibetan Plateau and adjacent arid regions of western China, to analyze the effects of environmental variables on plant S accumulation and N-S correlations. We found that plant S correlated with N in unimodal patterns. Salinity, rather than temperature or nutrient supply, promoted disproportionate accumulation of S but limited N uptake, inducing decoupling of N-S correlation in plants. Towards high salinity, the faster increasing rates of total S than that of glutathione, the most abundant organic-S compound in plant resistance, provided potential evidences explaining the decoupled plant N-S correlation. A salinity of 3.9‰ was calculated to be a threshold at which substantial changes in plant N-S correlation occurred. We designed a conceptual model to illustrate the mechanisms driving variations of N-S correlation in plants and environments along salinity gradient. In addition, salinity reduced species richness and drove community reassembly by filtering species with high S concentrations at community scale. Our study addressed the critical roles of S in plant resistance under adverse conditions. Studies on biogeochemical cycles of S and N in wetland ecosystems will further enhance our understanding of plant responses to future climate change.