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Increased carbon cost for nitrogen assimilation in plants under a warming climate
- Chao-Chen Hu 1 ,
- Chen-Guang Tian 2 ,
- Chong-Juan Chen 3 ,
- Wei Song 3 ,
- Xu Yue ORCID: orcid.org/0000-0002-8861-8192 2 &
- ...
- Xue-Yan Liu ORCID: orcid.org/0000-0003-1097-1516 1,3
Nature Geoscience (2025)Cite this article
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Abstract
Nitrogen (N) assimilation consumes carbon (C) in plants, and climate warming can alter soil N availability, thereby affecting plant N assimilation and associated C costs. However, the global C cost of N assimilation in terrestrial plants has long been unconstrained, and its warming response remains uncertain. Here we constructed a modelling framework of plant C costs for nitrate, ammonium and extractable organic N assimilation and assessed global C costs of plant N assimilation. Globally, the C costs for plant N assimilation were 208 ± 12 and 249 ± 15 TgC yr−1 under the present-day and 2.0 °C warming scenarios, respectively, which exceed the C emissions caused by deforestation and degradation fires and are comparable to the forest C fixed by atmospheric N deposition. Under the warming scenario, the global C cost would increase by 47% (41 ± 19 TgC yr−1), with a greater percentage increase at higher latitudes, due partly to enhanced contributions and C cost of soil inorganic N. We conclude that the C cost for N assimilation in terrestrial plants should be incorporated into global C budgets, while its positive response to warming would improve predictions of terrestrial C-cycle feedbacks to global warming.
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Acknowledgements
This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (42125301, 42221001, 42330505 and 42473081) and the Guizhou province ‘Hundred-Thousand-Ten Thousand’ Leading Talent Team (2025) Project (QianKeHe Talent BQW [2025] 007). Thanks to H.-R. Li and W.-G. Fan for their help on data analysis.
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Hu, CC., Tian, CG., Chen, CJ. et al. Increased carbon cost for nitrogen assimilation in plants under a warming climate. Nat. Geosci. (2025). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41561-025-01816-y
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41561-025-01816-y
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