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2011781 
Journal Article 
Does phosphorus limitation promote species-rich plant communities? 
Venterink, HO 
2011 
Plant and Soil
ISSN: 0032-079X
EISSN: 1573-5036 
345 
1-2 
1-9 
It is known that the number of limiting nutrients may affect the species richness of plant communities, but it is unclear whether the type of nutrient limitation is also important. I place the results from a study in Patagonia (elsewhere in this issue) in the context of the number and types of nutrients that are limiting. I present four mechanisms through which N or P limitation may potentially influence species richness. These mechanisms are related to: (i) the number of forms in which P or N are present in soil and the plant traits needed to acquire them, (ii) the mechanisms and traits that control species competition and coexistence under N or P limitation, (iii) the regional species pools of plants capable of growing under N- and P-limited conditions, and (iv) the interaction between the type of nutrient limitation and community productivity. It appears likely that P limitation can favour a higher species richness than N limitation, in at least in a variety of low productive plant communities, but evidence to support this conclusion is so far lacking. The four mechanisms proposed here offer a framework for exploring whether the type of nutrient limitation per se, or an interaction with productivity, is a potential driver for variation in species diversity. 
N:P stoichiometry; Nutrient limitation; Diversity-productivity; Species competition; Species pool; Biodiversity; N:P ratio; Nitrogen; Phosphorus; Resource balance hypothesis; Growth rate hypothesis