@article {KNZ001226, title = {Scale-dependent responses of plant biodiversity to nitrogen enrichment}, journal = {Ecology}, volume = {89}, year = {2008}, pages = {2165 -2171}, abstract = {Experimental studies demonstrating that nitrogen (N) enrichment reduces plant diversity within individual plots have led to the conclusion that anthropogenic N enrichment is a threat to global biodiversity. These conclusions overlook the influence of spatial scale, however, as N enrichment may alter β diversity (i.e., how similar plots are in their species composition), which would likely alter the degree to which N-induced changes in diversity within localities translate to changes in diversity at larger scales that are relevant to policy and management. Currently, it is unclear how N enrichment affects biodiversity at scales larger than a small plot. We synthesized data from 18 N-enrichment experiments across North America to examine the effects of N enrichment on plant species diversity at three spatial scales: small (within plots), intermediate (among plots), and large (within and among plots). We found that N enrichment reduced plant diversity within plots by an average of 25\% (ranging from a reduction of 61\% to an increase of 5\%) and frequently enhanced β diversity. The extent to which N enrichment altered β diversity, however, varied substantially among sites (from a 22\% increase to an 18\% reduction) and was contingent on site productivity. Specifically, N enrichment enhanced β diversity at low-productivity sites but reduced β diversity at high-productivity sites. N-induced changes in β diversity generally reduced the extent of species loss at larger scales to an average of 22\% (ranging from a reduction of 54\% to an increase of 18\%). Our results demonstrate that N enrichment often reduces biodiversity at both local and regional scales, but that a focus on the effects of N enrichment on biodiversity at small spatial scales may often overestimate (and sometimes underestimate) declines in regional biodiversity by failing to recognize the effects of N on β diversity.}, keywords = {LTER-KNZ}, doi = {10.1890/07-0971.1}, author = {Chalcraft, D.R. and Cox, S.B. and Clark, C.M. and E.E Cleland and K.N. Suding and Weiher, E. and Pennington, D.} }