Search for projects with tag "nitrogen deposition"
[ID: 261] Long-term nitrogen enrichment does not increase microbial phosphorus mobilization in a northern coniferous forest
Summary 1. Nitrogen (N) deposition can enhance carbon (C) capture and storage in northern coniferous forests but it may also enhance the demand for phosphorus (P). While it is well established that long-term N enrichment can decrease decomposition and enhance the accumulation of C in soils, it remains uncertain if a higher demand and acquisition of P influence soil C. 2. We studied microbial phosphorus mobilization and growth within a long-term N enrichment experiment in a Norway spruce forest, where N deposition was simulated by adding 0, 12.5, or 50 kg N ha-1 yr-1 for 21 yrs (n=12), by incubating microbial ingrowth cores with needles and humus with low and high P content, and with sand with and without mineral apatite P. 3. Long-term N enrichment had no effect on microbial P mobilization in needles and humus and did not enhance the positive effect that apatite had on fungal growth. However, it consistently strengthened the retention of C in the soil by decreasing decomposition of needle and humus, both with low and high P content, and by increasing fungal growth in sand-filled ingrowth cores. Further, we did not find any evidence that higher microbial P mobilization in response to N enrichment affected soil C storage. 4. These results show that long-term N enrichment in relatively young soils dominated by coniferous trees and ectomycorrhizal fungi can have relatively small impact on microbial P mobilization from organic sources and on the potential to mobilize P from minerals, and subsequently that elevated P demand due to N enrichment is unlikely to lead to a reduction in the soil C accumulation rate.
boreal forestcarbon sequestrationnitrogen depositiondecompositionsoil phosphorusapatiteectomycorrhizal fungi
[ID: 199] Low and high nitrogen deposition rates in northern coniferous forests have different impacts on aboveground litter production, soil respiration, and soil carbon stocks
Nitrogen (N) deposition can change the carbon (C) sink of northern coniferous forests by changing the balance between net primary production and soil respiration. We used a field experiment in an N poor Pinus sylvestris forest where five levels of N (0, 3, 6, 12, 50 kg N ha-1 yr-1, n = 6) had been added annually for 12-13 years to investigate how litter C inputs and soil respiration, divided into its autotrophic and heterotrophic sources, respond to different rates of N input, and its subsequent effect on soil C storage. The highest N addition rate (50 kg N ha-1 yr-1) stimulated soil C accumulation in the organic layer by 22.3 kg C kg-1 N added, increased litter inputs by 46 %, and decreased soil respiration per mass unit of soil C by 31.2 %, mainly by decreasing autotrophic respiration. Lower N addition rates (≤12 kg N ha-1 yr-1) had no effect on litter inputs or soil respiration. These results support previous studies reporting on increased litter inputs coupled to impeded soil C mineralization, contributing to enhancing the soil C sink when N is supplied at high rates, but add observations for lower N addition rates more realistic for N deposition. In doing so, we show that litter production in N poor northern coniferous forests can be relatively unresponsive to low N deposition levels, that stimulation of microbial activity at low N additions are unlikely to reduce the soil C sink, and that high levels of N deposition enhance the soil C sink by increasing litter inputs and decreasing soil respiration.
[ID: 194] Nitrogen deposition and soil phosphorus
Does long-term nitrogen deposition lead to increased microbial mining for phosphorus in organic and mineral soils, and what is the consequence for the soil carbon sink? This project use the long-term nitrogen addition experiment at Svartberget and ingrowth cores with needle litter, humus, and mineral soil with and without elevated phosphorus content. Substrates were collected in a phosphorus addition experiment in the Tönnersjöheden research forest in Halland.
[ID: 193] Nitrogen deposition and soil microbiology
This project made an inventory of the soil microbial communities in the organic layer of the D (n=6) and E (n=6) plots at the Svartberget nitrogen addition experiment in 2016, after 20 years of annual N addition at 12.5 and 50 kg N ha-1 yr-1. We used PLFA profiling and fungal DNA sequencing to study shifts in the microbial community structure, and used enzyme assays to study the impact of nitrogen on the soil metabolism targeting key components of soil organic matter and litter, including cellulose and hemicellulose, organic nitrogen in peptides and microbial necromass, phosphates, and lignin.
[ID: 190] Nitrogen deposition and tree carbon allocation
Nitrogen deposition can enhance above ground carbon sequestration, but most of the carbon in boreal forest soils are stored in soils. A higher above ground growth enables a higher input of above ground litter to soils, potentially increasing soil carbon stocks. However, a large flux of carbon is entering soils through roots, where it is used to produce and maintain root biomass, as well as exported into microbial biomass such as ectomycorrhiza. Root and microbial biomass production and turnover is an important source of soil carbon, but labile carbon in the root zone is also driving decomposition processes. In this project, we use the Åheden long-term low to high N addition rate experiment to study the consequence of different rates of N input on the soil C balance. We combine above ground flux measurements including the input of above ground litter and output of CO2 by respiration, and below ground measurements on fine-root and ectomycorrhizal fungal biomass production to understand how different rates of nitrogen addition influence the amount, form, and location of carbon inputs to soils, with the overall goal to understand how N deposition influence the boreal forest carbon sink.