4.4 Article

Relative role of understory and overstory in carbon and nitrogen cycling in a southern Appalachian spruce-fir forest

Journal

CANADIAN JOURNAL OF FOREST RESEARCH
Volume 37, Issue 12, Pages 2689-2700

Publisher

CANADIAN SCIENCE PUBLISHING
DOI: 10.1139/X07-115

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This study investigated aboveground pools and fluxes of biomass, carbon (C), and nitrogen (N) in the overstory and understory of a southern Appalachian red spruce (Picea rubens Sarg.)-Fraser fir (Abies fraseri (Pursh) Poir.) forest, following adelgid-induced fir mortality and spruce windthrow. Using fifty 20 m x 20 m plots, stratified by elevation (1700-1900 m), we estimated standing biomass and fluxes of all growth forms from periodic stand inventories (19982003), vegetation surveys, and existing or derived allometric equations. Total C and N pools and fluxes were calculated from plant- and tissue-specific C and N concentrations. Total aboveground biomass attained predisturbance values, ranging from 313 Mg.ha(-1) at the lower elevations to 204 Mg-ha(-1) at the upper elevations. Overstory biomass production (5650 kg.ha(-1).year(-1)) and N uptake (11-15 kg.ha(-1).year(-1)) exceeded earlier reported values, indicating forest recovery. Woody understory accounted for 3% of aboveground biomass, 10% of annual productivity, and 19% of total N uptake (similar to 7 kg.ha(-1) .year(-1)). Herbaceous vegetation, which comprised only 1% of total biomass, took up 18-21 kg N.ha(-1) annually, >50% of total ecosystem N uptake (37 kg.ha(-1).year(-1)). This suggests that N-rich understory vegetation plays an important role in N cycling.

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