4.5 Article

Long-Term Nitrogen Addition Does Not Increase Soil Carbon Storage or Cycling Across Eight Temperate Forest and Grassland Sites on a Sandy Outwash Plain

期刊

ECOSYSTEMS
卷 22, 期 7, 页码 1592-1605

出版社

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10021-019-00357-x

关键词

soil organic matter; decomposition; microbial respiration; nitrogen deposition; fertilization; soil carbon; incubation

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资金

  1. Cedar Creek Long-Term Ecological Research program (National Science Foundation (NSF)) [DEB-0080302]
  2. University of Minnesota College of Biological Sciences Graduate Excellence Fellowship
  3. NSF [00039202, DEB-0347103]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Experimental nitrogen (N) deposition generally inhibits decomposition and promotes carbon (C) accumulation in soils, but with substantial variation among studies. Differences in ecosystem properties could help explain this variability: N could have distinct effects on decomposition and soil C due to differences in vegetation characteristics (that is, root C inputs and chemistry) that influence microbial biomass or soil properties like pH that can affect organic matter stabilization. We used a 12-year N addition experiment to determine effects of sustained N addition on soil C pool sizes and cycling across different grassland, conifer and deciduous forest sites in Minnesota, USA, while controlling for soil type and climate. We conducted a year-long soil incubation, and fit one- and two-pool decay models to respiration data to identify C pool sizes and decay rates. Contrary to previous studies, we found no consistent effects of N on soil C across sites: soil C stocks, microbial respiration, soil C decay rates and pool sizes all showed no general response to N in these sandy soils. Nevertheless, microbial biomass, microbial respiration, and the root biomass C pool responses to N addition were highly correlated, suggesting that soil C responses were ultimately driven by fine root biomass C responses to N addition, which in turn affected microbial biomass. However, the inconsistent directional responses to N among sites with similar vegetation cover highlight that N addition effects can be site-specific and raise caution for broad extrapolation of results from individual systems to global models.

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