4.1 Article Proceedings Paper

Canopy uptake of atmospheric N deposition at a conifer forest: part I - canopy N budget, photosynthetic efficiency and net ecosystem exchange

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TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1111/j.1600-0889.2007.00264.x

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Global carbon cycle assessments of anthropogenic nitrogen (N) deposition influences on carbon sequestration often assume enhanced sequestration results. This assumption was evaluated at a Rocky Mountains spruce-fir forest. Forest canopy N uptake (CNU) of atmospheric N deposition was estimated by combining event wet and throughfall N fluxes with gradient measured HNO3 and NH3 as well as inferred (NOx and particulate N) dry fluxes. Approximately 80% of the growing-season 3 kgN ha(-1) total deposition is retained in canopy foliage and branches. This CNU constitutes similar to 1/3 of canopy growing season new N supply at this conifer forest site. Daytime net ecosystem exchange (NEE) significantly (P = 0.006) and negatively (CO2 uptake) correlated with CNU. Multiple regression indicates similar to 20% of daytime NEE may be attributed to CNU (P< 0.02); more than soil water content. A wet deposition N-amendment study (Tomaszewski and Sievering-part II), at canopy spruce branches, increased their growing-season CNU by 40 -50% above ambient. Fluorometry and gas exchange results show N-amended spruce branches had greater photosynthetic efficiency and higher carboxylation rates than control and untreated branches. N-amended branches had 25% less photoinhibition, with a 5-9% greater proportion of foliar-N-in-Rubisco. The combined results provide, partly, a mechanistic explanation for the NEE dependence on CNU.

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