4.3 Article

Plant effects on soil N mineralization are mediated by the composition of multiple soil organic fractions

期刊

ECOLOGICAL RESEARCH
卷 26, 期 1, 页码 201-208

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1007/s11284-010-0777-0

关键词

Ecosystem process; Nitrogen cycling; Soil density fractionation; Soil organic matter

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资金

  1. University of Minnesota's Initiative on Renewable Energy and the Environment
  2. US National Science Foundation [NSF/DEB-0620652]
  3. Marie Curie Outgoing Fellowship
  4. Natural Environment Research Council [ceh010010] Funding Source: researchfish

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Despite the topic of soil nitrogen (N) mineralization being well-studied, very few studies have addressed the relative contribution of different plant and soil variables in influencing soil N mineralization rates, and thus the supply of inorganic N to plants. Here, we used data from a well-studied N-limited grassland to address the relative effects of six plant and soil variables on net and on gross rates of soil N mineralization. We also addressed whether plant effects on soil N mineralization were mediated by changes in C and N concentrations of multiple soil organic matter (SOM) fractions. Regression analyses show that key plant traits (i.e., plant C:N ratios and total root mass) were more important than total C and N concentrations of bulk soil in influencing N mineralization. This was mainly because plant traits influenced the C and N concentration (and C:N ratios) of different SOM fractions, which in turn were significantly associated with changes in net and gross N mineralization. In particular, C:N ratios of a labile soil fraction were negatively related to net soil N mineralization rates, whereas total soil C and N concentrations of more recalcitrant fractions were positively related to gross N mineralization. Our study suggests that changes in belowground N-cycling can be better predicted by simultaneously addressing how plant C:N ratios and root mass affect the composition and distribution of different SOM pools in N-limited grassland systems.

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