共查询到6条相似文献,搜索用时 4 毫秒
1.
Marisa C. Piccolo Christopher Neill Jerry M. Melillo Carlos C. Cerri Paul A. Steudler 《Plant and Soil》1996,182(2):249-258
The natural abundance of 15N was examined in soil profiles from forests and pastures of the Brazilian Amazon Basin to compare tropical forests on a variety of soil types and to investigate changes in the sources of nitrogen to soils following deforestation for cattle ranching. Six sites in the state of Rondônia, two sites in Pará and one in Amazonas were studied. All sites except one were chronosequences and contained native forest and one or more pastures ranging from 2 to 27 years old. Forest soil 15N values to a depth of 1 m ranged from 8 to 23 and were higher than values typically found in temperate forests. A general pattern of increasing 15N values with depth near the soil surface was broadly similar to patterns in other forests but a decrease in 15N values in many forest profiles between 20 and 40 cm suggests that illuviation of 15N-depleted nitrate may influence total soil 15N values in deeper soil where total N concentrations are low. In four chronosequences in Rondônia, the 15N values of surface soil from pastures were lower than in the original forest and 15N values were increasingly depleted in older pastures. Inputs of atmospheric N by dinitrogen fixation could be an important N source in these pastures. Other pastures in Amazonas and Pará and Rondônia showed no consistent change from forest values. The extent of fractionation that leads to 15N enrichment in soils was broadly similar over a wide range of soil textures and indicated that similar processes control N fractionation and loss under tropical forest over a broad geographic region. Forest 15N profiles were consistent with conceptual models that explain enrichment of soil 15N values by selective loss of 14N during nitrification and denitrification. 相似文献
2.
We examined soil nitrogen (N) mineralization and nitrification rates, and soil and forest floor properties in one native forest:
evergreen broad-leaved forest (EBLF), one secondary shrubs (SS), and three adjacent plantation forests: Chinese fir plantation
(CFP), bamboo plantation (BP) and waxberry groves (WG) in Tiantong National Forest Park, Eastern China. All forests showed
seasonal dynamics of N mineralization and nitrification rates. Soil N mineralization rate was highest in EBLF (1.6 ± 0.3 mg-N kg−1 yr−1) and lowest in CFP (0.4 ± 0.1 mg-N kg−1 yr−1). Soil nitrification rate was also highest in EBLF (0.6 ± 0.1 mg-N kg−1 yr−1), but lowest in SS (0.02 ± 0.01 mg-N kg−1 yr−1). During forest conversion of EBLF to SS, CFP, BP and WG, soil N mineralization rate (10.7%, 73%, 40.3% and 69.8%, respectively),
soil nitrification rate (94.9%, 32.2%, 33.9% and 39%, respectively), and soil N concentration (50%, 65.4%, 78.9% and 51.9%,
respectively) declined significantly. Annual soil N mineralization was positively correlated with total C and N concentrations
of surface soil and total N concentration of forest floor, and negatively correlated with soil bulk density, soil pH and C:N
ratio of forest floor across the five forests. Annual soil nitrification was positively correlated with total C concentration
of surface soil and N concentration of forest floor, and negatively correlated with soil bulk density and forest floor mass.
In contrast, annual soil nitrification was not correlated to pH value, total N concentration, C:N ratio of surface soil and
total C concentration and C:N ratio of forest floor. 相似文献
3.
B. De Bruin F. W. T. Penning De Vries L. W. Van Broekhoven N. Vertregt S. C. Van De Geijn 《Plant and Soil》1989,113(1):69-78
In this study the rates of net mineralization, net immobilization and net nitrification have been quantified under laboratory conditions in a sandy low-humus soil from a semi-arid region, in absence of plant growth. Incubation experiments were carried out under constant humidity and under alternating wet and dry conditions to simulate field conditions during the rainy season. The ammonium and nitrate content of the incubates were determined and their CO2 production measured.The rate of net mineralization at field capacity was 0.6 kg N ha–1d–1 during the first 40 days and decreased to 0.06 kg N ha–1d–1 after 400 days. This rate was twice as high on wet days under alternating wet and dry conditions. The rate of net nitrification during alternating wet and dry conditions was also higher (1.9 kg N ha–1d–1) than at constant field capacity (1.3 kg N ha–1d–1) until the ammonium was almost completely depleted. These rates of net mineralization and net nitrification are in agreement with field observations.Net immobilization did not occur in the experiments, unless glucose was added to the soil.The data on CO2 production and net mineralization showed that the C/N ratio of the degraded material was around 9 or below. It is much lower than the ratio of total carbon over total nitrogen in the soil. This indicates that microorganisms and compounds high in nitrogen were mineralized. Certainly after about 30 days the only growth taking place is based on turnover of material of the microbial biomass itself.A decrease in the amount of inorganic nitrogen was observed upon drying of the soil, while it returned to the original content after rewetting. It is postulated that this might be due to temporary uptake of nitrogen in an inorganic form in microorganisms as part of their osmoregulation. 相似文献
4.
5.
The Catskill Mountains of southeastern New York receive among the highest rates of atmospheric nitrogen (N) deposition in eastern North America, and ecosystems in the region may be sensitive to human disturbances that affect the N cycle. We studied the effects of a clearcut in a northern hardwood forest within a 24-ha Catskill watershed on the net rates of N mineralization and nitrification in soil plots during 6 years (1994–1999) that encompassed 3-year pre- and post-harvesting periods. Despite stream NO3– concentrations that increased by more than 1400 mol l–1 within 5 months after the clearcut, and three measures of NO3– availability in soil that increased 6- to 8-fold during the 1st year after harvest, the net rates of N mineralization and nitrification as measured by in situ incubation in the soil remained unchanged. The net N-mineralization rate in O-horizon soil was 1– 2 mg N kg–1 day–1 and the net nitrification rate was about 1 mg N kg–1 day–1, and rates in B-horizon soil were only one-fifth to one-tenth those of the O-horizon. These rates were obtained in single 625 m2 plots in the clearcut watershed and reference area, and were confirmed by rate measurements at 6 plots in 1999 that showed little difference in N-mineralization and nitrification rates between the treatment and reference areas. Soil temperature increased 1 ± 0.8 °C in a clearcut study plot relative to a reference plot during the post-harvest period, and soil moisture in the clearcut plot was indistinguishable from that in the reference plot. These results are contrary to the initial hypothesis that the clearcut would cause net rates of these N-cycling processes to increase sharply. The in situ incubation method used in this study isolated the samples from ambient roots and thereby prevented plant N uptake; therefore, the increases in stream NO3– concentrations and export following harvest largely reflect diminished uptake. Changes in temperature and moisture after the clearcut were insufficient to measurably affect the net rates of N mineralization and nitrification in the absence of plant uptake. Soil acidification resulting from the harvest may have acted in part to inhibit the rates of these processes.
The US Governments right to retain a non-exclusive, royalty-free license in and to any copyright is acknowledged. 相似文献
6.
Nitrogen mineralization, nitrification potentials, pH, total N, C, extractable P and cations were measured in soils under 4-year-old, mono-specific stands of six fast-growing, native tree species, an abandoned pasture, and a 20-year-old secondary forest, as part of a study on the use of indigenous tree species for rehabilitation of soil fertility on degraded pastures at the La Selva Biological Station in the Atlantic humid lowlands of Costa Rica. Soil net nitrification potential rates were higher under two N-fixing, leguminous species,Stryphnodendron microstachyum Poepp. et Endl. (1.1–1.9 mg kg–1 day–1) andDalbergia tucurensis Donn. Smith (0.7–1.5 mg kg–1 day–1), than under the non-N-fixing trees in the plantation,Vochysia guatemalesis Don. Sm.,Vochysia ferruginea Mart,Dipteryx panamensis (Pittier) Record and Mell andHyeronima alchorneoides Fr. Allemao (0.2–0.8 mg kg–1 day–1). Values under the N-fixing trees were comparable to those found in secondary forest. There were no statistically significant differences in soil total N or in other nurtients between the species. Results of pH measurements done before and after incubation did not show any clear evidence of a pH drop attributable to nitrification. 相似文献
