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Seasonal and spatial patterns of S,Ca, and N dynamics of a Northern Hardwood forest ecosystem
Authors:Myron J Mitchell  Marianne K Burke  James P Shepard
Institution:(1) College of Environmental Science and Forestry, State University of New York, 13210 Syracuse, New York, USA;(2) Horn Point Environmental Laboratory, P.O. Box 775, Cambridge, Maryland 21613, USA;(3) NCASI, 34134 SW 24th Ave., P.O. Box 14483, Gainesville, Florida 32606, USA
Abstract:Seasonal dynamics of S, Ca and N were examined at the Huntington Forest, a northern hardwood ecosystem in the central Adirondacks of New York for a period of 34 months (1985–1988). Solute concentrations and fluxes in bulk precipitation, throughfall (TF) and leachates from the forest floor, E horizon and B horizon were quantified. Both above and below-ground elemental fluxes mediated by vegetation (e.g. uptake, litter inputs, and fine roots production) were also determined. The roles of abiotic and biotic processes were ascertained based on both changes in solute concentrations through the strata of the ecosystem as well as differences between dormant and growing seasons. Concentrations of SO4 2?, NO3 ?, NH4 + and Ca2+ were greater in TF than precipitation. Forest floor leachates had greater concentrations of SO4 2?, NO3 ? + NH4 + and Ca2+ (9, 6 and 77 µeq L?1, respectively) than TF. There were differences in concentrations of ions in leachates from the forest floor between the dormant and growing seasons presumably due to vegetation uptake and microbial immobilization. Concentrations and fluxes of NO3 ? and NH; were greatest in early spring followed by a rapid decline which coincided with a demand for N by vegetation in late spring. Vegetation uptake (44.7 kg N ha?1 yr?1 ) could account for the low leaching rates of N03 ?. Within the mineral soil, changes with soil depth and the absence of seasonal patterns suggest that cation exchange (Ca+) or anion sorption (SO4 2?) are primarily responsible for regulating solute concentrations. The increase in SO4 2? concentration after leachates passed through the mineral soil may be attributed to desorption of sulfate that was adsorbed during an earlier period when SO4 2? concentrations would have been greater due to elevated S inputs.
Keywords:calcium  fine roots  nitrogen  northern hardwood  nutrient dynamics  seasonality  soils  sulfur  vegetation
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