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Erosion and the Rejuvenation of Weathering-derived Nutrient Supply in an Old Tropical Landscape
Authors:Email author" target="_blank">Peter?VitousekEmail author  Oliver?Chadwick  Pamela?Matson  Steven?Allison  Louis?Derry  Lisa?Kettley  Amy?Luers  Esther?Mecking  Valerie?Monastra  Stephen?Porder
Institution:(1) Department of Biological Sciences, Stanford University, Stanford, California 94305, USA;(2) Department of Geography, University of California, Santa Barbara, California 93106, USA;(3) Department of Geological and Environmental Sciences, Stanford University, Stanford, California 94305, USA;(4) Department of Geology, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York 14853, USA;(5) ., CH2M Hill, Inc., 155 Grand Avenue, Suite 1000, Oakland, California 94612, USA;(6) ., Burke Mountain Academy, PO Box 78, East Burke, Vermont 05832, USA;(7) ., Geosyntec Consultants, 629 Massachusetts Avenue, Boxborough, Massachusetts 01719, USA
Abstract:Studies of long-term soil and ecosystem development on static geomorphic surfaces show that old soils become depleted in most rock-derived nutrients. As they are depleted, however, static surfaces also are dissected by fluvial erosion. This fluvial erosion leads to colluvial soil transport on the resulting slopes, which in turn can rejuvenate the supply of weathering-derived nutrients to plants. We evaluated the influence of erosion and consequent landscape evolution on nutrient availability along a slope on the Island of Kauarsquoi, near the oldest, most nutrient-depleted site on a substrate age gradient across the Hawaiian Islands. Noncrystalline minerals characteristic of younger Hawaiian soils increased from 3% of the soil on the static constructional surface at the top of the slope to 13% on the lower slope, and the fraction of soil phosphorus (P) that was occluded (and hence unavailable) decreased from 80% to 56% at midslope. Foliar nitrogen and P concentrations in Metrosideros polymorpha increased from 0.82% and 0.062% to 1.13% and 0.083% on the constructional surface and lower slope, respectively. The increase in foliar P over a horizontal difference of less than 250 m represents nearly half of the total variation in foliar P observed over 4.1 million years of soil and ecosystem development in Hawairsquoi. The fraction of foliar strontium (Sr) derived from weathering of Hawaiian basalt was determined using 87Sr:86Sr; it increased from less than 6% on the constructional surface to 13% and 31% on lower slope and alluvial positions. Erosional processes increase both nutrient supply on this slope and the fine-scale biogeochemical diversity of this old tropical landscape; it could contribute to the relatively high level of species diversity observed on Kauarsquoi.
Keywords:fluvial erosion  Hawairsquoi" target="_blank">gif" alt="rsquo" align="BASELINE" BORDER="0">i  landscape evolution  nitrogen  nutrient availability  phosphorus  soil mineralogy  strontium isotopes  toposequence
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