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Woody Plant Encroachment by <Emphasis Type="Italic">Juniperus virginiana</Emphasis> in a Mesic Native Grassland Promotes Rapid Carbon and Nitrogen Accrual
Authors:Duncan C McKinley  John M Blair
Institution:(1) Smithsonian Environmental Research Center, 647 Contees Wharf Road, P.O. Box 28, Edgewater, Maryland 21037-0028, USA;(2) Division of Biology, Kansas State University, 116 Ackert Hall, Manhattan, Kansas 66506-4901, USA
Abstract:The cover and abundance of Juniperus virginiana L. in the U.S. Central Plains are rapidly increasing, largely as a result of changing land-use practices that alter fire regimes in native grassland communities. Little is known about how conversion of native grasslands to Juniperus-dominated forests alters soil nutrient availability and ecosystem storage of carbon (C) and nitrogen (N), although such land-cover changes have important implications for local ecosystem dynamics, as well as regional C and N budgets. Four replicate native grasslands and adjacent areas of recent J. virginiana encroachment were selected to assess potential changes in soil N availability, leaf-level photosynthesis, and major ecosystem C and N pools. Net N mineralization rates were assessed in situ over two years, and changes in labile soil organic pools (potential C and N mineralization rates and microbial biomass C and N) were determined. Photosynthetic nitrogen use efficiencies (PNUE) were used to examine differences in instantaneous leaf-level N use in C uptake. Comparisons of ecosystem C and N stocks revealed significant C and N accrual in both plant biomass and soils in these newly established forests, without changes in labile soil N pools. There were few differences in monthly in situ net N mineralization rates, although cumulative annual net N mineralization was greater in forest soils compared to grasslands. Conversely, potential C mineralization was significantly reduced in forest soils. Encroachment by J. virginiana into grasslands results in rapid accretion of ecosystem C and N in plant and soil pools with little apparent change in N availability. Widespread increases in the cover of woody plants, like J. virginiana, in areas formerly dominated by graminoid species suggest an increasing role of expanding woodlands and forests as regional C sinks in the central U.S.
Keywords:Juniperus          virginiana            woody plant encroachment  grassland conversion  invasion  nitrogen cycling  nitrogen use efficiency  mineralization  carbon storage  land cover change
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