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Assessing Nitrogen-Saturation in a Seasonally Dry Chaparral Watershed: Limitations of Traditional Indicators of N-Saturation
Authors:Peter M Homyak  James O Sickman  Amy E Miller  John M Melack  Thomas Meixner  Joshua P Schimel
Institution:1. Department of Ecology, Evolution & Marine Biology, University of California, Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, California, 93106, USA
2. Department of Environmental Sciences, University of California, Riverside, Riverside, California, 92521, USA
3. Inventory and Monitoring Program, National Park Service, 240 West 5th Avenue, Anchorage, Alaska, 99501, USA
4. Department of Hydrology and Water Resources, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona, 85721, USA
Abstract:To evaluate nitrogen (N) saturation in xeric environments, we measured hydrologic N losses, soil N pools, and microbial processes, and developed an N-budget for a chaparral catchment (Sierra Nevada, California) exposed to atmospheric N inputs of approximately 8.5 kg N ha?1 y?1. Dual-isotopic techniques were used to trace the sources and processes controlling nitrate (NO3 ?) losses. The majority of N inputs occurred as ammonium. At the onset of the wet season (November to April), we observed elevated streamwater NO3 ? concentrations (up to 520 µmol l?1), concomitant with the period of highest gaseous N-loss (up to 500 ng N m?2 s?1) and suggesting N-saturation. Stream NO3 ? δ15N and δ18O and soil N measurements indicate that nitrification controlled NO3 ? losses and that less than 1% of the loss was of atmospheric origin. During the late wet season, stream NO3 ? concentrations decreased (to <2 µmol l?1) as did gaseous N emissions, together suggesting conditions no longer indicative of N-saturation. We propose that chaparral catchments are temporarily N-saturated at ≤8.5 kg N ha?1 y?1, but that N-saturation may be difficult to reach in ecosystems that inherently leak N, thereby confounding the application of N-saturation indicators and annual N-budgets. We propose that activation of N sinks during the typically rainy winter growing season should be incorporated into the assessment of ecosystem response to N deposition. Specifically, the N-saturation status of chaparral may be better assessed by how rapidly catchments transition from N-loss to N-retention.
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